Germans of Czechoslovakia : What Happened?

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2024
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    There is extra historical information and clarification in the pinned comment.
    0:00 Introduction
    4:08 Reaching an Accord
    18:41 Nationalsozialismus
    28:48 WW2
    33:32 'The Final Solution'
    _________________________________________________________________
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    #history #czechoslovakia #ww2 #germany #czech #slovakia #sudeten #expulsion

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @MLaserHistory
    @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +189

    Extra Information & Clarifications
    Sources for all my videos are in the bibliography of my scripts all available to download for FREE on my Patreon. www.patreon.com/mlaser?filters[tag]=script
    0:05 In the shown map I am not accounting for post war border changes like the land transfer between Czechoslovakia & Poland and or Hungary & Austria. Even though at some points I will be talking about 1918 or 1920, before all the border disputes in Central Europe had been settled, the maps will only reflect the final state of Central European borders.
    0:26 The Czech part of the map shows the 1921 census & the Slovak 1910 census (I was unable to get hold of the Slovak 1921 regional data. There was a 30% decrees in the number of Germans in Slovakia between the 1910 & 1921 censuses. This can easily be explained by the fact that around 65% of Germans living in Slovakia were natively bilingual) while the 3.2 million number comes from the German population of Czechoslovakia in 1938. The number of Germans in the 1921 census was 3.123 million
    1:15 This map is based on the 1930s Czechoslovak census & was made based on an amazing map made by the Czechoslovak ministry of defence in the 1930s
    2:02 There was a bunch of contention within the socialist & communist parties of Czechoslovakia, including the ones mentioned, on the grounds of how much socialist/communist they should be. For example, Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party were mostly light socialist & some more radical people split from the party to form a Communist party. Such splitting of leftist parties & forming of new parties & dissolution of other parties was very common in interwar Czechoslovakia. However, all of these parties were more concerned with the "class struggle" rather than ethnic struggle
    3:57 Ethnicity is a social construct, as such it can form in different ways (there isn't one inevitable outcome) & can be malleable. The Czech & Slovak ethnic identities of today were much more fluid in the 19th & 20th century & the idea that Czechs are separate from the Slovaks wasn't the only idea at the time. Some people which we would today define as Czechs & Slovaks, all the way in the medieval era, believed themselves to be of one ethnic group. Modern believers of this idea, as ethnic identities began to be far more important during the modern period, tried to form one official united ethnic identity which included both Czechs & Slovaks (they tried this through News Paper like Hlas). During this time other Czechs & Slovaks (although they wouldn't want to be called that) even flirted with Pan-Slavism i.e. all Slavs are the same & one ethnicity. Anyways, the Czechoslovak ethnic proponents partially succeeded as the idea of a Czechoslovak ethnicity, composed of two subgroups, was quite widespread in usage during the first Czechoslovak Republic. There were people, like the first president of Czechoslovakia, who identified as Czechoslovak. However, over time, especially after the Slovak Fascist State, the idea of Czechoslovak ethnicity fell out of use, & by the 1990s it was so well out of use that the splitting of the nation, based largely on an idea of separate ethnic identities, was possible. However, none of these later developments detract from the fact that a Czechoslovak ethnic identity did exist & was used by both Czechs & Slovaks during the First Republic. That is why it's used in this video
    5:14 Here I used the phrase German-speaking as opposed to just German. This is because it was language not ethnicity that was used in the AH's censuses that were used to determine which areas had a German majority & which had a Czech
    9:04 What is interesting here is that Kramar was considered as one of the more chauvinistic Czechoslovak politicians & was far more nationalistic than, for example, Masarik or Benes. However, even he, as you can see with his quote, was against violent attacks on Germans & their property & understood the importance of not antagonising the Germans
    10:55 There were few instances of these terms being used before 1918 but they were never used by the Czechoslovak Germans themselves. It was only after the formation of Czechoslovakia that these terms started to be used as ethnic identifiers by the Germans of Czechia & Slovakia
    13:31 The 20% mark wasn't defined in the constitution. It was left open in order to be defined later when or if the minority parties were willing to negotiate. This didn't happen as the minority parties viewed any negotiation as admitting defeat, & so the old 20% standard of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was adopted as the mark for Czechoslovakia as it was deemed to be the most "equal" solution
    15:33 The one gripe that everyone keeps holding against Masaryk was that he called the Germans 'colonists' & 'settlers' in Czechoslovakia during his December 1918 speech to the nation called 'první poselství'. However, in that same speech Masaryk called for ethnic unity & for creating "free self-governing citizenship" composed of all "equal" ethnic groups, including Germans, Hungarians, & Rusyns. His statement of calling German 'colonists' & 'settlers' wasn't meant to incite ideas of deportation or ethnic cleansing, it was simply a statement of the historical reality. Nevertheless, the statement was very controversial at the time & Masaryk did later, during a newspaper interview, apologise to the Sudeten Germans for saying it. Masaryk never, at any point, called for ethnic cleansing & his entire agenda was always one of co-prosperity & interethnic unity in the country
    19:39 Confusingly all the Nazi parties in the various countries retained the same name. So instead of calling the German, Czechoslovak, & Austrian Nazis the same name I will specify which country they're from
    20:59 The Czechoslovak Nazi party was technically able to get a bit more % of the vote then just 3.5 as they ran on a joined election ticket with the German National Party. All together both parties manage to score a bit over 5% of the Czechoslovak vote
    21:47 The Nazis knew the Czechoslovak government was going to ban & dissolve them & before the ruling could pass through the parliament they preemptively dissolved themselves. So "technically" they weren't dissolved by Czechoslovakia but they were banned & the funds of the paramilitary Volkssport were seized
    22:48 Estimated because there are no unemployment figures that differentiate among ethnicity. Also, it must be stated that the reasons which made the Germans suffer more during the great depression also made their economic recovery after the great depression, more specifically after 1937, faster
    28:31 I am skipping over a lot of Czechoslovak internal politics here because I found them to be irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. Nothing, other than western intervention, would have prevented the conquest of Czechoslovakia by Germany
    28:25 What would become the Munich agreement was already being negotiated before the September coup attempt but the uprising was the final nail in the coffin for the allied decision
    29:25 However, any planned large-scale settlement of Germans in Czechia never happened due to the war
    31:00 I will admit that stating that one terrible experience isn’t as bad as another terrible experience is missing the point a bit
    31:18 Population changes shown on screen are estimates so you will see a bit different numbers from various sources. However, every single source will agree that the population of Czechia during the war grew while the populations of Poland & Ukraine drastically fell
    33:45 The scale & planned execution of this idea changed on an almost monthly bases depending on various conversations, state of the war, & support or reluctance from the allies. At one point in 1941-2 Benes even tabled the idea of autonomous German parts within Czechoslovakia, with expulsion of only the members of the Nazi party (which at most would be 20% of the German Czechoslovak population). However, this got rejected by the Czechoslovak nationalistic elements. On the other hand a lot of the Sudeten Germans in exile also rejected various proposals from the Czechoslovak government in exile, basically, for the most part, no one was willing to compromise
    33:45 There's far more nuanced diplomacy happening here. For example, the allies, including UK & USA, agreed earlier in 1942 to an organized expulsion of Germans but by 1944-5 UK & USA were reluctant to officially sanction it. Basically there was a lot of backroom diplomacy with secret deals being made & others being broken. But in broad strokes what I talk about in the video is accurate
    36:22 The Russian, & in parts of Western Czechia, US troops sometimes tried to mediate the tensions between the German civilians & Czechoslovak militias but the troops were not everywhere, especially not in rural towns & villages, & even if they were, they would often let the locals do what they want & not interfere
    38:28 Some of these camps, after 1948, were also used by the communist as gulags
    38:45 The labor camp showen was a German labor camp in Petrzalka not Pezinok. A picture of the Pezinok labor camp doesn't exist
    39:00 The picture is of a camp in Terezin which was built by the Nazis & later used by the Czechoslovaks. This is not a picture of the camp in Budejovice (no pictures of it exist), it is only here to serve as a visual representation
    There were many other instances of brutality & executions of the Germans than I have mentioned here (I cannot mention everything). Like, for example, the execution of around 100 Hauerland Germans in today's Slovakia, or the roughly 1000 Germans shot dead in Postoloprty, etc.n

    • @erika8889
      @erika8889 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Today is also Munich agreement day, did you do that on purpose?

    • @lionelhubeny404
      @lionelhubeny404 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Hezký přízvuk :)

    • @Asptuber
      @Asptuber Před 7 měsíci +5

      Already the video in itself was fantastic - especially wrt to the pictures. And then these footnotes, wow!
      Your use of images is so far from what commercial documentaries manages to do that it isn't funny. I usually give up on those big budget productions because I can't deal with the flood of "illustrative" images that seems to have been put together by some "visual artist" without any historical knowledge whatsoever.
      In contrast here I had to pause the video so often to look at the various things you are showing (I love old pamphlets and posters) that I should really watch the video again :-)

    • @danielkoucky3711
      @danielkoucky3711 Před 6 měsíci

      It's great!

    • @JustRomanian95
      @JustRomanian95 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Ya should make a video about history of Romania 🇷🇴

  • @archstanton3931
    @archstanton3931 Před 7 měsíci +3234

    My grandfather was a Sudeten German. When his family was exiled, he left a harmonica with a Czech neighbor, and decades later he returned to his hometown as an adult to find that she not only lived in the same house, but had kept the harmonica for all those years.

    • @igor-yp1xv
      @igor-yp1xv Před 7 měsíci +170

      What a cool story

    • @qhu3878
      @qhu3878 Před 7 měsíci +222

      based czech woman

    • @shezhenping3072
      @shezhenping3072 Před 6 měsíci +22

      how wholesome

    • @YourSocialistAutomaton
      @YourSocialistAutomaton Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@dylanvogler2165good things russia did

    • @YarpYarp-qu5or
      @YarpYarp-qu5or Před 6 měsíci

      slavs are not even native to central europe. the slavs came with the great migration period from eastern european plains. before that balts and germanics lived throughout these areas and illyrians in the balkan with celts and greeks. how about the slavs simply return home to russia@@dylanvogler2165

  • @mg4361
    @mg4361 Před 7 měsíci +896

    Something similar was going on in eastern Croatia (Slavonia) and northern Serbia (Vojvodina) at the time. My grandma's family got a house and land grant in Slavonia, but when they got there, they found the german family that owned the farm shot dead and deposeted on the dung heap. They didn't want to live in a place obtained in such a way and went back to their village in the mountains of south Croatia.

