Unanimous Statement of Austria’s Bishops Concerning the Balloting:
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Vienna, March 18, 1938
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The Archbishop of Vienna
Dear Gauleiter,
I am forwarding to you herewith the enclosed declaration of the bishops. From it, you will understand that the bishops voluntarily and under no duress have fulfilled our national obligation. I know that good cooperation will follow this statement.
With the assurance of my highest esteem
[handwritten] and Heil Hitler!
[Signature of Archbishop Innitzer]
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Preface to the Solemn Declaration
of the Austrian Bishops in the Matter
of the Plebiscite
After extensive deliberations, we bishops of Austria, in view of the great historic moments that the people of Austria are experiencing, and in the awareness that the thousand-year-old yearning of our people for unification in a single great empire of Germans is coming to fruition in our times, have decided to address the following appeal to all our faithful.
We can do so all the more confidently, as the Führer’s representative for the plebiscite in Austria, Gauleiter Bürckel, has announced his sincere policy, which is to be guided by the motto: “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.”
Vienna, March 21, 1938
For the Vienna Ecclesiastical Province:
[Signature of Innitzer]
For the Salzburg Ecclesiastical Province
[Signature of Waitz]
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Solemn Declaration!
Out of the innermost conviction and of our own volition, we, the undersigned bishops of the Austrian Ecclesiastical Province, declare on the occasion of the great historic events in German-Austria:
We joyfully acknowledge that the National Socialist movement has achieved and is achieving outstanding results for the German Reich and people, especially for the poorest classes of the people, in the area of national [völkisch] and economic development, as well as social policy. We are also convinced that the actions of the National Socialist movement averted the danger of utterly destructive, godless Bolshevism.
The bishops support these actions for the future with their greatest blessings, and will also enjoin the faithful along these same lines.
On the day of the plebiscite, it is a self-evident national duty for us bishops, as Germans, to pledge ourselves to the German Reich, and we also expect all faithful Christians to be cognizant of what they owe to their people.
Vienna, March 18, 1938 [Signatures of Innitzer, Waitz, Gföllner, Pawlikowski, Memelauer, and Hefter]\