"Pater Patria Expulsorum" translates to "Fatherland of the Expelled" using Google Translate.
Please see photos for details. Note lighting variation may alter colors of item in photos. Stand not included.
Translated from Wikipedia:
Emmanuel (sometimes Emanuel) Johannes Reichenberger (born April 5, 1888 in Vilseck, Upper Palatinate; † July 2, 1966 in Vienna) was a German Roman Catholic priest and Sudeten German journalist. During the final phase of the Second World War, he developed into the “father of the expellees” and an opponent of the expulsion policy and the collective guilt theory that was widespread among the Allies. He resisted National Socialism in the Sudetenland before its annexation to the Third Reich.
After graduating from high school, Reichenberger studied theology in Regensburg and Leitmeritz. As a young priest in the Sudetenland, he was nicknamed “The Red Chaplain” because of his social commitment.
Reichenberger was the founder and general secretary of the People's Association of German Catholics in the Czech Republic and campaigned for the ethnic rights of the Sudeten Germans, whereby he was also an opponent of Konrad Henlein and National Socialism. From 1938 he emigrated to the USA via France and Great Britain.
There Father Reichenberger served as President of the Kolping Family in the city of Chicago, which at that time had a high German population.
In publications and petitions he spoke out against Morgenthau's anti-German partition plans and, after the "liberation", he organized aid campaigns for displaced Germans, which earned him the nickname of the "Father of the Displaced Persons".
Reichenberger later settled in Graz and then in Nuremberg and was appointed papal privy chamberlain and spiritual councilor by the Vatican.
In 1952 he published the book “Europe in Ruins”, in which he sharply attacked the liberation terror of the victors. He wrote the foreword for the book “Allied War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity,” published in Buenos Aires in 1953 by Dürer Verlag. Reichenberger was an honorary member of the Society for Free Journalism from 1964.
He died in Vienna in 1966 and was buried in Altötting.