    • @Gusararr
      @Gusararr Před 7 měsíci +89

      Well Croatians or Yugoslavs also depored/killed large amount of Italians from Dalmatia and Istria too

    • @DefinitelySchizo
      @DefinitelySchizo Před 7 měsíci +157

      Good on your grandmas family, horrible that stuff like that happened

    • @mg4361
      @mg4361 Před 7 měsíci +71

      @@DefinitelySchizo Yup, those were horrible and chaotic times with a lot of brutalities happening. This is not the only personal account of horror that I heard from that time. Talkig to my grandparents, hearing what they saw, I'm fascinated that none of them developed any visible PTSD and they all managed to live pretty normal lives afterwards.

    • @IKMojito
      @IKMojito Před 7 měsíci +43

      My families Vojvodinia German on my Mother's side and Hungarian on my father and yeah, insanely tragic things happened to so many of us. Most of the family was killed, but a handful were just left with their farms and lands taken away

    • @nsk370
      @nsk370 Před 6 měsíci +57

      ​​@@Gusararrthe Italian deportation and killings are mostly a myth, perpetuated by post war Italian nationalists politicians and others. Unlike with Germans who did face deportation and were not allowed to stay, Italians were never deported, and tens of thousands stayed and continued to live in peace. Most Italians did leave, but that was because of fear and opposition to Yugoslav government, not forced and not by orders. As for the killed - the case of Foibe is perhaps one of the most blown out of proportion events of modern history. A historic joint research commision of both Italian and Slovenian historians was created to research it, and the findings were that between 2000 and 4000 people were killed in total, over the course of 4 years of war, of which a large degree was Italian occupation soldiers and yugoslav collaborators in wartime actions, while the civilians who were killed were also of both ethnicities and not targeted for ethnic background but for political reasons, of real or precieved collaboration or fascist sympathism, just as such massacres happened to a much larger scale against native Yugoslavs.
      While still sad moment of history, it is not comparable to fascist-nazist ethnic cleansing or post war retaliations and deportations of Germans, neither in scale nor in scope.

  • @auto952
    @auto952 Před 7 měsíci +1179

    Do what happened to the Greeks of Constantinople/Istanbul, culminating in the Istanbul Pogrom of 1955. Greeks made up 31% of the city's population in 1919, when Turks made 38%. It's a very interesting story.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +577

      There is something to be said about the Greco-Turkish ethnic wars, exchanges, and conflicts of the early 20th century as they were kind of a precursor to other ones in Europe like the expulsion of the Germans, but I don't want to go into another depressing topic any time soon. I need some positive ones after this video.

    • @stariyczedun
      @stariyczedun Před 7 měsíci +79

      @@MLaserHistory take care mate! Your mental wellbeing is more important. I can relate somewhat - I followed Ukranian war pretty closely since I'm still a Russian citizen and I live not that far away from the action and I got a sort of a mild PTSD as a result. Now my fav topics of history, politics and war sometimes make me really anxious so I completely stopped watching some of my fav youtube channels. Just can't stomach it anymore.

    • @bigchungus1920
      @bigchungus1920 Před 7 měsíci +20

      @@stariyczedunI hope things get better and to can enjoy these subjects again soon. I will do prayers that the conflicts don’t spread and peace comes as quick as possible so no more death

    • @screwstatists7324
      @screwstatists7324 Před 7 měsíci

      If these deportations were ok, why not deport all minorities from Europe starting today?

    • @pietromorenoallaho
      @pietromorenoallaho Před 6 měsíci +21

      @@stariyczedun "mild PTSD" lmao, no you didnt. not every feeling of shame and anxiety has a cool modern name. you insult those with actual PTSD.

  • @flopunkt3665
    @flopunkt3665 Před 6 měsíci +279

    In Bavaria we have entire towns founded by Sudeten Germans after the war, like Neu-Gablonz, Waldkraiburg or Traunreut. And lots of cities often have an area called "Neue Heimat" (new home). A large part of the Bavarian population descends from Sudeten Germans today, and Bavaria has a population larger than that of Austria or the Czech Republic.

    • @flopunkt3665
      @flopunkt3665 Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@ilovememes2628 the last part is just not true, since the Sudete Germans settled in all parts of Bavaria, also Franconia.

    • @TheHighwayDreams
      @TheHighwayDreams Před 6 měsíci +3

      The same here in Thüringen too

    • @TheOljebaronen
      @TheOljebaronen Před 6 měsíci

      When vacationing in Grossgmain, south west of Salzburg , a couple of years ago, I encountered a memorial. It's memorial text surprised me. It was a tale of German suffering of people driven away from Sudetenland.
      I am aware of the history, The Reichsgau Sudetenland -38, WW2 and the departure of the Germans post -45 and all that... so nothing new there.
      What was new was the the message of the memorial. I was surprised. First time ever that I saw a memorial for suffering Germans. I. e. ordinary people. I my mind everybody else in Europe suffered. From German doing. The German nazis only got what they deserved. Right?!
      Well, this memorial contrasted very much with my up grown overall picture. It was a lesson and an awakening for me.
      www.google.se/maps/@47.7253838,12.9101689,3a,75y,218.31h,96.59t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1s-S2shXcCnCXnRIvsWKMWBA!2e0!7i16384!8i8192?hl=sv&entry=ttu

    • @Y2Drifter
      @Y2Drifter Před 6 měsíci +4

      Bavaria is still the largest of the Germanic states, and it should have remained a sovereign and independent state !

    • @TheOljebaronen
      @TheOljebaronen Před 6 měsíci +8

      ​@@Y2Drifter Interesting You are mentioning that.
      I was vacationing in Schwangau, Bavaria this year. Hiking and looking around.
      When reading about the history of the various places and palaces I visited and of Ludwig II and that time, I encountered a small piece of text. I believe it was on Wikipedia.
      It mentions briefly that during the 20-ies, in the aftermath of the dissolution of the German and the Austro-Hungarian empires, there were ideas and even suggestions to resurrect Bavaria as an independent Kingdom.
      Not surprisingly, people around the old Royal family and certain members of the Bavarian elite supported the idea. But there were apparently also some Bavarian nationalistic sentiments left among common people as well.
      Question:
      How is it today? How do ordinary Bavarians think of the matter today? Are there any sentiments for a Bavarian independent state? Is the idea discussed or are people happy with things as they are?

  • @michaelmcnally9737
    @michaelmcnally9737 Před 7 měsíci +294

    Using the CZcams logo to censor the forbidden symbol was genius

    • @martinsriber7760
      @martinsriber7760 Před 7 měsíci +55

      In distant future people will have the two symbols confused.

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. Před 7 měsíci +41

      @@martinsriber7760 Oh God, you are right. Especially since I've seen this exact method of tongue-in-cheek censorship multiple times on different channels. It serves CZcams right. 😄

    • @petterbirgersson4489
      @petterbirgersson4489 Před 6 měsíci +11

      ​@@martinsriber7760Maybe for good reasons. 🙃

    • @LebenderZombie
      @LebenderZombie Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@martinsriber7760 in the future both symbols will be banned.

    • @davilimalol4612
      @davilimalol4612 Před 6 měsíci +7

      Credit Alternate History Hub for it, if you haven't, pretty sure he was doing it years ago.

  • @DGAMINGDE
    @DGAMINGDE Před 6 měsíci +434

    My grandpas family was expelled from the Sudetenland, but he always had a surprisingly positive experience with the Czechs that got the house, to an extend that other Germans from the region are confused. The family let my grand-grandpa take valuable family stuff from the house over the border and my grandparents now often visit. We children even got socks knitted by a Czech grandma, who sadly passed away around 3 years ago. If anything he only had a bad experience with the Soviets, who sadly shot the family dog (who was not attacking them and in their shed).
    Ironically he faced discrimination by other school kids in East Germany for being "foreign". I think we can just agree, that its bad to to ethnic cleansing. Its not a good look, if people use Nazi tactics to Germans that were expelled.

    • @AltIng9154
      @AltIng9154 Před 6 měsíci +22

      Always the same .Decent persons are everywhere! It could happen that the servile ones, suddenly have fun to torture you while the persons with dignity not.

    • @tomassiegl4991
      @tomassiegl4991 Před 6 měsíci +22

      You were lucky on good people. There are good Czech people like in any nation, but of course there are also bad people. Czechs are the same as Germans in many ways.

    • @DGAMINGDE
      @DGAMINGDE Před 6 měsíci +23

      @@tomassiegl4991 It also shows how arbitrary "race" can be. I talked multiple hours to my grandpa and he remembered more negative about east Germans done against him (although he isn't resentful against them either and enjoys the culture), while stressing that he only had positive experiences with Czech people.

    • @kompognatus
      @kompognatus Před 6 měsíci +16

      Ethnic cleansing isnt a Nazi tactic, its originally a British tactic

    • @bb1111116
      @bb1111116 Před 6 měsíci +50

      @@kompognatus ; before that it was a Roman tactic. Before that, it was an Assyrian tactic. Ethnic cleansing, along with genocide, unfortunately is as old as humanity.

  • @loptater9681
    @loptater9681 Před 6 měsíci +331

    As a descendent of Sudeten Germans, I greatly appreciate this video since the topic is basically unknown outside Germany and Czechia (and even there lots of folks don't know anything about it). My grandparents continue to have nightmares about the explusion and refused to watch any news about the War in Ukraine because "they had already seen enough dead bodies during their youth".
    What happened between our people was horrible and we can all be glad to finally live peacefully next to one another. May those times never repeat again.

    • @uxydra6403
      @uxydra6403 Před 6 měsíci +34

      No, everyone is very familiar with this in czechia. Even thou some people actually still think it was justified. They just dont get that a good answer to ethnic cleansing is not ethnic cleansing

    • @p.b.5107
      @p.b.5107 Před 6 měsíci +24

      It is taught in Hungary too. Also the fate of East Prussia.

