Fuglekassen ~ The Birdbox

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Torbjørn Wikestad has written to Hugen, and his mail went like this: "When I read about Havel and Levinas on the Hugen website, I was reminded of a special text:

"Extract from the speech made by the President of the Czech Republic to the European Parliament in Strasbourg on March 8th, 1994." (the extract quoted below)

Thank you, Torbjørn, for your contribution. I permit myself to bring the address I received from you of the Student Network of Peace:  http://uit.no/snf

Bjørke, 25th October 2004
Enok Kippersund  enok@kippersund.no


Václav Havel

About European Identity

The European Union is based on a large set of values, with roots in antiquity and in Christianity which over 2.000 years evolved into what we recognize today as the foundations of modern democracy, the rule of law, and civil society. This set of values has its own clear moral foundation and its obvious metaphysical roots, regardless of whether modern man admits it or not. Thus it cannot be said that the European Union lacks its own spirit from which all the concrete principles on which it is founded grow. It appears, though, that this spirit is rather difficult to see. It seems too hidden behind the mountains of systemic, technical, administrative, economic, monetary and other measures that contain it. And thus, in the end, many people might be left with the understandable impression that the European Union - to put it a bit crudely - is no more than endless arguments over how many carrots can be exported from somewhere, who sets the amount, who checks it and who eventually, punishes the delinquents who contravenes the regulations. That is why it seems to me that perhaps the most important task facing tlie European Union today is coming up with a new and genuinely clear reflection on what might be called European identity, a new and genuinely clear articulation of European responsibility, an intensified interest in the very meaning of European integration in all its wider implications for the contemporary world, and the recreation of its ethos or, if you like, its charisma.

Simply reading the Maastricht Treaty, despite its historical importance, will hardly win enthusiastic supporters for the European Union. Nor will it win patriots, people who will genuinely experience this complex organism as their native land or their home, or as one aspect of their home. If this great administrative work, which obviously should simplify life for all Europeans, is to hold together and stand various tests of time, then it must be visibly bonded by more than a set of rules and regulations ...

I would welcome it, for instance, if the European Union were to establish a charter of its own that would clearly define the ideas on which it is founded, its meaning and the values it intends to embody.. If the citizens of Europe understand that this is not just an anonymous bureaucratic monster that wants to limit or even deny their autonomy, but simply a new type of human community that actually broadens their freedom significantly, then the European Union need not fear for its future... "

(Extract from the speech made by the President of the Czech Republic to the European Parliament in Strasbourg on March 8th, 1994)

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Havel-tavle ~ By and on Havel