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Reclaiming Children for the Nation: Germanization, National Ascription, and Democracy in the Bohemian Lands, 1990–1945

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Tara Zahra
Affiliation:
University of Michigan

Extract

In September of 1899 the Czech National Social Party issued a stern warning to parents in Prague as the school enrollment season approached: “Czech parents! Remember that your children are not only your own property, but also the property of the nation. They are the property of all of society and that society has the right to control your conduct!” Czech and German nationalists in the Bohemian lands were hardly alone in claiming that children comprised a precious form of “national property” (nationaler Besitz, národanímajetek) at the turn of the century. In an age of mass politics and nationalist demography, nationalists across Europe obsessed about the quantity and quality of the nation's children. They were, however, unique in their ability to transform this polemical claim into a legal reality. Between 1900–1945, German and Czech nationalist social workers and educational activists in the Bohemian lands attempted to create a political culture in which children belonged to national communities, and in which the nation's rights to educate children often trumped parental rights. In 1905, nationalists gained the legal right to “reclaim” children from the schools of the national enemy in Moravia, a right which they retained until 1938. By the time Ota Filip's father dragged him to the German school in Slezská Ostrava/Schlesisch Ostrau, children had become one of the most precious stakes in the nationalist battle, and a parent's choice of a German or Czech school had become a matter of unprecedented personal, political, moral, and national significance.

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Articles
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Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 2004

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References

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22. These lists can be seen in SÚA, NRČ, Carton 509. Folder la České díté do české školy, 1908; Carton 508, Folder I České dítě do české školy, 1905–1906. Folder Zápisové akce Varia, 1903–04–05–06.

23. Template of letter sent to Czech parents. SÚA, NRČ, Carton 509.

24. Letter from NRČ to Spolku majitelů domů, 7 September 1906; “Zápis o schůzí agitačního sboru pro Prahu VII a VIII.” 3 September 1906; letter from Zeman Vojtěch, úředník banky Slavic, April 1909, all in SÚA, NRČ, Carton 508.

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26. Letter from NRČ to the obecní úřad v Motelech, 11 September 1906; letter to NRČ from the obecní úřad v Řepích, 1 October 1906, both in SÚA, NRČ, Carton 508.

27. Anonymous postcard sent to ÚMŠ, passed on to the Czech National Council. SÚA, NRČ, Carton 508.

28. Cohen, Gary, The Politics of Ethnic Survival (Princeton, 1981), 110.Google Scholar

29. Large estate owners were exempted from this rule, and still retained their own separate (non-national) curia for elections and in the Moravian Diet. For background on the political negotiations leading up to the Compromise and more detailed analysis of its other provisions, see Kelly, Mills, “Last Best Chance or Last Gasp? The Compromise of 1905 and Czech Politics in Moravia,” Austrian History Yearbook 34 (2003): 279301CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stourzh, , Gleichberechtigung, 213–28.Google Scholar

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33. Bezirkschulrat in Brünn an den böhmischen kk Bezirksschulrat für die Stadt Brünn. Zl. 378 Brünn, 5 February 1913. Moravský zemská archiv, (MZA), Zemská školní rada, (ZŠR), B22 1. Část, Carton 318.

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38. Budwinski, , Erkenntnisse, 1742.Google Scholar

39. DrIndra, Richard, “Návod, jak reklamovati české dítky z německých škol.” Zákon perkův, právní přiručky pro učitelstvo (Zábřeh, 1913), 43.Google Scholar

40. See surveys of Franz Raus, Franz Roček, Josef Tours, Karl Vojáček, Josef Vostál, Franz Rous, MZA, ZŠR, B22 1. Čast, Carton 329.

41. Ibid.

42. Deutscher Bezirksschulrat in Iglau an Bezirkshauptmannschaft in Trebitsch, 28 April 1912, z. 3896, wegen schleuniger Einvernahme der Kindeseltern und Erhebung für die Frage der nationalen Zugehörigkeit massgebenden Momente, MZA, ZŠR, B22 1. Čast, Carton 329.