    • @bone6495
      @bone6495 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@uxydra6403 Why?

    • @KnightofAges
      @KnightofAges Před 6 měsíci +28

      Don't think they can't happen again. I remember back in the 1990s, when Germany reunited, the Czechs living in one former Sudeten German village went to the graveyards and destroyed all the skeletons of the Germans they had murdered in 1945, just to make sure there were absolutely no German remains in the area. And later the Czech President Milos Zeman defended the genocide, saying the Sudeten Germans had 'betrayed their birthplace' (oddly enough, he didn't care much when HE supported the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, nor said anything about the Czechs that fought for Russia in WWI against Austria-Hungary, technically their 'birthplace').The incident even made the German President cancel a visit to Czechia.
      You may think things are different today, but I assure you, all it takes is a small fire to make the powderkeg blow up again.

    • @bone6495
      @bone6495 Před 6 měsíci +11

      @@KnightofAges As a Slav I see no problem with this. Good for the Czech people.

  • @Archerman-bd1nr
    @Archerman-bd1nr Před 6 měsíci +127

    My grandfather lived in Teplice (Teplitz). They were ethnicaly czech but spoke german (czech as well they were bilingual). After 1938 anexation his grandma switched nationalities from czech to german whitch resulted in the death of his father and brother in Stalingrad. Suprisingly after the war (mainly due to speaking czech) they were able to stay here and I also live in Teplice to this day. It was strong when he said when hitler came I had to forgot czech and when communists came I had to forgot german.

    • @Prometheus101
      @Prometheus101 Před 6 měsíci +15

      Bohužel je to tak. Nacisté a komunisté je jedno zlo.

    • @jirislavicek9954
      @jirislavicek9954 Před 6 měsíci +7

      ​@@Prometheus101Stejná pakáž. Nacisti = národní socialisti, Komunisti = internacionální socialisti

    • @jirislavicek9954
      @jirislavicek9954 Před 6 měsíci

      @@cdgncgn O liberálech jsem nic nepsal. Jinak dnešní "liberál" = neomarxista.

    • @anaturn12
      @anaturn12 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@jirislavicek9954based take. Tahle pakáž dělá to samé jen jedno definují nepřátele dle rasy druzý dle sociálního postavení

    • @martinzak3824
      @martinzak3824 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@Prometheus101Deportácie neurobili komunisti ale Beneš

  • @merxbj
    @merxbj Před 7 měsíci +294

    Great video! My grandfather was Sudeten German (*1924) and was pretty much bilingual. On the other hand, his mother (I was fortunate enough to meet her when I was still very young) still spoke rather broken Czech. Her husband was actually politically active and very much anti-Hitler. As a result, he ended up in a concentration camp, managed to survive for a couple of years but died shortly after his release. After the war, they wanted to deport the family from their house but my great grand mother successfully pleaded for an exception. However, all their friends and neighbors from the village either died during the WW2 or if they survived, they got deported. It must have been surreal to watch the new “owners” “occupy” their homes.

    • @polsyg6581
      @polsyg6581 Před 6 měsíci +12

      my gparents live there too and said the new owners were often miscreants and didnt do a good job keeping up the place but at least it kept more nature unspoiled with less folks around.

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln Před 6 měsíci +34

      @@polsyg6581Do not forget that 50 years of communism followed. Nobody was allowed to keep any kind of farm, land or factory anyway. Most often even not a home or house, because all resources belonged now to the state. So whatever was there in property, everybody lost it anyway.
      My great-grandfather had a factory in Prague (kohinoor) but he was Jewish. In 1938 the factory was seized by the Germans, and he was sent to Dachau. Officialy he „sold“ the factory for some cents to them. After 1989 the Czech state never gave us anything back, because of the Beneš decree, stating all property seized from Germans in 1946 belongs now to the Czech state.
      Can you imagine the irony??

    • @uxydra6403
      @uxydra6403 Před 6 měsíci +7

      ​@@denkendannhandelnthats an interesting Story, how three differente systems took stuff from people and insured that the original ownerd never got anything back

    • @tomassiegl4991
      @tomassiegl4991 Před 6 měsíci +12

      ​@@denkendannhandeln Koh-i-noor is a very famous Czech company. Everyone in Czechia knows Koh-i-noor. I assume there is only one company with this name in Czechia. I personally know only one Koh-i-noor. If there is more than one, it might not be the same company in that case. The company is not in state hands anymore. If it is any consolation to you, the current owner of the company seems nice. :)

    • @Mirinovic
      @Mirinovic Před 5 měsíci

      Many of this new onry was expelld from Poland

  • @m.benhart
    @m.benhart Před 5 měsíci +57

    I am Czech of German, Polish, Silesian, Italian and Slovak origin. I am Czech/German speaking and can understand Slovak and quite well Polish, because I am originally from the Moravian-Silesian region, which shares the borders with Poland and Slovakia and many people are of both Polish and German origin. To explain a little bit more my roots, my ancestors came to Ostrava/Ostrau, which was growing very fast due to the industrialization of this region. I am thankful, that nowdays we can live peacefully next to each other and enjoy the life together. I have many German and Austrian friends. Liebe Grüße aus Tschechien nach Deutschland, Österreich und an alle, die kein Hass sondern eine Annäherung unserer Länder unterstützen.

    • @redmeat4vegans62
      @redmeat4vegans62 Před 4 měsíci +5

      I hope you can continue to live in harmony. But as this story, the break up of Yugoslavia, and the rebirth of fascist/"strong-men" world wide has shown - all that harmony can quickly be wiped away by power hungry politicians playing to the basest instinct of their audiences.
      It is important for all those that want harmony and peace to vehemently oppose those that would divide us. Otherwise, we will all go blind from all the eyes and teeth taken.

    • @forentalk1418
      @forentalk1418 Před 2 měsíci

      Bravo! Hope our folks are gonna be wise enough for the upcoming decades to continue or even intensify sharing their lives and stories...

    • @martinskacel7614
      @martinskacel7614 Před 2 měsíci

      Die Kommunisten haben diesen Hass gegen die Deutschen 40 Jahre lang genährt, sie haben mich auch einer Gehirnwäsche unterzogen, aber ich habe nicht nachgegeben.

  • @sebastiankala1093
    @sebastiankala1093 Před 3 měsíci +15

    Though I'm slovak, my grandpa was a Moravian. After the war his parents were given a house and land in the Sudetes. One night, they found an old man walking around their house. When my great-grandma asked who is he, and what he wants on their property, he calmed her down and said, that he just wanted to see his old home. They got to talk, grandma invited him inside. He was one of the germans, who were expeled. He even showed her, where he hid some of their valuables, which were still there. So grandma let him take it. Grandpa was always telling me this story, because his parents felt very sorry for the man and guilty for living in the house, which he built.

  • @matthiasm4299
    @matthiasm4299 Před 6 měsíci +203

    In the 2000s, the owner of the holiday apartment we stayed in for our winter holidays here in Austria was a Sudeten German. He refused to accept Czech guests. So these wounds lived on for a long time. Of course the same is true for the more numerous victims of Nazi crimes.
    Even though I was at least superficially familiar with the topic, I was still surprised by the brutality and gained a better understanding. Thank you!
    I hope there will be a video about the Slovak WW2 uprising in the future. It just came up on the WW2 in real time channel and I honestly had never heard of it before!

    • @jonathanwilliams1065
      @jonathanwilliams1065 Před 6 měsíci

      Of course the Czechs weren’t ruling themselves after WWII, it was just a puppet government installed by the Soviet Union

    • @uxydra6403
      @uxydra6403 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Most people moved on from the complicated history the germans and slavs have but for some its too much to move on from

    • @Argacyan
      @Argacyan Před 6 měsíci +38

      @@uxydra6403 Something that makes it hard to move on from is also that little was done to make-good on what happened. Germany did, Germany's even in court with Namibia over colonial violence from more than a century ago, Czechia hasn't done shit that I've been informed of as somebody who would be if it did anything such as land-back or reparations.

    • @krasnyytsesarevich
      @krasnyytsesarevich Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@uxydra6403also among Slovenian/Croatian Italians.

    • @rafazygowicz1514
      @rafazygowicz1514 Před 6 měsíci +37

      @@Argacyanreally ? My grandfather was enslaved (forced labor camp) and never received any compensation or even an apology.

  • @danielwhite8036
    @danielwhite8036 Před 2 měsíci +7

    Czech here, It's very fascinating to hear all the personal accounts from people of Sudeten German descent. Personal stories are a great way to gain some perspective on these historical events.
    One interesting thing about the former German majority areas of Czechia is that to this day these are some of the poorest regions of the country. It's eerie how the old protectorate border lines up with unemployment, low income or crime statistics of the current day. Many german speaking villages were never resettled and remain abandoned or sparcely populated. Before the war northwest Bohemia was an industrial powerhouse and one of the richest regions of Czechoslovakia (and of Austria-Hungary before that)

  • @irena4545
    @irena4545 Před 6 měsíci +76

    A very good video, though one point seems to be missing - the aftermath of the München Agreement when not only the Sudets were ceded to Germany but the Czech population of the region was expelled. Not so brutally and forcibly, not at such a short notice, but expelled they were, and those who stayed were subject to ethnic prosecution. Just one more piece to the mosaic.
    Also, after the Velvet Revolution, the topic was opened and quite widely discussed throughout the 1990s, it's not like it's been all hush-hush.

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx Před 5 měsíci +1

      Just like they expelled us, we did unto them
      Eye for an eye

    • @irena4545
      @irena4545 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@somebodyanonymousx Sort of, I guess... I just wish we hadn't stooped to their level doing so.

    • @tylerbozinovski427
      @tylerbozinovski427 Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@somebodyanonymousxYou do realise that the smallest minority is the individual, right?

