Expulsion of germans from czechoslovakia
[DOC File]Anglo-American Responsibility for the
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In order to justify the expulsion of the Germans, Eduard Beneš again and again referred to them as traitors: "We must get rid of all those Germans who plunged a dagger in the back of the Czechoslovak State in 1938." Here Beneš was referring to the Munich Agreement of 1938.
[DOC File]Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
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10) Norman M. Naimark, "The Expulsion of Germans from Poland and Czechoslovakia," chapter 4 in Naimark. Fires of Hatred: Ethnic Cleansing in Twentieth-Century Europe, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2001, pp. 108-38.
[DOC File]Ethnic Cleansing 1945 and Today: - Alfred de Zayas
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As noted earlier, the expulsion and enforced flight of some fifteen million ethnic Germans caused the deaths of over two million of them, and there is ample evidence that numerous leaders of the Soviet Union, Poland, and Czechoslovakia intended that loss of life. Moreover, the traumatic experience of losing their homes and every link to the land where they were born and where their parents and ...
[DOC File]CZECHOSLOVAK HISTORY IN SHORT
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2nd president of Czechoslovakia. From September 21, 1944, Czechoslovakia was liberated by Soviet troops (the Red Army), supported by Czech and Slovak resistance, from the east to the west, only southwestern Bohemia was liberated by other Allied troops from the west. The . Potsdam Agreement. provided for the . expulsion of Sudeten Germans
[DOC File]The New York Review of Books: FROM THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD ...
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[8] See Radomir Luza, The Transfer of the Sudeten Germans: A Study of Czech–German Relations, 1933–1962 (New York University Press, 1964); Pertti Ahonen, After the Expulsion: West Germany and Eastern Europe 1945–1990 (Oxford University Press, 2003), Chapter One: "From the Expulsions to the Rise of the Expellee Organizations"; Norman M. Naimark, Fires of Hatred: Ethnic Cleansing in ...
[DOC File]cuni.cz
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In some countries, like Poland and Czechoslovakia, the. expulsion of ethnic Germans and former German citizens was. accepted or even encouraged by the Allies. In other places this . expulsion was arranged by local authorities or resulted from. collective measures against German minorities, who were. generally suspected to be Nazi collaborators (e.g. German-speaking. citizens of Yugoslavia and ...
[DOC File]ECHR - MZV
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In the declaration, the German side acknowledged its responsibility for events leading to the Munich Pact, expulsion of inhabitants of Czechoslovak border regions and seizure of Czechoslovakia. It expressed regret over the injustice and suffering inflicted on the Czechoslovak people during the Second World War and acknowledged that the German National Socialist policy during the War ...
[DOC File]T
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Much has been written about the expulsion of the Czechoslovak Germans after World War II and much of this literature can best be described as ‘angry.’ The standard line of debate has focused on the supposedly criminal behavior of one side or the other: German subversion of the state and bad behavior after the takeover in 1939; Czech obsession with expelling the Germans; the Brno Death ...
[DOC File]Češi v Kladsku - Masaryk University
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They found 508 citizens of Czechoslovakia and 2,512 Czechs without citizenship, i.e. a total of 3,050 compatriots. In spring 1946, the expulsion of Germans from Kłodzko started, leading to a stronger flow of refugees to Czechoslovakia. Refugees were divided in three categories: Czechs, Germans with Czech ancestry and Nazi Germans.
[DOC File]Germans in Czechoslovakia - FCPS
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After the end of WWII, when the Czechoslovak state was restored, the majority of Germans from Czechoslovakia were expelled. In the months directly following the end of the war "wild" expulsions happened from May till August 1945. These "wild" expulsions were encouraged by polemical speeches made by several Czechoslovak statesmen.
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