43. Hubáček's son was ultimately permitted to remain in the German school. Beschwerde, Josef Hubáček, Hausbesitzer in Hohenstadt. 14 June 1912, 3, SÚA, SSD/V, Carton 89. Folder II/84 1912, with II/114 1912.

44. The full original text of this letter is published in Stourzh, , Gleichberechtigung, 311–16Google Scholar. The original document can be found in Folder II/84 1912, with II/114 1912, SÚA, SSD/V, Carton 89. The court's decision can be found in Budwinski, , Erkenntnisse, z. 9549/A, 19 04 1913.Google Scholar

45. Budwinski, , Erkenntnisse, z. 9549/A, 19 04 1913Google Scholar. For a similar case in which a father was assigned a Czech nationality against his will, see “Zur Beschwerde des böhmischen Ortsschulrates in Königsfeld. Wesentliche publizierte Gründe zum Erk. z. 12601/1912.” SSD/V, Carton 89. Folder II/98 1912 z. 9188 ex 1912.

46. See Aktenbund II/45 1910, Aktenbund II/46 Böhmischer Ortsschulrat in Seelowitz v. MfKU, Erk. 1814. ÖstA, AVA, VGH, Carton 304. For example, in the school district of Třebič/Trebitsch near Jihlava/Iglau 93 out of the 128 children whom the Czech school board attempted to reclaim at the start of the 1911–1912 school year had actually been successfully reclaimed for Czech schools in the fall of 1910, but reenrolled in a German school again in 1911 after brushing up on their German, z. 10881, An den deutschen kk Bezirksschulrat in Iglau-Land, Deutsche Volksschule in Trebitsch Stadt, Schülereinschreibung pro 1911–1912. 17 April 1912, MZA, ZŠR, B22 1. Část, Carton 329.

47. Aktenbund II/115 1911, Böhmischer Ortsschulrat in Komein vs. MfKU, 4 May 1912, Verhandlungsprotokoll, Beratungsprotokoll, and Stížnosi z. 1875, ÖstA, AVA, VGH, Carton 310. See also Getreue Eckart, 1909, 284–85Google Scholar. The Supreme Court also stipulated that while children were contested and their cases made their way through a complicated bureaucracy, they could remain enrolled in the schools originally chosen by their parents. Aktenbund II/108 1910 Böhmischer Ortsschulrat in Königsfeld, z. 10.299, ÖstA, AVA, VGH, Sig. II, Carton 305.

48. Indra, , “Návod,” 4950Google Scholar; “Oplátky,” Věstník ÚMŠ (1909): 190.Google Scholar

49. Beschwerde des Böhmischen Ortsschulrates in Wall. Meseritcsch v. MfKU, Aufnahme von Schulkindern in die deutschen Volksschulen, 1911–12, AVA, VGH, Sign. II, Carton 311.

50. Protokoll über die am 20. Juli 1911 im Stadthaltereigebäude in Brünn abgehaltene Beratung betreffend die Regelung der Aufnahme der Kinder in die öffentlichen Volkschulen, ÖstA, AVA, MfKU, Mähren in genere, Carton 4625, Sig. 18a, 1909.

51. See Böhmische Ortsschule in Unterkanitz v. MfKU, z. 9546, SÚA, Beschwerde des böhmischen Ortsschulrates in Unterkanitz, Erkentnisse z. 5277, SSD/V Carton 92, z. 765 1914; Beschwerde des böhmischen Ortschulrates in Königsfeld gegen die Entscheidung des MfKU vom 13. Februar 1912, z. 2679, SSD/V Carton 89. Folder II/98 191, z. 8150.