  • @Bohous156
    @Bohous156 Před 7 měsíci +170

    A part of my mother's family were Sudeten Germans, including my great-great-grandmother. She wasn't expelled after WW2 because she was married to a Czech but her sister and her family were since they were all German. A part of my family, people I don't know and who might not even know I exist, was torn away. History hits different when it directly affects those close to you. In the end I am left wondering how it could have been different and what potentional future was lost.

    • @Bohous156
      @Bohous156 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@desichalkos5627 The act of forcibly removing someone from a location - expulsion - is a way a region can be ethnically cleansed. I used this word to put emphasis on the fact that they weren't murdered.

    • @asmirann3636
      @asmirann3636 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@Bohous156Do you know Germans always had a very positive view of Ethnic cleansing.
      If you read German history or German writers from 18th, 19th and 20th century, all of them were advocating ethnic cleansing. First it were of the Natives in Americas, then Africans in Africa and finally specific type of Europeans in Europe.
      But you correctly pointed out that history hits differently when it directly affects those close to you. Since Germans themselves were never a victim of ethnic cleansing till WW2, they were always in favour of such kinds of things. On top of it empathy and kindness were probably never part of German culture, so doing acts of violence on others was easier for Germans.

    • @pachekusdimitrescus1
      @pachekusdimitrescus1 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@asmirann3636 To be fair, most nations and cultures advocated for such policies, the russians (with ukraine, caucasus, baltics...), the french (algeria), italians (south tyrol)...

    • @tylerbozinovski427
      @tylerbozinovski427 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​​@@asmirann3636"empathy and kindness were probably never part of German culture" Seriously, have you not studied basic history? Are you not aware of how the Germans have always been more kind and empathetic than most other cultures (particularly Eastern and Southern Europeans)? For one, they reformed and enfranchised people a lot sooner than many other places. Even France and Britain didn't have universal male suffrage before Germany did. Germany and Austria also allowed women to vote before France and Italy did.
      Claiming that Germans were in favour of ethnic cleansing also ignores the fact that they're not a monolith who all share the same views. The years of the Weimar Republic are very good evidence of this.

  • @spanishSpaniard
    @spanishSpaniard Před 7 měsíci +108

    Seeing this topic I can't stop myshelf from thinking of similarish situation that is happing as this video releases. The fleeing armenians from nagorno karabak.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +49

      Honestly, yeah ... :(

    • @buurmeisje
      @buurmeisje Před 7 měsíci +5

      Except the Armenians are mostly settlers that commited ethnic cleansing against the Azeri population in the 90s, that is the comparison. Azeris are finally putting things right, returning homes to hundreds of thousands of people.

    • @yrobtsvt
      @yrobtsvt Před 7 měsíci +33

      @@buurmeisje Eye for an eye...

    • @piuthemagicman
      @piuthemagicman Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@buurmeisjeYeah, the cycle of revenge that has been proven to stabilize nations. Right?

    • @fnansjy456
      @fnansjy456 Před 6 měsíci +32

      ​@@buurmeisjeNo they are not Ngarno-karabakh has always been majority armenian you can look at past census. Yes there were Ethnic cleansing of the azeri population in the 90s which was bad and does not justify More ethnic cleansing rambert azeribajain also committed ethnic cleansing in the 90s .Nothing justifes ethnic cleansing. What is right is to allow both tye armenian and azeri population to return to ngarno karabakh and the principle of national self determination to sort this out

  • @pamelahalstead
    @pamelahalstead Před 6 měsíci +54

    This was the most detailed, documented and frankly honest presentation of the Sudaten German and Czech history together I have heard. Thank you.

    • @gunwu9084
      @gunwu9084 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, surprisingly honest.

  • @markmuller7962
    @markmuller7962 Před 7 měsíci +188

    Such an ugly age for the European continent, I consider myself extremely lucky to have born after ww2

    • @georgejanzen774
      @georgejanzen774 Před 7 měsíci +31

      Though we need to stay forever vigilant. We still have politicians "declaring war to the end upon liberalism", people shouting racist slogans on the streets and, of course, on the internet,... Even in our own societies that we consider more civilized and more advanced, the idea of ethnic division resurfaces depressingly often. I feel like we're still just one economic crisis away from a backslide into the 1930's.

    • @williamchamberlain2263
      @williamchamberlain2263 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Yep

    • @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506
      @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 Před 6 měsíci +5

      ​@@georgejanzen774These conflicts arose out of the new borders. Everybody wanted an ethnostate. Just all have been decided by plebscites. That's how you avoid shitty conflicts like in southern Tirol, the Sudetenland or Carinthia.

    • @TheSonOfDumb
      @TheSonOfDumb Před 6 měsíci +15

      @@georgejanzen774 The pendulum is simply swinging back. Well, I don't mind that it is.

    • @alenahubbard1391
      @alenahubbard1391 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@TheSonOfDumbYou don't mind that racism and fascism is on the rise? 🙄 Good to know.

  • @CatarigMaTt
    @CatarigMaTt Před 7 měsíci +68

    Guys, wake up a new video by M. Laser History just dropped

    • @tigergamespl2713
      @tigergamespl2713 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Cool countryball

    • @pavan923
      @pavan923 Před 7 měsíci

      Guys wake up, its time for our weekly jelq session

  • @valentinbezdan570
    @valentinbezdan570 Před 6 měsíci +13

    Quick sidenote: in German, if there is an "h" after a vowel in a word, it is not pronounced. Instead it makes that vowel long. Wehr would be pronounced with a long "e" and with the "h" silent.

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Před 7 měsíci +82

    Why am I always kinda busy when my favorite HistoryTubers drop an amazing colab?

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +26

      In order that you take a break, everyone needs breaks.

    • @CatarigMaTt
      @CatarigMaTt Před 7 měsíci +9

      ​@@MLaserHistorycorrect

    • @Shrey_Shrek
      @Shrey_Shrek Před 6 měsíci +3

      chelanguages viewer?

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Shrey_Shrek Yes. 😁

    • @Shrey_Shrek
      @Shrey_Shrek Před 6 měsíci +2

      super@@Artur_M.

  • @fireant002
    @fireant002 Před 7 měsíci +140

    As an ethnic Czech from Prague I had no idea about most of this. We are taught about the two burned Czech villages over and over, but the scale of inhumanity done to Germans after the war has always been glossed over. Great video, I really appreciate you focusing on quotes rather than personal opinions and explanations.

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Před 6 měsíci +20

      You are not taught about that? How do you explain that 3 million Germans lived in Czechoslovakia before the war and now there are almost none? There were even more Germans than Slovaks in this interwar Czecho-German-Slovakia.
      P.S.: in the Slovak part of the ČSSR you did the same to the Hungarian population, although not so thoroughly.

    • @DiskusGames
      @DiskusGames Před 6 měsíci +10

      I‘m from Germany and this isn’t something we learn much about either. And I even lived basically next to the Czech border.

    • @DiskusGames
      @DiskusGames Před 6 měsíci

      @@ancientbohemianCan you point out something the video got wrong? With sources to back that up? Otherwise your critique rings hollow.

    • @tomassiegl4991
      @tomassiegl4991 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@ekesandras1481 You would be surprised. Many Czechs believe to this day that it was the right thing to do and that the expulsion of the German population from the country was justified.

    • @Luck9nN
      @Luck9nN Před 6 měsíci +9

      @@ekesandras1481 we are taught about the Beneš decrees and the expellation of the Germans, not so much about the violence, I think it is because during the communist rule it wasn't really taught at all

  • @victoradam8485
    @victoradam8485 Před 7 měsíci +62

    Thanks for uncovering what was never really taught, or discussed, in CS. In the early 1960s, I spent (relatively) a lot of time in the Cheb area, attending a 2 room school where my aunt and uncle were teachers. It was only much later that I realized why I didn't always get what the other kids were saying --- duhh. In the late 60s, we camped in the SW Sumava mountains, where we explored "abandoned" farm houses littered with German journals and magazines -- it was eerie.
    In 69 we were in a refugee camp in Germany; my mom was working outside. She came home one night, very disturbed, because some guy was yelling at her in Czech in an obscene and threatening manner. On the other hand we left the kitten that we adopted with a Czech speaking camp employee, a Sudeten German, who befriended my parents.
    BTW, Pekna cestina! Ja bych si na slovenstinu netrouf... :)

    • @krystofk.2279
      @krystofk.2279 Před 6 měsíci +4

      just so you know. It's taught today in schools. Though, teachers usually have no time to go any deeper into the topic since we learn about WWII in great detail. IMO way too much that it's unnecessary. Not because it's not important, but there happened a lot of stuff in Czechoslovakia in the past 100 years and we have only 1 year to teach the students about it and half of it goes to WWII usually.
      And wow, such an interesting story.

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow Před 7 měsíci +86

    My video editor is descended from Pressburg Germans. She's currently trying to get a Slovakian passport.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +63

      Ahh very interesting, sadly, I don't think precedent is on her side on this one. I believe Slovakia and Czechia literally have a clause in repatriation laws that exclude descendants of expelled people under Benes decrees.

    • @YarennSagorXiyat
      @YarennSagorXiyat Před 7 měsíci +4

      I'm thinking of Slovakian citizenship too, but my grandpa was a Jewish Hungarian speaker from [Czecho]Slovakia so I have more chance I think

    • @georgejanzen774
      @georgejanzen774 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Out of curiosity and by no means intended as an insult, what makes one interested in a Slovakian citizenship? I'm of Eastern European descent myself and love discovering the area. But isn't the larger demographic trend still emigration due to economic underdevelopment? Or are we getting close to a tipping point?

    • @scottkrafft6830
      @scottkrafft6830 Před 7 měsíci +4

      *Bratislava

    • @mg4361
      @mg4361 Před 7 měsíci +22

      @@georgejanzen774 Both Czechia and Slovakia are full EU members, so having their citizenship gives you the right to live, work in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands and other EU countries as well as Switzerland, Norway and Iceland. If you have a US passport and then get an additional Slovak passport, this basically gives you the right to live, work and travel visa-free in two of the greatest commercial centers of the world.

  • @1vantheterrible814
    @1vantheterrible814 Před 7 měsíci +26

    An absolute delight to watch, all the work you put in is clear as day (and the czech outro was the cherry on top)! Bravo!

