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Record of All Anti-jewish Regulations in Czech Protectorate Listed in Prague

September 3, 1942
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
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A summary of all anti-Jewish regulations now in force in the Czech Protectorate is published in the Juedisches Nachrichtenblatt, official organ of the Prague Jewish community, reaching here today.

Warning the Jewish population that any violation of these regulations will bring severe punishment, the Jewish organ enumerates the following activities which are forbidden to Jews:

1. Entrance to meeting halls, museums, reading rooms or libraries. 2. Use of buses. 3. Use of street cars on certain designated days. 4. Entry to the forests in the vicinity of Prague. 5. To linger along the banks of the Moldau river. 6. To buy sugar, sweets, pork, wine, tobacco, garlic, leather goods or certain textiles. 7. Export to other sections of movable merchandise. 8. Entrance to Prague’s burg, or government castle. 9. Entrance to a large number of designated squares and streets in the inner city. 10. Entry to the city’s parks. 11. Use of baths, laundries, or cleaning and dyeing establishments and use of public telephones. 12. Permanent or temporary change of living quarters.

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