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File:"Nerozlucne je nase priatelstvo!".jpg

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Description
English: "Our friendship is inseparable!"
  • Slovak Nazi propaganda poster published 1940–1941 by the Hlinka Party (aka the Slovak People's party), a clerical Fascist party that ruled Slovakia 1939-1945 as a client state of Nazi Germany.
  • Slogan written in Slovak and German: Nerozlučné je naše priateľstvo! and Untrennbar ist unsere Freundschaft)
  • Artwork by Andrej Kovacik (1899–1953)
  • Height 28.7, width 21 cm.
  • Painting in colour of two young men in paramilitary uniforms shaking hands: a member of the German Party in Slovakia in a 'brownshirt' uniform, holding the party's version of the Nazi swastika flag, and a member of the Hlinka Guard, a Slovak Pro-Nazi militia before and during World War Two, holding the Hlinka party flag. In the background, a landscape with trees and a patriarchal double cross resembling a rising sun behind low mountains.
  • Hlinka's Slovak People's Party (Slovak: Hlinkova slovenská ľudová strana), also known as the Slovak People's Party (Slovenská ľudová strana, SĽS) or the Hlinka Party, was a far-right clerico-fascist political party with a strong Catholic fundamentalist and authoritarian ideology. Its members were often called ľudáci (Ľudáks, singular: ľudák).
  • The Hlinka Guard (Slovak: Hlinkova garda; German: Hlinka-Garde; abbreviated as HG) was the militia maintained by the Slovak People's Party in the period from 1938 to 1945; it was named after Andrej Hlinka.
  • The flag of the Hlinka Party and its militia guard was a blue flag with a red double cross (patriarchal cross) in a white cirle (the arms of the cross reached to the edges of the circle).
  • The German Party (German: Deutsche Partei, abbreviated DP) was a Nazi political party active amongst the German minority in Slovakia from 1938 to 1945
  • The (First) Slovak Republic (Slovak: (Prvá) Slovenská republika), otherwise known as the Slovak State (Slovenský štát), was a partially-recognized client state of Nazi Germany which existed between 14 March 1939 and 4 April 1945 in Central Europe. The Slovak part of Czechoslovakia declared independence with German support one day before the German occupation of Bohemia and Moravia. It controlled most of the territory of present day Slovakia, without its current southern parts, which were ceded by Czechoslovakia to Hungary in 1938. It was the first time in history that Slovakia had been a formally independent state. Bratislava was declared the capital city.
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"Our friendship is inseparable!"

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