The 10th meeting of the Czech Ackermann Gemeinde organization, which started today, is aimed at strengthening the cultural identity of the Czech Republic's German minority and enhancing relations between Czechs and Sudeten Germans in west Bohemia
Published:
19 March 2001 y., Monday
The 10th meeting of the Czech Ackermann Gemeinde organization, which started today, is aimed at strengthening the cultural identity of the Czech Republic's German minority and enhancing relations between Czechs and Sudeten Germans in west Bohemia, Helena Faberova said.
Faberova, head of the organization, told CTK that the meeting provided the Sudeten Germans living in Bohemia with an opportunity to realize that they can act freely, including speaking German, dancing and signing their national songs. "The Germans who were not resettled [to Germany or Austria after World War Two] were not allowed to do anything like that.
They were not viewed as equal citizens and they feared to show their German nationality in public, as there was the unhealthy atmosphere of collective guilt," Faberova said, referring to the former post-war and later communist Czechoslovakia. The Ackermann Gemeinde was founded two years ago as a counterpart to the Ackermann Gemeinde in Germany, an organization which has been striving for new relations between Czechs and Germans, based on Christianity, since the end of the war.
The Czech Ackermann Gemeinde has 320 members, most of whom are ethnic Germans. It promotes Czech-German reconciliation and the preservation of joint culture ensuing from the two nations' common history. It's goal is also to support a constructive shaping of the European future.
Šaltinis:
CTK - Czech News Agency
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Millions of Europeans observed three minutes of silence at noon Wednesday
more »
Europe fell silent for three minutes as leaders and ordinary people in the streets paid a poignant tribute to the 146,000 victims of southern Asia's tsunami disaster.
more »
Recent data indicate a 20 percent drop in reverse immigration to Russia in 2004 compared to 2003
more »
Ireland forecast to have bigger population than Scotland by 2019
more »
This year on January 25-27 annual traditional and already 12th retail trade and banking equipment exhibition “Wincor World 2005” will take place in Padeborn, Germany. Lithuanian company "Penkiø kontinentø bankinës technologijos" (BS/2) - the silver partner at the exhibition - will present its latest products and solutions created for the banking equipment at the exhibition.
more »
Pope John Paul II turned his thoughts to victims of the Asian tsunami disaster in his New Year's prayers as the death toll edged towards 126,000
more »
The huge Asian communities in Gulf Arab states have mobilized to send aid to victims of a massive earthquake and tidal waves across Asia
more »
Pope John Paul II appealed for swift international aid to help thousands of victims from Sunday's massive tidal waves that swamped coastal areas across southern Asia
more »
The speaker of Poland's Parliament, Jozef Oleksy, offered to resign on Wednesday, a party spokesman said, after a court said he had worked for the country's Communist-era secret services
more »
The transport minister of Ukraine was found dead with a gunshot wound yesterday — a day after the country’s election was re-run because it had been rigged
more »