In September 1938, the Munich Agreement delivered the
Sudetenland to Germany. Six months later, Hitler's troops marched
unopposed into Prague and established the Protectorate of Bohemia
and Moravia--the first non-German territory to be occupied by Nazi
Germany. Although Czechs outnumbered Germans thirty to one, Nazi
leaders were determined to make the region entirely German.
Chad Bryant explores the origins and implementation of these
plans as part of a wider history of Nazi rule and its consequences
for the region. To make the Protectorate German, half the Czech
population (and all Jews) would be expelled or killed, with the
other half assimilated into a German national community with the
correct racial and cultural composition. With the arrival of
Reinhard Heydrich, Germanization measures accelerated. People faced
mounting pressure from all sides. The Nazis required their subjects
to act (and speak) German, while Czech patriots, and exiled
leaders, pressed their countrymen to act as "good Czechs."
By destroying democratic institutions, harnessing the economy,
redefining citizenship, murdering the Jews, and creating a climate
of terror, the Nazi occupation set the stage for the postwar
expulsion of Czechoslovakia's three million Germans and for the
Communists' rise to power in 1948. The region, Bryant shows, became
entirely Czech, but not before Nazi rulers and their postwar
successors had changed forever what it meant to be Czech, or
German.
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