  • @prespurak
    @prespurak Před 7 měsíci +248

    Extremely commendable effort, I learned a ton of new information and even knowing the expulsion of Germans was horrible, this made it much more clearer just how horrible it actually was. Hope there would be more of that in our (Slovak) history schoolbooks. Would love to see another one on the Slovak National Uprising and maybe one about the Hungarians in Czechoslovakia, after you recover from this one :)

    • @Asptuber
      @Asptuber Před 7 měsíci +9

      Yes yes yes!
      Those two (SNP and Hungarians) were the two topics that came to mind watching this. Hungarians would be interesting also in a wider lens than just Czechoslovakia - Transsilvania and Zakarpattya (sorry, can't think of what to call that part that is now mostly Ukraine).
      I noted Czernowitz on one of the maps - I visited Chernihiv this summer, and wow, is that corner of the world also interesting. Just following the history of the professors of that university through the wikipedia articles about them gives a mind blowing picture of how different central/eastern Europe was before 1914.

    • @genuscorvid
      @genuscorvid Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@perseus274 Nice one sided propaganda; I assume you're Slovak.

    • @dusansuhajda6273
      @dusansuhajda6273 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@perseus274Duh, another chauvinist moron. 🤦‍♂️

    • @dusansuhajda6273
      @dusansuhajda6273 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@perseus274What Slovaks and how many of them did actually live in Subcarpathia to support any claim for it to be called 'far eastern Slovakia'?? If anything, the whole territory had been subdivided into several Hungarian counties, and even under Czechoslovakia, it simply never became the same administrative unit as Slovakia, so please stop spreading nonsense.
      The overwhelming majority population has been Ruthenian (formerly mostly loyal to the Hungarian cause and patriotic), Hungarian and Jewish, with a marginal handful of German, Slovak and Romanian villages.

    • @dusansuhajda6273
      @dusansuhajda6273 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​​@@AsptuberOh well, the typically Slovak unconscious doublethink: on the one hand saying 'expulsion of Germans was horrible & do a video on Hungarians as well', on the other hand using the false, insinuative term 'Slovak National Uprising' (which in fact lead to deaths of many Carpathian Germans, priests or simply people named 'Nemec') as if nothing happened.

  • @kartanashimisaky6140
    @kartanashimisaky6140 Před 6 měsíci +11

    yours must be one of the most efficient and precise channels about history on CZcams. I really enjoy how seriously you take the manners you explore and I appreciate all the more the emphasis you put on parts of history often shadowed under their collossal neighbors, such as Czechia

  • @Luck9nN
    @Luck9nN Před 6 měsíci +28

    Just a little note, Emil Hácha definitely wasn't a nazi collaborator, he actively fought for the Czechs and their rights during the protecrorate. He was then called a collaborator by the communists, which somewhy stucked with him :/

    • @Theanimeisforme
      @Theanimeisforme Před 6 měsíci +2

      Happened to a lot of collaborators that felt staying in some kinda power was better then forfeiting the country to a more true puppet.

    • @jirislavicek9954
      @jirislavicek9954 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Hácha understood, that Czechs, after being dumped by Western allies, are unable to fight the Germans, who were far superior in numbers, technology and also had great geographical and demographic advantage. Quiet surrender and cooperation was probably the most sensible thing he could do. Even the video mentions that the treatment of the Czech by the Germans was quite mild for WWII standards.

    • @CZpersi
      @CZpersi Před 5 měsíci +3

      Hácha was a tragical personality. He was already too old when they asked him to become president, already before the German occupation. He had a rich career in international law and would have served the country well in better times. He had no chances of resisting the Nazi occupation and was not left with many options under the Nazis.

  • @jeroenl8352
    @jeroenl8352 Před 7 měsíci +6

    Thank you for these videos! They provide valuable information most people don't know a lot about

  • @PeterBayer7
    @PeterBayer7 Před 7 měsíci +19

    What a video, man. Congratulations on being a wonderful historian, Slovak, and human being.

  • @bukelos2804
    @bukelos2804 Před 7 měsíci +88

    Thank you for the video. It's depressing for me as a Czech, but truthful history must be kept alive.
    What i generally found annoying tho is that Westerners usually think that the 'Sudeten areas of Czechoslovakia' were only german speaking pple therefore Germans. They don't realise the difference between being a majority and being homogenous. These Germans lived with Czechs next to each other and when Henleiners with Nazis took over, those 'Sudeten areas' (btw the fact that Sudeten germans never existed as a term for the whole border line of the Czechoslovakia only to be coined by the nazi propaganda and this term is used to this day, i find very appaling) expulsed those pple, who didn't want to proclaim that they are only German or were just Czechs...
    My grandfather's family is from southern Bohemia and according to traditions over there, everyone were devout catholics and Czech girls were often married in to German families. This intermingling happened through centuries and thats why Czechs are the most german like Slavs and Austrians are the most Slavic like Germans...
    Anyway, thank you again for the history of our country, take a brake and focus on something more positive. :) _Veritas vincit!_

    • @magmalin
      @magmalin Před 6 měsíci +17

      You're right. My father is from Bohemia, my mother from Moravian Selesia. I've got family records that go back to 1600 and the names of my ancestors sometimes were German, sometimes Czech or Polish. I did a DNA test not too long ago and it turned out that I was about half North Western European, half Eastern European. My nationality is German and I've got a Czech surname. I don't think there is something like a "pure" ethnicity.

    • @ktipuss
      @ktipuss Před 6 měsíci +1

      You're right; lancing a boil can be painful but it does end up healing the sore.

    • @ianmansbridge3646
      @ianmansbridge3646 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Nationality is a contrived concept useful for politicians, ordinary people should be very suspicious when it is used to convince them. It is vital for us all to understand it's consequences - we in the UK have just been manipulated into leaving the EU by such means and are suffering the consequences. Thank you for making this informative record.

    • @TheMirodyn
      @TheMirodyn Před 6 měsíci +5

      Nationalism as a whole is such a stupid concept. Especially in central Europe. I am Czech. I have Czech name. I live in Czech republic. But my family basically came from Germany on one side, and Austria on the othe, based on the records that we have found. I would not be even surprised if some of my ancestors have been forced to change their name to hide the fact that they were Germans.

    • @magmalin
      @magmalin Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@TheMirodyn Nationality is rather a squishy term and it always depends on how it is defined. If it denotes the citizenship of a person in a specific country, it’s clear. But if the term is used synonymously to refer to ethnic origin or belonging to an ethnic group, it poses problems because notions of ethnic groups are no more than social constructs often associated with racial discrimination and nationalism which have led to terrible wars in the past. Really contraproductive here in Central Europe, I totally agree with you.

  • @eozcompany9856
    @eozcompany9856 Před 7 měsíci +44

    Truly a wonderful video about not so wonderful times of our Country, one of, if not the best, summarization of these events. Good job!

  • @branislavhamborsky5535
    @branislavhamborsky5535 Před 7 měsíci +175

    Great video as always. Its kinda sad as a Slovak to have to deal with the fact that our nations role in ww2 was basically a black void of evil. Even sadder is that we cant even truly blame the Germans since we basically got off scot free compared to the everyone else. We truly are the greatest makers of our own misery.
    I hope todays election isnt just another step deeper into that black void.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +91

      "We truly are the greatest makers of our own misery." The definition of Slovakia.

    • @mg4361
      @mg4361 Před 7 měsíci

      @@MLaserHistory You should check out Croatia 😬 Pozdrav iz Hrvatske i hvala na ovom kanalu

    • @piuthemagicman
      @piuthemagicman Před 6 měsíci +21

      Hello from Finland. My dad and his gf visited Slovakia ~5 years ago. Dad told me it was bizzarre how many shopkeepers and other service providers not only refused to talk to him but looked away in almost disgust when he and his gf tried to communicate in somewhat broken English. They even tried telling they're from Finland but no difference. My dad is the most gray unpolitic man you'll meet and I don't believe he lied. It's weird how many Slovaks behaved towards them.

    • @OndrejReinisch
      @OndrejReinisch Před 6 měsíci +4

      sending hopes of wisdom in upcoming elections from czechia ❤

    • @Brian-----
      @Brian----- Před 6 měsíci

      I was happy to see that the ĽSNS deservedly lost the election shamefully.

  • @AntonioBrandao
    @AntonioBrandao Před 7 měsíci +5

    Really great work on this video. Congratulations and thank you.

  • @tremondial
    @tremondial Před 6 měsíci +71

    My grandmother was born in Jablonné v Podještědí/Deutsch Gabel, but was forced out of her home along with her 3 older brothers, younger sister and her mother when she was 5 years old. She and her siblings were all half-Czech/half-German with her mom being Czech and both her biological father and her step-father being Germans. Her family walked to Berlin where they would stay in a bombed out appartment with another family for 2 years until her mom could no longer provide for all 5 of her children and thus send my grandma and her brothers to live with different families all across Germany. The living conditions in Berlin were so dire that my grandma just barely survived an infection with tuberculosis in which a doctor succesfully removed one of her affected kidneys.
    Her German step-father meanwhile had been marched into a nearby forest along with many other German men from the region and was never seen again. Her brothers later visited their hometown again sometime in the 70s and actually discovered that their biological father was still alive and living in a nearby town.

    • @LucyMusic1999
      @LucyMusic1999 Před 6 měsíci +9

      ​@@desichalkos5627 are you a bot or something lol stop correcting people's stories, let them talk about their family history as they want to. Not everyone has to talk like you.

    • @dernochjungenoergler
      @dernochjungenoergler Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@LucyMusic1999thank you

    • @tremondial
      @tremondial Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@desichalkos5627 well, technically the N@zis were the first who wanted to ethnically cleanse Czechoslovakia by forced assimilation.

    • @brozjoszip6401
      @brozjoszip6401 Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@tremondialthat does not justify the chechoslavakian acts at all.

