INTRODUCTION
Some notes on the concept of Czechoslovakia from the point of view of the constitution and national identity
The constitutional concept of Slovakia
The position of the ruling circles on the issue of nationalities in Czechoslovakia
Citizenship in post-war Czechoslovakia and the decrees of President Beneš
PART ONE: POLITICS AND DIPLOMACY
I. CZECHOSLOVAK-SOVIET REPATRIATION NEGOTIATIONS
1. The Czechoslovak-Soviet treaty of 8 May 1944 and its flouting by the Soviet Union in 1945
Treaty of 8 May 1944
May and June 1945
August and September 1945
October and November 1945
2. Czechoslovak and Soviet information and arguments in 1946
Jan Masaryk: instructions for Ambassador Jirí Horák
Problems in getting exact information
The Minister of Foreign Affairs and the summary list of deportees
The USSR throws doubt on the Czechoslovak lists and Soviet data
The Czechoslovak Delegation for the Liquidation of War Damage
Efforts at obtaining reciprocal information about those arrested and imprisoned
Slovaks from Hungary interned in the USSR and their repatriation
Vladimír Outrata’s memorandum
Updating of the lists in 1946
Members of the Slovak Technical Division
The deported inhabitants of the Hlucín region
Attitudes towards the deportations and public opinion
The intervention of the Czechoslovak Embassy in Moscow
Horák’s intervention with Vyshinsky 21 March 1946
The material summarised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 19 April 1946
Uncertainties about information received from Envoy Chichaev
“The Great June Repatriation”
Czechoslovak–Hungarian relationships and repatriation
Ambassador Horák urges a final solution to the repatriation
The lists and instructions
Spišiak, Catloš and co.
The lists and nationality
Complex versus selective – two concepts of repatriation, and the decree of the Ministry of the
Interior of 26 September 1946
Vladimír Outrata: instructions for intervention
Clementis’s memorandum
Horák’s intervention with Vyshinsky on 29 December 1946
3. The enforcement of the selective principle
Horák’s intervention with Golubev on 8 January 1947
The repatriation principles of the Ministry of the Interior and the pragmatic approach of the Soviet Union
The conflict between the Foreign Ministry and the Interior Ministry over the approach to repatriation
Ambassador Horák’s negotiations with Golubev on 24 March 1947
Instruction of 9 April 1947 from the Ministry of the Interior about repatriation
Disunity of Czechoslovak principles and considerations regarding the Soviet Union
The Czechoslovak governmental delegation in Moscow in July 1947
Autumn 1947: Horák strives for an ending to repatriation by the end of 1947 and inter-ministerial consultation at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
II. SCREENINGS AND TRANSPORTS
1. The repatriation camp in Luisdorf near Odessa
1947: The Soviet Union accelerates repatriations
Emil Šulc (Schulz) in Luisdorf, May 1947
Ludovít Micátek in Luisdorf, June 1947
Counsellor Kašpárek's urgent requests and Golubev’s data
Process of screening and approval
Preparations for screening of repatriates at the end of August 1947
Krno and Šulc in Luisdorf, September 1947
Superficiality and possible misuse of the repatriation screenings
Emil Šulc in Luisdorf, October 1947
Czechoslovak interministerial meeting on 21 November 1947
Horák’s intervention with Golubev in November 1947, national criteria, rumours and confused information
2. The repatriation camp Marmaros Sziget in Romania
Screening of Slovaks and Hungarians in Sziget and the ethnicity criterion
The Czechoslovak plenipotentiary in Sziget
The handing over of the transports to Czechoslovakia and the lists of repatriates
3. The final phase of screening in Luisdorf and Sziget
The tardiness of the Czechoslovak authorities
Václav Vaško in Luisdorf, August 1948
Problems with the screening in Sziget
Czechoslovak and Soviet positions before the end of repatriation
Excursus: Czechoslovak diplomats in Moscow in charge of the repatriations ....