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54. On nationalist discourses on Czech humanitarian “national character” in interwar Czechoslovakia see Lass, Andrew, “What Are We Like? National Character and the Aesthetics of Distinction in Interwar Czechoslovakia,” in National Character and National Ideology in Interinar Eastern Europe, ed. Verdery, Katherine and Banac, Ivo (New Haven, 1995), 3965.Google Scholar

55. For more on the influence of local nationalist pressure groups on Czechoslovak educational, language, and land policy in the founding years of the Czechoslovak republic, see Cornwall, Mark, “The Struggle on the Czech-German Language Border, 1880–1940,” in The English Historical Review 109, no. 43 (09 1994)Google Scholar; Kučera, Jaroslav, Minderheit im Nationalstaat: Die Sprachenfrage in den tschechisch-deutschen Beziehungen, 1918–1938 (Munich, 1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Miller, Daniel, “Colonizing the German and Hungarian Border Areas During the Czechoslovak Land Reform, 1918–1938,” Austrian History Yearbook 34 (2003): 303–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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57. In Bohemia, presumably, parents could still chose between German and Czech schools in the interwar period. While the Lex Perek remained in effect it appears that other aspects of the Moravian Compromise did not.

58. Z. 6962/22, Wolframitz/Olbramovice, SÚA, Nejvyšši spravní soud, (NSS), Carton 857. The court cited both the Treaty of St. Germain and paragraphs 34, 130, 131, and 132 of the Czechoslovak Constitution to support this claim. The Lex Perek was never extended to Bohemia.

59. Z. 18098 Bartošovice/ Partschendorf, Z. 19.594/33, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858. For other cases in which the court elaborates this position on the relationship between language use and nationality, see Z. 3220/23, Z. 6962/22, Z. 9106/22, Z. 3221/23, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

60. Z. 78/24, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857. See also Z. 1826/26, Z. 27893/28, Z. 12856/28, Z. 27893/28, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858.

61. Z. 6962/22, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

62. For analysis of Czech denunciation during and after the Second World War, see Frommer, Benjamin, National Cleansing: Retribution Against Nazi Collaborators in Post World War II Czecho slovakia (New York, forthcoming)Google Scholar; Bryant, Chad, “Making the Czechs German: Nationality and Nazi Rule in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, 1939–45” (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2002).Google Scholar

63. These statistics come from my own survey of 100 random reclamations cases. See the files in the SÚA, NSS, Cartons 857, 858, and 859.

64. This principle was elaborated early on in the following early decisions: Z. 3220/23, Z. 14445/23, Z. 22210/23, Z. 2078/24, Z. 17.227/22, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

65. See for example Z. 12703/22, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857. Early on the court rejected reclamations in several of these cases because the Czech father was dead or had abandoned the family.

66. In 1910, Austrian census takers counted 3,291 German-speakers and 54 Czech-speakers in the town. By 1930 the Czechoslovak census registered 2,285 Germans and 972 Czechs. Spezialortsrepertorium von Niederösterreich (Vienna, 1915)Google Scholar; Das Deutschtum in der Tschechoslowakei zwischen beiden Weltkriegen, vol. 1 (Vienna, 1986).Google Scholar

67. All the above parental testimony is from SÚA, NSS, Carton 857. z. 5518/24, Valtice/Feldsberg.

68. Z. 22539/25 Skalice/Skalitz, SUA, NSS, Carton 857. Skalice/Skalitz had 573 Czech resi dents and 39 German residents according to the 1921 census. Pohl, , ed., Orientierungs-Lexikon.Google Scholar

69. Z. 8453/24, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

70. Z. 27893/28, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858.

71. Z. 16512/35, SÚA, NSS, Carton 859.

72. Z. 5707/29, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858.

73. Z. 20928/24, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

74. Z. 7645/25, SÚA, NSS, Carton 857.

75. Z. 13270/37, SÚA, NSS, Carton 859, also Z. 1269/34. SÚA, NSS, Carton 233.

76. Z. 16046/29, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858.

77. Z. 3834/29, SÚA, NSS, Carton 858.

78. Z. 15.406/35, SÚA, NSS, Carton 859. For parallel examples see Z. 1249/34, Z. 13269/37, SÚA, NSS, Carton 233.

79. In 1920 Czech school officials estimated the school-age population in Hlučin/Hultschin was composed of 6,579 “Moravian-speaking” children, 1,533 bilingual children, and 1,072 German-speaking children. Němečková, Jaroslava, “Vývoj školské problematiky na Hlučínsku v letech 1920–1938 a její politický obsah,” Z dějin českého školství, 1918–1945, ed. Koukal, Ervin (Prague, 1970), 7683.Google Scholar

80. Němečková, , “Vývoj školské problematiky,” 133, 233–43.Google Scholar

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82. “Aufnahme von Kindern aus dem Hultschiner Ländchen in Troppauer Schulen,” Präsidium des Landesschulrates in Brünn z. 1507, präs. 38, B.Archiv, R 1501/127120.