    • @Adam_Machacek
      @Adam_Machacek Před měsícem +1

      That is really interesting. I never thought I would find someone with roots from Deutsch Gabel here. My family is from the area and we were spared of Transfer. We come from a Dorf north of Deutsch Gabel. Do you have any information about the event of Transfer itself? I could help you find some info in Archive in Česká Lípa, where documents about Transfer from Bezirk Deutsch Gabel are

  • @andreashasselberg6592
    @andreashasselberg6592 Před 6 měsíci +20

    Hi thank you for very interesting video. I'm german and part of my (grand)grandparents lived the czech republic before they came to the modern day germany.
    Since my grandparents from this side already died I only know a few things of what happened indirectly from my mother.
    One thing I'd like to say is that she told me that the neighbours back then harbored no ill will against my grand-grandparents and from what I've heard they could have stayed after the war. But with conditions like no german language allowed and no school for the children. But theese were not the condition from their neighbours!
    What I'd like to point out is the collective guilt which is always a topic. Since I myself, as a german perhaps not so objective person on the question, wonder how many people think everybody got what he deserved with such a notion. And since your video could be seen as critisizing the czech part of the actions of the czech people I'd like to extend my view to this topic as well.
    Politics are one thing and it is hard or more like impossible to judge every single person in a situation like back than and make decision on what to do on an individual level. Especially with the emotional state most people must have been in.
    But I think when we view back into history we can always aknowledge that besides the people who took action back than, there were probably many people who either just lived their lives without knowing of what happened, felt powerless to do anything against it or simply feared the outcome of what would happen if they tried to do anything. And I thing this fear was a very real and legitimate reason, even if many people - at least online - seem to scoff at such arguments.

    • @kurtreckziegel4935
      @kurtreckziegel4935 Před 6 měsíci +4

      There should be no such thing as « collective guilt ». It is an injustice to new generations. The Expression « Sins of the Father » should have no bearing on future generations. Also I, born in Gablonz a.d. Neisse (Jablonec n. n.), have as a mantra that I do not forget but I forgive and on recent trips back »home » I would never hold past events against present Czechs.

    • @sighman9209
      @sighman9209 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It's a long and tragic story. The microcosm was already broken, when the Czech suddeters were kicked out, in 38. And any chance of it mending pretty much died, when the Nazis launched their campaign of retaliation following Heydrich's assassination.
      The attitudes varied obviously, however the overarching one was that co-existence wasn't really an option anymore, by the end of the war.

  • @johngregson6252
    @johngregson6252 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Man wonderful video this part of history I really did not know and I love learning about it. You earned yourself a new patron!

  • @robertstaron8010
    @robertstaron8010 Před 6 měsíci +79

    My grandfather and his mother were ready to be expelled from the country, but after a few days they were waiting at the train station. They and other Germans here from Těšín were told that they should return home. And this despite the fact that my great-grandfather was a member of the NSDAP and fought in the Kriegsmarine. Now I see that they had more luck than they could have imagined.

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln Před 6 měsíci +20

      Did they? Do not forget, all those who remained in Czechoslovakia were forced with living under totalitarian communist rules for the next 50 years. And then 25 years of economic turmoil following fall of the Sovjet Union. Poverty, misery, hardship, being held captive and unable to travel. All those who fled in 1946 and reached Austria and Germany had for sure a much better live.

    • @tomassiegl4991
      @tomassiegl4991 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@denkendannhandeln I'm not sure if I fully agree with you. You are right in principle though. Keep in mind that after the war, economic situation in Czechoslovakia was much better than in Germany or Austria. So at that time you wanted to be in Czechoslovakia rather than in Austria or Germany. With time and economic stagnation in communist Czechoslovakia, it progressively changed. I have experienced life in Czechia during 90s after the Velvet revolution and it was completely fine. Good quality of life even back then. Now it is much better of course. Things improved dramatically after the Velvet revolution with EU membership.

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln Před 6 měsíci +8

      @@tomassiegl4991 I saw documentaries of the life in Czech Republic, especially Prague in the 80-ties. The same time I often visited the place as a teenager. It was horrible. Waiting in lines for every item and goods, and all the communist products were of an absolutely horrible quality (remember the toilet paper?) and if you needed something from an official you had to bribe him with western chocolate and coffee. The pluming system was not working, and in Prague was a horrible housing crisis. People lived in miserably run down buildings, heated with coal and living in thick smog. Prague was covered with a black layer of dust. In addition was the constant political pressure with unspeakable police brutality. And all were being held prisoner in their own land - that was not fun.
      And I am not sure if the 90-ties were such fun for many people eighter. Many were not equipped or educated to succeed in a stressful capitalist system, they lost their jobs, lost their stability and psychological understanding of the world, many factories were sold or closed and people fell into unemployment with just minimal help from the government. Not being used to capitalism they took too many loans they could not pay back, had no understanding of the financial system, subscribed to loans for houses with way too high mortgages, had no barrier to refrain from expensive consumption of western goods and lived way out of their budget. Still today almost 20% of people have so high debt, that they are permanently threatened with foreclosure. Alcoholism increased as well as suicides and a large exodus of the workforce occurred.
      But today it is a beautiful land. Still I think the Germans had a way better live in Westen Germany. I myself was so lucky that my parents escaped in 1968.

    • @leoprg5330
      @leoprg5330 Před 6 měsíci +5

      ​@@denkendannhandelnYou probably don't know much about life in CS during communism or what real poverty means.. the lack of freedom was much bigger hardship than "poverty". I would describe it as they weren't blessed with consumerism. Not saying that I would like to live in those miserable times.

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@leoprg5330 well, not everybody lived in the same circumstances. Apparatshniks surely had if much better. There were always people, who found their way around hardship.
      About consumerism there is one difference, you are free today to CHOOSE to participate in it or not. Living under communism you were FORCED to live in the circumstances the government imposed on you. Of course it was not starvation level poverty, but standards of living were for 50 years way below the level of the potential of the country. Let‘s not forget Czechs we’re one of the most industrialized and wealthy regions in 1920, exporting goods to the whole world during the first republic. So it was a hard step down.
      I just observe a certain romanticizing of the communist period by some groups of Eastern Europeans. Often people who lived at maximum their childhood then. Seeing it as the good old times and completely blocking our the reality of the times. It happens often to people around 50-60 who mix in their memories the good times, that everybody has as teenagers and youngsters (friendships, adventures, first love etc.) comparing it with the hardship of older age (aches creep in, health deteriates etc.) with the actual political system. Being 15 under communism for sure was more fun than being 55 under capitalism. But they make the mistake to project the normal flow of live and it’s psychological phases onto the state itself. I am not sure if I manage to explain the idea well.
      Often this changes around 65, when people start needing urgently a well functioning medial health system. Being confronted with cancer, needed operations, and so on, absolutely nobody wants to go back to communism where health care was just possible on very basic level and innovative western drugs were just not available.

  • @MikeHaggarKJ
    @MikeHaggarKJ Před 2 měsíci +3

    What an incredible video, great job. I'll watch 10000 more videos by you now.

  • @Garystrothmann
    @Garystrothmann Před 6 měsíci +8

    Excellent video, very informative and well researched. My family is from Bohemia and both ethnicities intermarried throughout my family tree. I understand both sides of this sensitive issue, this video should be used in schools!

  • @eliskaplichtova2362
    @eliskaplichtova2362 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Thank you for your hard work :)

  • @larsrossle8576
    @larsrossle8576 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Thank you for this video. It was very informative.

  • @damonbond5315
    @damonbond5315 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this informative video. It was extremely thorough and well balanced.

  • @MrSonofsonof
    @MrSonofsonof Před 6 měsíci +12

    One point about the Sudeten German Social Democratic Party mentioned at 43:09 in the video. They wanted to join the Czechoslovak government in exile because they opposed the Nazis, but they still supported the annexation of the Sudetenland to Germany, and as a result the other parties represented in the government did not accept them. Not every anti-fascist German respected the territorial integrity of the Czechoslovak state.

    • @Mirinovic
      @Mirinovic Před 3 měsíci

      To Není scela pravda mnozí němečtí antifašisté v 38 odešli do vnitrozemí

  • @Matthew_080
    @Matthew_080 Před 6 měsíci +7

    I'm very happy that you covered this topic of the Germans (and other minorities) in Czechoslovakia!

  • @neoan
    @neoan Před 6 měsíci +2

    What a fantastic content creator. That was very well approached. Kudos

  • @beakhammer2638
    @beakhammer2638 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Excellent and intellectual version of events. I learned a lot. Many thanks from Ireland.

  • @JibAcademy2010
    @JibAcademy2010 Před 6 měsíci +13

    Thank you for putting this out! My great grandfather was a Carpathian German from near Spis, always wanted to learn more!

    • @eddysadventures5539
      @eddysadventures5539 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Hi, my husband's grandmother and her family members are/were Carpathian Germans from Spiš, around Spišská Nová Ves. If you have the last/family name, it would be interesting if they match/are related or if they were neighbours/from the same area. Husband's grandma could stay (they were told to accept CS citizenship past WW2 and stop talking German and then could stay, or refuse and leave. Cca 90% of her family refused and had to leave for Germany, she and cca 10% of her family stayed and she became a musical primary school teacher during the communist era.

    • @frantisekbalaz1959
      @frantisekbalaz1959 Před 3 měsíci

      Hello where from is your great grandfather? I am from Spis and I try to learn more about Germans in Slovakia

  • @MB-ez7lf
    @MB-ez7lf Před 3 měsíci +3

    I just discovered your channel. Brilliantly presented. Thank you.

  • @francocruz1321
    @francocruz1321 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I like the concept of project homecoming, keep it up guys

  • @rockin1014
    @rockin1014 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Thank you very much for this video it was very well done!

  • @Schnaitheimer
    @Schnaitheimer Před 6 měsíci +14

    Thanks for your efforts in revealing this complicated history! My mother's ancestors were also Germans in Czechoslovakia at Znaim/Znojmo and fled to central southern Germany in 1945. Just managed to visit the (beautiful) town last autumn and randomly booked my hotel not far away from a place where my grandmother worked at some 80 years before like my mother told me afterwards. Although I'm generally politically interested, I never wondered, what the political beliefs of my ancestors from that region might have been, but never heard negative expressions about what happened.

