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Encyclopedia > Emil Hacha
Emil Hácha
Emil Hácha
Third President of Czechoslovakia
Born July 12, 1872
Trhové Sviny near České Budějovice, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary
Died June 26, 1945
Prague, Czechoslovakia


Emil Hácha (July 12, 1872-June 26, 1945) was a Czech lawyer, the third Czechoslovakian President, taking office in 1938, and the last president of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.


Emil Hácha was born on July 12, 1872 in a town of Trhové Sviny. He graduated from a secondary school in České Budějovice and then applied for the law faculty at the University of Prague. After finishing his studies in 1896 he started working for various local courts in Bohemia. Shortly before the World War I he became an advisor to the Highest Court in Vienna. During the war he stayed in Vienna where he met Ferdinand Pantůček.


After the Treaty of Versailles Pantůček became the Head of the Senate of the Republic of Czechoslovakia and Hácha became a member of this body. After Pantůček's death in 1925 he was chosen by T. G. Masaryk as his successor. He became one of the most notable lawyers in Czechoslovakia, a specialist in the British common and international law. He was also a translator of English literature (most notably the Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome). He also became a member of the Legislative Council.


After the Treaty of Munich and emigration of president Eduard Beneš he was chosen as his successor on November 30, 1938. He was chosen because of his Catholicism and conservatism and because of not being involved in any government that led to the partition of the country. During a night meeting with Adolf Hitler and Hermann Göring in Berlin on between 14 and 15 of March, 1939 he was threatened with aerial bombardement of Prague and forced to sign a document accepting of incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia into Germany even though he did not consult the parliament beforehand.

Official portrait of Emil Hácha in the late thirties
Enlarge
Official portrait of Emil Hácha in the late thirties

After the occupation of the remnants of Czechoslovakia on March 16 he became the puppet president of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. In November 1939 he was forced to swear an oath to Hitler and Konstantin von Neurath, the newly-chosen Protector of the rump puppet state. He protested against the German policies and Germanization of former Czechoslovakia. However, to little effect. He also cooperated with the exiled government of Eduard Beneš.


His situation changed after Reinhard Heydrich became appointed as the Protector of Bohemia and Moravia and replaced von Neurath, considered not harsh enough by Hitler. Hácha lost any influence over the matters in his country and became a puppet. Many of his collaborators and friends were arrested (including the Prime Minister Alois Elias) and shot or sent to the concentration camps. Because of the terror campaign started by Heydrich, Hácha felt that the collaboration with the occupants was the only way he could help his nation.


According to postwar historians, because of Hácha's poor health, he was not responsible for his actions, at least after February 1943. At least since 1941 his influence on German policies was close to none. After liberation of Prague, on May 13, 1945, Emil Hácha was arrested and transferred immediately to a prison hospital where he died on June 26. After his death, he was buried in an unmarked grave at the Vinohrady cemetery.


He is regarded by many as one of the most tragic characters of all Czechoslovak history. By others he is seen as the most disappointing characters. He collaborated with Hitler's Nazi regime and became the state president in 1939, when Czechoslovakia was overtaken by Hitler and transformed into the protectorate Böhmen und Mähren. Others argue that he tried to save as much of Czechoslovakia's freedom as it was possible.


External link:

  • Hácha's report on the March 15 meeting in Berlin (http://www.fronta.cz/index.php?dokument=28) (in Czech)

  Results from FactBites:
 
PraĹžskĂ˝ hrad - Emil Hacha (1050 words)
When Emil Hacha left for Berlin on March 14, 1939 he was still Czechoslovak President, even though truncated and in his heart transformed by the Munich Agreement and the arbitration in Vienna in the autumn of 1938.
Hacha published scientific papers on issues of international law, he was an expert in Anglo-Saxon law and also a connoisseur of English literature; together with his brother he translated the well known humorous novel "Three Men in a Boat" by Jerome K. Jerome.
On May 13, 1945 the Minister of the Interior Vaclav Nosek ordered Hacha's arrest at the Castle in Lany and he was taken to the prison hospital at Pankrac where he died in the evening of June 27 (not on June 1 as is falsely claimed in many dictionaries and other publications).
The complex legacy of the president many would prefer to forget - 28-06-2005 - Radio Prague (750 words)
It was an event that wasn't marked with pomp and ceremony: Emil Hacha remained in office throughout the German wartime occupation, and he is remembered by many as a symbol of wartime collaboration.
Although contacts with London were broken off, Hacha and Elias, with their obvious Czech patriotism, remained a thorn in the side of the Germans, and when the hard line Reinhard Heydrich became Hitler's man in occupied Bohemia and Moravia, Elias was removed, arrested and then executed, and the increasingly frail Hacha became completely marginalized.
Emil Hacha died in the hospital in Prague's Pankrac prison on the 27th June 1945 just six weeks after the end of the war.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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