I am still in Germany, which is very much against my liking I applied for a US visa in 1945. Although I am a Czech citizen, but as I was born in Vienna, I have to go to the states on the Austrian quota , which is badly oversubscribed. I was told by my lawyer that there will be no more visas issued before July. I am trying to make the best of it, but I should prefer to be in the States and to get a permanent job.
It is somehow surprising and amazing to watch the speed with which things are done by the US government, being used to European conditions.The work here is coming to an end, more quickly than expected. Many things may have to be left undone, and a fair proportion of all the investigational and microfilming work will not be utilized, because no time is left to index and process it properly. Very much of good material was and is in the mill just now and can hardly be processed without help of the German scientists in the Document Branch. But the army wants us out of Germany. Gen Clay wanted us out of Germany as the new policy will rebuild Germany and he does not want anybody here who tries to get knowledge or information out of this country. The DOC is trying to get a three month extension, which would be all that is necessary. I sometimes wonder how much benefit will derive to the industry as a whole. My impression is that the dissemination of German reports in the form of microfilm will be a difficult job and would take so long that most industries will not be willing to wait for it. That may be a pity in many cases, as a lot of effort and work has been put into this organization. I personally would prefer if FIAT could carry on for just that time, but if it doesn't, I shall say thanks for everything I had here and take another job. The Krupps' team of the war crime people want somebody with experience in metals so I may be in Nuremberg next month.
I bought a Volkswagen. Gasoline is furnished by the army, as transportation here is getting worse and worse. Conditions in general are very bad. It is difficult to find a German of the younger generation who would not like to emigrate and leave his country. Germany is too weak now to recover on its own strength alone, particularly if no unity can be reached on any major issues. The credit of the US army is high. This based to fair degree on the PX and not on the belief in democracy. More than 50 % of German youths joined American sponsored youth clubs largely because of additional food, and to a lesser degree because they want to learn English. Everything over here can be bought for a few cigarettes or a pound of coffee, whether a shop keeper, policeman or a pretty girl. Democracy does not mean much the average German. He thinks it brought worse living conditions than ever. Of course he is wrong, it was not democracy, but he himself and Hitler who brought all this about, but people have short memories, and remember that Hitler did much for them and now the communists preach a new millennium and they will fall for it again. It seems that many of the Germans hope for an early clash between East and West, and the country is full of rumors of an oncoming war. The communists are clever and absolutely unscrupulous, more than ever. I wonder whether we shall see another war. I don't see how one can cooperate with people who have no moral principles at all.
This is a first hand account of my father's experiences before and after World War 2 as told to me and other family members in letters. I took exerpts from his letters and put them in the form of a blog and autobiography. I believe he had a very interesting life living through 2 world wars and many other events and I hope many people will find it of interest.
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
June 14, 1947
I would like to go to Vienna, but no permits are issued. the US authorities don't like visitors because billets are scarce and every bit of food has to be shipped for such a long distance. One can go to Salzburg or Innsbruck, and I have applied again. As Vienna was out I went to Prague and Moravska Ostrava last week. ( my note: Moravska Ostrava is now the third largest city in the Czech Republic and the second largest urban agglomeration after Prague. Located close to the Polish border. Its history and growth have been largely affected by exploitation and further use of the high quality black coal deposits discovered in the locality, giving the town a look of an industrial city and a nickname of the “steel heart of the republic” during the communist era of Czechoslovakia. Many of the heavy industry companies are being closed down or transformed, yet the city remains one of the most polluted in the EU.) Prague is as beautiful as ever. The country has recovered to an amazing degree. Food is better than in England, they have a ration card, but in restaurants you pay 25% more and get everything without the cards. I spent an evening with an old friend who is in charge of the office of the World Jewish Congress. Both he and his wife had been in several concentration camps and luckily enough found each other again after everything was over. They, as well as other people I met, do not want to stay. One has a feeling slightly comparable to the one in 1938. Also then Prague was lovely, food plentiful, industry working- but a big shadow of uncertainty loomed over it all. One can talk freely in Prague, as one could in 1938, papers from London and New York are sold in the streets. But the question felt everywhere is how long will it please Stalin to permit all this? When I was in Moravska Ostrava, I visited my cousin Irma. No one from her family survived at all, except her sister, Stella, who is in New York.
I also visited the factory ( Elbertzhagen & Glassner - family steel factory that he managed until 1939, and was confiscated by the Nazis). Mr Bucala, who worked under Wluka in the old days in the accounting office, is now the procurist, and a new man from Witkowitz is the director. The factory has been enlarged very much during the war. Now it is called First Ostrauer Machine Factory, Nationalized Undertaking. Like all the big mills it has been nationalized, and there is not the slightest hope or chance ever to get this factory back. Laws about compensation have not been passed yet, but one may get finally a few thousand Kronen, if one is lucky, and if everything would be slightly less involved than it happens to be, due to the skill of Hugo, Tony, Ludwig and Alfred (his uncles). But the feeling against everything German, and capitalist is very strong, and it is absolutely ridiculous even to consider for a moment to return there, except on holidays to the Tatra ( a mountain range which forms a natural border between Slovakia and Poland, and are the highest mountain range in the Carpathian Mountains ) or Prague. I was not permitted to enter the factory, which made me rather sad, being slightly sentimental. But as the factory is working on government orders they still have got these silly orders, and since they think of me as "American" they were not willing to let me in. I spoke to one of the old bosses, who was very good and nice, but the other people did not like seeing me. They are Czechs, and antisemitism and anti-capitalism is very strong in these nationalized mills. Hatred of the Germans is terribly strong everywhere, much more than in Belgium or France. Ostrau itself is rather poor. There is hardly any damage, but most civilized people have gone. I went to the old cafe and felt glad to get out again. On the other hand, the workers seem to profit under the new system. Everybody agrees that the spirit of the workers is high and their condition is good. I went to see Dr Kraleczek, who was and is a lawyer, and who looked after my things in 1939. His wife is Jewish, and all her family has been killed.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)