  • @Miningfox
    @Miningfox Před 6 měsíci +3

    Thanks for this very nuanced video

  • @haeuptlingaberja4927
    @haeuptlingaberja4927 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Very good presentation. In 2000 I had to translate for my wife's grandmother who in her dementia had reverted to the German she spoke until she was 17 in 1945. When the Red Army got close to Moravia, her German dad fled to Stuttgart, where his family was from, leaving his Czech wife and their kids to fend for themselves, which wasn't easy, especially since he had forbidden them from speaking Czech and their neighbors in Šumperk (formerly Schoenberg) considered them Germans. My wife, who was born in Šumperk in 1970 and lived there until she was 26, had never heard most of the stories I was translating for her and at first couldn't even believe them...until she asked an older aunt who confirmed all of it. A truly horrific history, which didn't stop when the war ended. And this is the reality of history--it's not just an account of things that once happened but instead the driving, shaping force behind what the present is, whether we know that history or not.

  • @douglasstemke2444
    @douglasstemke2444 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This is an absolutely fascinating video. Thank you. I am an American citizen, my mother's family leaving Czechoslovakia from Kacov in 1939 as there were members in the family with US citizenship so they left with the Nazi annexation. As such, I have received most of the history of these lands from a very one-sided account, and that includes the expulsion of the Czech Germans too. I had a Great Uncle, Alois Jedlička, who fought as a resistance fighter during the war who was a Czech scholar, professor of Czech language at Charles University and editor of the magazine Naše řeč. He was one of an authors of a book standardizing Czech grammar.
    I visited the Czech Republic (now, of course Czechia) in the mid 1990s. Many of the older family members were still resolutely unfriendly to Germans, others had moved on. Things were a even more divisive when discussions of Communism were brought up (more a rural verses urban split as much as I could tell).

  • @Faultystar5
    @Faultystar5 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I’m learning this right now in class! Thanks ML!😀

  • @ivobednar5608
    @ivobednar5608 Před 6 měsíci +39

    I am surprised how little we the Czech people are learning in school about this upholding chapter of our history. I am at university and I have heard about some of the darkest parts of this video for the first time.

    • @lovaserzsebet670
      @lovaserzsebet670 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Ollective guilt is against Ezropean values. In spite of that Benes decrees are part of present Czech legislation.

    • @DANA-yc9wq
      @DANA-yc9wq Před 5 měsíci +4

      It is sad that you expect from "university" to teach you everything. There is no excuse for ignorance. Czech libraries , archives and used books stores are treasures for educating yourself better than any "university' has to offer.

    • @MaxRoth-mc6nb
      @MaxRoth-mc6nb Před 5 měsíci +5

      ​​@@DANA-yc9wq Okay, you usually would expect universities not to be biased in such a drastical way. But modern universities are not so modern, in fact. Communist re-education had been very strong. By the way: What is not reflected in the video is panslavistic national occultism that played an important role due to the sponsors of foundation process of Greater Czech Republik which turned out to be Czechoslovakia.

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx Před 5 měsíci +1

      We had classes on expulsions in high school. Not to such depth as this video, but we had them. You should have learned long before college

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@lovaserzsebet670Czech values take precendent over some 'European' values

  • @MrtaVmbat
    @MrtaVmbat Před 7 měsíci +42

    Úžasné video, vďaka ti za to že šíriš informácie o takýchto ťažkých, no napriek tomu málo známych témach, len tak ďalej!

    • @iskanderaga-ali3353
      @iskanderaga-ali3353 Před 6 měsíci +5

      I like how uzasne means awesome
      In my language it means horrible💀
      Some terrific/terrible vibes here

    • @Neme112
      @Neme112 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@iskanderaga-ali3353 Or awesome/awful vibes

  • @henningbartels6245
    @henningbartels6245 Před 3 měsíci +2

    extremly good, informative and well balanced video.

  • @vortex_master
    @vortex_master Před 7 měsíci +2

    Thank you for highlighting this mostly overlooked part of WW2 history.

  • @BaalFridge
    @BaalFridge Před 7 měsíci +9

    Yessss a new M.Laser video!!!! Early christmas!!!

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +4

      There'll be one more before Christmas ... hopefully.

    • @BaalFridge
      @BaalFridge Před 7 měsíci +3

      ​@MLaserHistory the longer the wait the greater the hype 😂

  • @WhateverDaaah
    @WhateverDaaah Před 6 měsíci +11

    Very interesting and I as a German do appreciate the moslty fair storytelling. It’s always sad to hear about civilians beeing treated so poorly but at least there are people willing to speak about it and thereby show that the world is full of good will and forgiveness as well as memorance and good humanist people

    • @trevorphilips2090
      @trevorphilips2090 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Germans are usually oblivious about (and often ignore) the size of their minority in Eastern Europe, Hungary also has a huge German minority.

    • @jirizajic2479
      @jirizajic2479 Před 6 měsíci

      Transylvanian Germans, also at least 2,5 - 3 million ppl. After WW II.part of them tried to repatriate back in western Germany

    • @asmirann3636
      @asmirann3636 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@trevorphilips2090This is a problem with Germans. They migrate in millions to foreign lands and then feel entitled.
      They are more German origin people living outside of Germany, then within it.

  • @davidnavratil5349
    @davidnavratil5349 Před 7 měsíci +66

    The depopulated areas along the German border were settled during the rule of the Communist party by gypsies being relocated from Slovakia. Later on more came in to unite families. It's fascinating to see how an area which used to be highly industrialized and economically active during the German presence would descent into poverty. Even today the areas of former Sudetenland are mostly viewed as poor regions with low income, poor housing, crime, lack of opportunities and generally undesirable to live in.

    • @leeuwerik2
      @leeuwerik2 Před 7 měsíci +9

      They were repopulated with Czechs returning or displaced from various other regions like Russia, Poland etc.

    • @cjclark1208
      @cjclark1208 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Land and Rent/Mortgages are probably substantially cheaper in those areas I’m willing to bet.

    • @ludekz.773
      @ludekz.773 Před 6 měsíci +25

      I would rather have Germans there instead the mess that Is there now

    • @michaelwoernle378
      @michaelwoernle378 Před 6 měsíci

      About 300 villages fell into disrepair after the Germans were expelled.

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@cjclark1208 During the Socialist period there was basically no such thing as variable land value. Rents were identical per m2 whether you lived in a large city like Prague or a small town. And much of the Sudetenland was repopulated with new workers for the industry and factory jobs there, so people did not have choice over where they were settled.

  • @trueTomi
    @trueTomi Před 2 měsíci +3

    I am Czech by birth and I must say your video has given me some new outlook and perspective on this whole thing
    Its really bizarre how we managed to justify this so well in our society, I distinctly remember being taught in school how the Germans were expelled after WW2 and the way it was presented is that it was a done deal, a right thing to do, not much detail was put into it.
    Only years after I learned about the violence but I somehow still told myself that it was a few isolated events but this video really puts the scale of the whole thing in the perspective.

  • @Gizfreek
    @Gizfreek Před 6 měsíci +6

    My grandfather and his family lived in a town near the Austrian border named Gottschallings, they had to leave it in half an hour without being able to bring any of their valuables, outright lucky compared to what happened to others. The town was later demolished with almost no traces left of it today.

  • @martinlavric8374
    @martinlavric8374 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Good and balanced overview. Thank you.

  • @walterschnipsel6334
    @walterschnipsel6334 Před 4 měsíci +4

    My hole family is Silesian and my mother in law survived a Czech labor camp with her mother and sisters.Nobody was talking about those things in public in W.Germany,all my childhood I had to lissen to those horrorstorys at familymeetings.Till today I hate christmastime cos it was the time everybody was remembering of their lost familymembers and how they died.

  • @mAfUn88
    @mAfUn88 Před 6 měsíci +7

    I really like your channel. I'm czech myself and love to see brotheren shining light on dark history.
    You show some inside on history that is not commonly taught in schools. In Czech schools we are never told the horrific things we did back to germans, only that we expelled them.

    • @JohnSmith-en6ev
      @JohnSmith-en6ev Před 2 měsíci

      Sounds like you're people are brainwashed on the whole then.

    • @MoeSzyslak2001
      @MoeSzyslak2001 Před měsícem

      What school did you go to? When I was in high school, I did learn about the crimes done against Germans during the expulsions.

  • @Goldieczech
    @Goldieczech Před 6 měsíci +33

    Moc pěkné video o naší historii kterou se fakt málo kdo dozví ze školy. Rozhodne se těším na další videa o Československu

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx Před 5 měsíci +1

      My jsme se o tom učili ve škole. Divné že to nebylo ve tvé škole

    • @sigurdcz6241
      @sigurdcz6241 Před 2 měsíci

      @@somebodyanonymousx Tak ono se to liší škola od školy, já se na základce celkově o 2. světové moc nedozvěděl (resp. něco, co bych tou dobou sám nevěděl), protože jsme vyplýtvali spoustu času na antických civilizacích a středověku, takže na moderní dějiny už čas nezbyl.

    • @somebodyanonymousx
      @somebodyanonymousx Před 2 měsíci

      @@sigurdcz6241Myslel jsem střední. Vůbec si nepamatuji, co jsme se učili na základce, ale na střední jsme se učili o osudu Němců

  • @graedenius
    @graedenius Před 4 měsíci +2

    Extremely well done video. Had no idea of these events.

    • @graedenius
      @graedenius Před 4 měsíci

      @@keikihaniyasushin8574 you can't research an event you didnt know happened. Retard

  • @lucasroach7835
    @lucasroach7835 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Thank u for your channel fellow Slovak, keep it up!

  • @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi
    @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi Před 6 měsíci +5

    in 2012-2016 I worked with the descendant of a Czech family who fled to Romania after 1938 ... he did not speak much about the subject but that made me curios and among the anecdotes I gathered was that after 1938 the official food ration for a Czech was 800 calories per month ...

  • @InferKnow
    @InferKnow Před 6 měsíci +7

    This was a very well done video, shocked it hasn’t blown up yet the visuals are amazing and this is a very specific part of history to be covered with many people not knowing it which I didn’t! The maps were also fantastic, I was zoned in the whole time, great script great visuals

  • @mkrosova
    @mkrosova Před 3 měsíci +2

    Very interesting video, as a Czech, I learned a lot! Thank you

  • @gurrtug9213
    @gurrtug9213 Před 6 měsíci +2

    dobře zpracované video!