83. Němečková, “Vývoj školské problematiky,” 178.Google Scholar

84. Letter from Růžena Ehrmannová, majitelka soukromé německé mateřské školy v Praze XII, Prague, 6 November 1937; Letter from Josef Čapek, 3 November 1937, Městský školní výbor v Praze, č. 52463, April 1936, all in SÚA, Zemská školní rada, Carton 38.

85. For in-depth analysis of Sudeten German politics leading up to the annexation of the Sudetenland and Sudeten German attitudes toward and participation in the Nazi administration see Zimmerman, Volker, Sudetendeutsche im NS Staat: Politik und Stimmung der Bevölkerung im Reichsgau Sudetenland (Munich, 1999)Google Scholar, and Gebel, Ralf, Heim ins Reich! Konrad Henlein und der Reichsgau Sudetenland (Munich, 1999).Google Scholar

86. For examples, see Keil, Theo, ed., Die deutsche Schule in den Sudetenländern. (Munich, 1967), 469Google Scholar. On kindergartens, and women, working, “Kindergartenarbeit im Sudetenland.” Die Zeit, Prague, 26 06 1940, B.Archiv R 1501/127120Google Scholar; “Zusammenarbeit der Gemeinden und Landkreise mit der NSV zur Förderung der Kindertagesstätten,” 21 03 1941, SÚA, Uřad řisského protektorata (ÚŘP) Carton 269.Google Scholar

87. The Nazis created two generous slush funds for the purpose of “strengthening Germandom” in the Sudetengau and Protectorate: the Borderland Welfare (Grenzlandfürsorge) fund in the Sudetenland and the Volkstumsfond in the Protectorate. For an overview of the projects supported by the Volkstumsfond, see Volkstumsfond 1942, Einzelübersicht, SÚA, ÚŘP, Carton 269. For examples of requests for schools and social welfare programs from Sudeten German officials to rectify alleged interwar “Czechification” and “colonization,” see Memorandum an das Reich und preussische Ministerium des Innern, v. Bürgermeister der Stadt Troppau, October 10, 1938, B.Archiv, R 1501/127120; Grenzlandfürsorge Sudetenland, Regierungsbezirk Karlsbad II/5 2086/39, Karlsbad June 23, 1939, B.Archiv R 1501/127122; Grenzlandfürsorge Sudetenland, Regierungsbezirk Aussig, Ib Volk 101/00, 1 September 1941, B.Archiv R1501/127121; Grenzlandfürsorge Sudetenland, Anträge auf Gewährung von Beihilfen zur Pflege und Förderung des Deutschtums, 1941, B.Archiv R1501/127121.

88. Konrad Henlein himself opposed any plans to “Germanize” Czechs, arguing for complete territorial separation (i.e., expulsion). See Gebel, , Heim ins Reich, 289326Google Scholar. For Germanization plans outlined by von Neurath and Frank in the fall of 1940, see Král, Václav, Lesson from History: Documents concerning Nazi Policies for Germanization and Extermination in Czechoslovakia (Prague, 1960), Doc. 6, 5463Google Scholar. For analysis of Germanization policies pursued by the Third Reich, see Bryant, , “Making the Czechs German,” chap. 2–3.Google Scholar

89. On measures to repress Czech education in the Protectorate, see Doležal, Jiří, Česká kultura za protektorátu: školství, písemnictví, kinematographie. (Prague, 1996)Google Scholar; Bryant, , “Making the Czechs German,” chap. 4.Google Scholar

