Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2008
In the aftermath of the First World War, a so-called ‘minority problem’ loomed large in European politics. This problem was understood, moreover, to be peculiar to central and eastern Europe. In fact, however, linguistic diversity was not a unique feature of the east, but also an ongoing challenge in states that had long claimed to have a unified national culture. This article compares policies of national classification and minority rights in France and Czechoslovakia after the First World War. It suggests that even as east/west binaries structured the unequal application of new international minority rights protections, France, rather than Czechoslovakia, implemented a more radical and racist policy of forcible national classification.
A la suite de la première guerre mondiale, le ‘problème des minorités’ était très important dans la politique européenne. De plus, ce problème était entendu comme particulier à l'Europe centrale et orientale. En fait, la diversité linguistique n'était pas une caractéristique unique de l'Est, mais aussi un continuel défi dans des états qui revendiquaient depuis longtemps une culture nationale unifiée. Cet article compare les politiques de classification nationale et le droit des minorités en France et en Tchécoslovaquie après la première guerre mondiale. Il argumente que la classification de l'appartenance nationale était, en France, plus radicale et plus raciste qu'en Tchécoslovaquie, même si on pouvait encore reconnaître la divergence traditionnelle dans l'octroi des droits des minorités.
Nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg bestimmte ein so genanntes ‘Minderheitenproblem’ die europäische Politik und wurde besonders auf Zentral- und Osteuropa bezogen. Tatsächlich jedoch trat linguistische Vielfalt nicht nur im Osten Europas auf, sondern bildete auch eine kontinuierliche Herausforderung in Staaten, welche scheinbar eine vereinheitlichte nationale Kultur aufwiesen. Dieser Artikel vergleicht die Art und Weise, wie in der Politik Frankreichs und der Tschechoslowakei nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg Minderheiten nach nationalen Kriterien klassifiziert und Minderheitsrechte durchgesetzt wurden. Er argumentiert, dass die Klassifikationen von nationaler Zugehörigkeit in Frankreich radikaler und rassistischer war als in der Tschechoslowakei, auch wenn man den traditionellen Gegensatz in der Gewährung von Minderheitenrechten noch erkennen kann.
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10 NSS, Decision from 10 February 1923, č. 10967/22, Oddělení spisovny 8, čislo 113, podčislo 4, carton 1238, Ministerstvo Vnitra – Stará Registratura (MV-SR), NA.
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55 Harris also discusses the vigorous debate about abortion provoked by racial fears about children of German soldiers. Ruth Harris, ‘The “Child of the Barbarian”: Rape, Race, and Nationalism in France during the First World War’, Past and Present, 141 (1993), 170–206. See also Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau, L'enfant de l'ennemi: vol, avortement, infanticide pendant le Grande Guerre (Paris: Aubier, 1995).
56 Alfred Zeil, Rapport sur les questions de nationalité. Comités d'études économiques et administratives relatives a l'Alsace-Lorraine, Adopté en séance du Comité du 23 Fevrier 1918, 4, 30/AJ/96, Archives nationales françaises (AN).
57 Ibid., 27. Zeil also cited the Jews of Romania as a model for the treatment of Germans in Alsace.
58 Ibid., 28.
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61 Cathérine Lefevre à Monsieur le Haut-Commissaire de la République, 17 April 1919, 286 D 175, ADBR.
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66 Joseph Kropfinger à Monsieur le Haut-Commissaire de la République, May 9, 1919, 286 D 175, ADBR.
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69 Le commissaire de la République à Strasbourg à Monsieur Ziegler, Inspecteur de la Prison Civile, 16 April 1919, 286 D 175, ADBR.
70 Commission de triage et de classement du 2ème degré (Metz) à Commissaire général de la République (Strasbourg), 7 July 1919, 121 AL 902, ADBR.
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77 See King, Budweisers into Czechs and Germans, 164–5, for a discussion of the 1921 census.
78 No author, Unsere deutsche Schulen und das Vernichtungsgesetz (Eger: Böhmerland Verlag, 1920), 7.
79 This strategy was successful. For statistics see Friedmann, František, Mravnost či oportunita? Několik poznámek k anketě acad. spolku ‘Kapper’ a českožidovství a sionismu (Prague: Sionistický výbor pracovní pro Čechy a Moravu, 1927), 24–6, 36Google Scholar.
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81 Oddělení spisovny 11, č. 57, podčislo 15, Carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
82 Oddělení spisovny 11, č. 58, podčislo 4, Carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
83 Ibid., podčislo 7, carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
84 Ibid., podčislo 38, carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
85 Ibid., podčislo 44, carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
86 Ibid., podčislo 19, podčislo 17, podčislo 28, podčislo 38, all in carton 251, MV-SR, NA.
87 Sčitání lidu 1930, Memo from the NRČ to the State Statistical Office and the Presidium of the Council of Ministers, 16 May 1930, carton 183, NRČ, NA.
88 Vládní nařizení ze dne 26 června 1930 o sčitání lidu v roce 1930, Sbírka zákonů a nařízení státu československého (Prague: Státní nakladatelství, 1930), 480.
89 Memo to Josef Mičkov in Frýdek, Odděleni spisovny 8, č. 247, podčislo 19, carton 2995, MV-SR, NA.
90 Odděleni spisovny 8, č. 249, podčislo 16, carton 2996, MV-SR, NA.
91 Germany's 2000 citizenship law automatically grants citizenship to children of non-citizens born on German soil, if at least one parent has the status of permanent resident and has been residing in Germany for at least eight years. Such children are required to apply to retain citizenship status at the age of 23, and may not have dual citizenship. Germany's naturalisation law requires prospective citizens to live in Germany for eight years and take 650 hours of German language instruction.
92 Michael, Johns, ‘Do as I Say, not as I Do: the European Union, Eastern Europe, and Minority Rights’, East European Politics and Societies, 17, 4 (2003), 682–99Google Scholar. For Minority at Risk data see http://www.cidcm.umd.edu/inscr/mar/ (last visited 3 August 2007).
93 Tony, Judt, Post-war: A History of Europe Since 1945 (New York: Knopf, 2005), 8–9Google Scholar.
94 For further discussion on the creation of minorities in Europe after 1918 see Bahm, Karl F., ‘The Inconveniences of Nationality: German Bohemians, the Disintegration of the Habsburg Monarchy, and the Attempt to Create a “Sudeten German” Identity’, Nationalities Papers, 27, 3 (1999), 375–405CrossRefGoogle Scholar; John, Swanson, ‘Nation, Volk, Minderheit, Volksgruppe: Die deutsche Minderheit in Ungarn in den Begriffskämpfen der Zwischenkriegsära’, Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropaforschung 55, 4 (2006), 526–47Google Scholar; Brubaker, Nationalism Reframed, 55–78; Theodora Dragostinova, ‘Between two Motherlands: Struggles for Nationhood among the Greeks in Bulgaria, 1906–49’, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Illinois, 2006; Chu, Winson, ‘“Volksgemeinschaften unter sich”: German Minorities and Regionalism in Poland, 1918–39’, in Gregor, Neil, Roemer, Nils and Roseman, Mark, eds., German History from the Margins. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2006), 104–26Google Scholar; Brown, Biography of No Place, 18–51.