  • @barracuda6900
    @barracuda6900 Před 6 měsíci +21

    Also, do you plan on doing a video on the Free City of Danzig? A classic experiment of an "internationally administered" territory that went horribly wrong.

    • @ktipuss
      @ktipuss Před 6 měsíci +3

      D
      "Danzig Frei Stadt" has been called an example of sweeping a big problem under the carpet hoping no one notices.

    • @barracuda6900
      @barracuda6900 Před 6 měsíci

      @@ktipuss an attempted temporary compromise (like a UN peacekeeping operation) that should never have tried to be permanent.

    • @nico210
      @nico210 Před 6 měsíci

      What went wrong in Dantzig were the local people, and no amount of external policy, good or not, was ever changing that.

  • @PikarinePlays
    @PikarinePlays Před 6 měsíci +5

    This is such a well done video, great for highlighting a relatively little known bit of history

  • @myboloneyhasafirstname6764
    @myboloneyhasafirstname6764 Před 6 měsíci

    Excellent video, I learned so much.

  • @panagiotismagos3649
    @panagiotismagos3649 Před 6 měsíci +2

    excellent video!

  • @matthiuskoenig3378
    @matthiuskoenig3378 Před měsícem +6

    The 20% is hypocracy on the side of the Czechs. They claimed oppression on the side of the Austro-Hungarians, hence their siding with the allies in the great war. And then impose the same laws on the new minorities.

  • @chillibean281
    @chillibean281 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Beautiful documentary, it truly expands upon and explains an oft not talked about part of the aftermath of world war 2.

  • @Sofus.
    @Sofus. Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the great video🥲

  • @ShadowDragon1848
    @ShadowDragon1848 Před 7 měsíci +15

    I did not know how based Masaryk was.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 7 měsíci +12

      He wasn't perfect (no one is) and had some flaws, but yeah he was pretty based.

    • @YarennSagorXiyat
      @YarennSagorXiyat Před 7 měsíci +4

      Turns out the square in Tel Aviv and a village nearby carrying this name were named after him, I didn't know, now I checked and I know, interesting

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo Před 4 měsíci +4

    When I did my Erasmus program at Pilzen university we went around an abandoned German village. It was really interesting. The forest had reclaimed so much but it was still obvious we were walking through someone’s house.

    • @MLaserHistory
      @MLaserHistory  Před 4 měsíci +2

      Yup, the remnants of this event are still all around. (also how dare you watch my video months after it has been released, you should be one of the first viewers!)

  • @schwingedeshaehers
    @schwingedeshaehers Před 6 měsíci +4

    if you want to get more information about after the war, my grandfather wrote a book about it, and i have (some/most of) the sources used (german/tschek)

  • @volkhen0
    @volkhen0 Před 6 měsíci +5

    I wish I could view similar video about Poland. This was a very good job.

  • @jjackmanster
    @jjackmanster Před 6 měsíci +5

    Extraordinary tragic history within a beautiful country. It would be strengthened by adding that the western CZ boundary with German lands had existed for hundreds of years. Great work!

  • @Maldrex
    @Maldrex Před 7 měsíci +13

    I just realised that this video is doing bether job at telling something about Czechoslovak history than our text book in schools.
    From what I remember there was a small foto on a side of a text book with few lines under it talking about deportation of germans.
    When I think about it there is so litle information in our history text book over all.
    It was bland texts that had little to no information.
    I dont think I woulde love to learn history if it wasn't for my history teacher's efforts. She did a good job,and teched us her way, she woulde talk about history with us and added many information on top of what was in text book.
    well...
    Over all, I need to say great video, I always love to learn new thing about our history(even the dark side of it).
    If only our text books did as of a good job as you did. 🇸🇰

  • @lukasuhlenkamp9850
    @lukasuhlenkamp9850 Před 7 měsíci +22

    My great great grandmother was a Sudeten German from the village of Heiligenkreuz, which according to Wikipedia is the modern municipality of Chodský Újezd. Unlike some German villages in the area, it still exists. She was lucky to come to the states just before the world wars, but it saddens me that many of her relatives and neighbors were expelled so violently from their homes, if they survived at all. I was gifted her prayerbook by my grandmother, which she bought in the states from a German language bookstore shortly after her arrival in Minnesota.

  • @kona6812
    @kona6812 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Although I've seen a few of your vlogs, I've been putting off this video for a long time. Both my great grandmother and my wife's grandmother came from the Sudetenland. I don't want to say what was lost, but rather how excellent this vlog was! The history was reported very neutrally and in the end both were losers. Keep on your good work and greetings from Austria!

  • @dbass4973
    @dbass4973 Před 11 dny

    definitely one of the best history channels on youtube

  • @nyckolaus
    @nyckolaus Před 6 měsíci +4

    Excellent video! I'd love to see a prequel of the Bohemian Crown lands under the Hapsburgs.

  • @stefanbattige7988
    @stefanbattige7988 Před 6 měsíci +47

    I am German, and this chapter of history was only peripherally touched with a few lines in our history lessons at school. Your documentation threw some light at the background why all this happened.I am very happy to live now and not in these dark times. I'm happy to have now many friends who are Czechs! Nationalism as an ideology on steroids is never good! We are all humans!

    • @4tedi4
      @4tedi4 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Nationalism isn't bad idea i think. Idea that nation should have their own political entity and govern by themselves is good. It made modern western democracy. Chauvinism on the other hand is evil. It is degeneration of the nationalism.

    • @alexandrosnaoum1318
      @alexandrosnaoum1318 Před 6 měsíci

      @@4tedi4 There is a very thin line between chauvinism and nationalism same like nationalism and fascism. The events of the Inter-war period made it to be so thin with no return.

    • @4tedi4
      @4tedi4 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@alexandrosnaoum1318 On the other hand from antinationalism position is very thin line to international comunism. Without nationalism there will be no modern democracy state.

    • @Steyr32
      @Steyr32 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​​@@4tedi4man has not thought clearly of what he wrote 😂

    • @tylerbozinovski427
      @tylerbozinovski427 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​​​@@4tedi4Well, to be fair, it is possible to be a patriot, or at least a different kind of nationalist. For example, there is no such thing as an "American" ethnicity (unless if you count Amerindians, I guess), yet ideas of patriotism and nationalism still exist there. Additionally, not all Russian nationalists are ethnic Russians. And then there's India, which has over 2000 ethnic groups.

  • @nervachadikus
    @nervachadikus Před 6 měsíci +3

    Another awesome video as always. Personally I'd like to see you do more videos on the south slavic cousins or something. Something like a video on Vojvodina would perhaps be interesting, seeing how it's one of the most diverse areas of the former Yugo, yet didn't devolve into civil war like every other.

  • @izno73
    @izno73 Před 7 měsíci +14

    Not sure what deemed someone "German", my Aunt was born and raised in Brno (*1924) in a Germand AND Czech speaking household, their surname was "Horky" (not really German-sounding), still...
    They were expelled from their home and had to leave most of their stuff behind and participate on the "Todesmarsch" (death-walk) to Austria. They were neither Nazis nor "real" Germans IMO. It simply was a bad time for human rights. And revenge often hits the wrong people.

    • @izno73
      @izno73 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Goes many ways...my Great-Grandfather had to leave Austria in 1938 for the US, for the obvious reasons. My dad on the other hand, was born in CZ and fled the country with his mum in the 50s, from Communism etc.

    • @ninak8370
      @ninak8370 Před 6 měsíci +2

      because violence begets violence and revenge

  • @petrpalecka5932
    @petrpalecka5932 Před 6 měsíci +19

    Thank you for this very interesting topic. Just to add, after the occupation of the Sudetenland in 1938, the Nazis also organised expulsions of Czechoslovaks living there. In a very similar way, they were given a little time to pick their belongings and leave for the remaining portion of Czechoslovakia. Their properties were subsequently confiscated. My grandfather witnessed arrivals of such refugees, who came with the little they could bring with them into the soon-to-be Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, where the effects of starvation of the non-German population were still felt long after the war, up until 1953, when food rationing was abolished. As you mentioned, the injustices during the Protectorate (mass murders, slave labour, low food rationing, systematic repression) fuelled the vengeance of the Czechs and Slovaks in the post-war period, which they decided it to take on the whole German-speaking population in the Sudetenland. Bear in mind there were also interests of turncoats such as Karol Pazúr, who gave in Přerov the orders to shoot German civilians. Previously, he fought for the pro-Nazi Hlinka guards until his capture by the Soviets.
    The expulsion of the Germans is still a hot topic to this very day. Whenever demagogues like Zeman try to lure voters into getting their votes, they are happy to label their opponents as willing to allow the descendants of the Sudeten Germans into reclaiming their confiscated properties. This will almost certainly never happen because the Beneš decrees are enshrined into the Czech law.

    • @MoeSzyslak2001
      @MoeSzyslak2001 Před měsícem

      While I'm a Czech myself, to be fair, the extent of these expulsions has been inflated. "Only" around 100K left, most of them Czechoslovak state employees and their families who settled there after 1918. Half a million of Czechs stayed in the annexed areas and would, ironically, later become *less* resentful of the Germans than the Czechs from the interior of Czechia, since unlike for the Czechs from the interior, Germans weren't an "unified anonymous mass" to them, they interacted with Germans for years and differentiated between the "good ones" and "bad ones". During the Ústí massacre, some "Revolutionary Guards"men were even distrustful of the minority Czech natives of Ústí because of their lack of enthusiasm for killing Germans, there was a similar distrust for Czech natives of the Sudetenland among the post-1945 settlers as well.

  • @lexter8379
    @lexter8379 Před 7 měsíci +37

    Úžasný video! Hned ho rozešlu, kde můžu :)

  • @robjus1601
    @robjus1601 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thanks so much for the English translation as I never learned Czech or Slovak from my Dad.

  • @WeirdAwesomeGeography
    @WeirdAwesomeGeography Před 4 měsíci

    Great video!