90. In Poland, newly registered Volksdeutsche were classified into four categories based on their “degree” of Germanness. These criteria were circulated in the protectorate but not adopted as official policy. Abschrift des Reichs Führers SS, Reichskommissar für die Festigung des deutschen Volkstums. Erlass über die Überprüfung der Bevölkerung in den eingegliederten Ostgebieten, SÚA, ÚŘP, Carton 520. Doris Bergen has argued that these criteria created an incentive to anti-Semitic violence in the occupied East, as questionable candidates for Germandom could “prove” their “Germanness” through violence against Jews. Bergen, , “The Nazi Concept of Volksdeutsche and the Exacerbation of Anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe, 1939–1945,” Journal of Contemporary History 29, no. 4 (1994): 569–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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93. Aufnahme tschechisch sprechender Kinder in deutsche Schulen, 28 June 1940, SÚA, ÚŘP, Carton 295.

94. Merkblatt für die Begutachtung von Vorhaben eines Besuchs deutscher Schulen durch tschechische Volkszugehörige, SÚA, ÚŘP, Carton 295. On disputes within the administration over the use of “race” or “conviction” as the criterion for Germanization, see Gebel, , Heim ins Reich!, 298305.Google Scholar

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100. Letter to Reichsprotektor, Brünn, 13 February 1941, SÚA, ÚŘP, Carton 292.

101. Oberlandrat in Brunn an den Herrn Reichsprotektor in Böhmen und Mähren, 28 May 1941, SÚA, ÚŘP Carton 292. For more on Toušek, see Bryant, , “Making the Czechs German,” chap. 1.Google Scholar

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113. Ibid., no. 41, 17 January 1940,656.

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119. Beobachtungen während des Jugendtages, Prague, 20 September 1943, SÚA, Kuratorium, Carton 43.

120. Reich-loyal Czech Nationalism may have been similar in certain respects to the nationalities policies of the former Soviet Union, which sought to promote symbolic markers of national identity in order to domesticate political nationalism. Martin, Terry, The Affirmative Action Empire: Nations and Nationalism in the Soviet Union, 1923–1939 (Ithaca, 2003)Google Scholar; Slezkine, Yuri, “The USSR as a Communal Apartment, or How a Socialist State Promoted Ethnic Particularism,” in Becoming National: A Reader, ed. Eley, Geoff and Suny, Ronald (Oxford, 1996), 203–39.Google Scholar

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123. Ibid.

124. Unser Einfluss auf die ältere Schuljugend, Prague, 21 April 1944, SÚA, Kuratorium, Carton 43.

125. Kuratorium für Jugenderziehung.

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132. Hlas lidu, a newspaper of the Czech People's Parry in Budějovice/Budweis, cautioned in 1947 “we must not allow ourselves to make Czechs out of Germans, but then again, we must not allow ourselves to make Germans out of Czechs either. Many mixed marriages, and especially the children from those marriages must be examined very carefully, so we do not commit any injustice.” Hlas lidu, 27 06 1945, 34Google Scholar. Cited, in King, , Buduweisers, 195Google Scholar. On the dynamics of national ascription during the expulsions see Bryant, , “Either German or Czech,” 683706Google Scholar; Frommer, Benjamin, “Denouncers and Fraternizers: Gender, Collaboration, and Retribution in Bohemia and Moravia,” in Women and War, ed. Wingfield and BucurGoogle Scholar; King, , Budweisers, 190202Google Scholar. The presidential decree which stripped Germans ot their citizenship in 1945 simultaneously ruled that citizens who had “become” German during the occupation could remain in Czechoslovakia if issued a certificate of “national reliability” by a District National Committee.

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136. Recent Czech-language literature on this topic continues to promote precisely these myths. See for example Doležal, , Česká kulturaGoogle Scholar; Řehaček, Karel, “České menšinové školství na Stříbsku v letech 1938–1939,” in Historie okupovaného pohraničí, ed. Radvanovský, Zdenék (Ustí nad Labem, 2000).Google Scholar

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