Returning to the dream of the
Founding Fathers
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| Pope Francis during his visit to the European Parliament in Strasbourg |
As Europe faces its most difficult period since the
aftermath of the Second World War, returning to the origins of the European
project can help it find a new impetus for the Old Continent. It is the
"dream of the Founding Fathers”. Pope Francis called this "concrete
dream" solidarity.
By Alessandro Gisotti
As has been the case for 35 years, the upcoming 9 May will
mark Europe Day. Inevitably, this year’s celebration will be lived in a unique
way. For some European Union countries, in fact, this anniversary will coincide
with the first attempts to return to "normality". Others will
probably still be grappling with restrictive measures to counter the spread of
Covid-19. What is certain though, is that this celebration, which falls within
the most dramatic period for Europe since the aftermath of the Second World
War, may represent an opportunity to pause and reflect on the Common European
Home's identity and mission. Few European citizens claim this Day as their own.
Probably even fewer know why that date was chosen.
This year, we celebrate the Day's 70th anniversary. On 9 May
1950, the French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman gave a memorable speech. In
it, he proposed the creation of a European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC).
This marked the first step on a path that, through a series of continental
institutions, would lead to the birth of the European Union forty years later.
The relevance of that declaration is striking. Schuman, still with the fresh
images of the devastation caused by the fratricidal war that had ravaged Europe
and the world, warned that “world peace cannot be safeguarded without the
making of creative efforts proportionate to the dangers which threaten it”:
peace and solidarity. Glimpsing the path that would unfold in the succeeding
decades, Schuman said, "Europe will not be made all at once, or according
to a single plan. It will be built through concrete achievements which first
create a de facto solidarity". Speaking of the ECSC's primary objective:
the merging of coal and steel production - first and foremost that of France
and Germany - he stressed that " this production will be offered to the
world as a whole without distinction or exception, with the aim of contributing
to raising living standards and to promoting peaceful achievements". The
prophetic force of those words was so profound that even many years later, at
the European Council held in Milan in June 1985, they were taken as a point of
reference for Europe Day. Thus, Europe Day coincides with the date on which
Schuman delivered his famous speech.
The approach of such an anniversary, in a situation that is
putting a strain on the European dream, reminds us that we can still learn a
lot from how the "founding fathers" responded to crises that were
different, but no less serious, than the one facing Europe Union leaders today.
To recall the words of Joseph Ratzinger, they were "objective and
realistic politicians" for whom "politics was not pure pragmatism,
since it was related to morality". To return to the roots and to the
founding values of Europe is precisely what Pope Francis - the first
non-European Pope in centuries – has constantly brought to the attention of
European leaders and peoples. The most recent example of this is his
Easter Urbi et orbi message, which struck so many believers
and non-believers alike. On that occasion, Pope Francis warned that "after
the Second World War this continent was able to rise again thanks to a concrete
spirit of solidarity that enabled it to overcome the rivalries of the
past". The ancient virus of division and selfishness returns along with the
ever-effective vaccine of solidarity or, to use an expression even more dear to
the Pope, of "human fraternity".
Memory is needed to face the present and to plan for the
future, even more so at a time when so many certainties are lacking. The
Pope who came from the end of the world, but is the son of
immigrants from the Old Continent, has recalled this many times and in
different contexts: in the Vatican as well as in Strasbourg. He has also
recalled this in his Apostolic Journeys across Europe, almost always in
countries far from the political and economic centre - from his first journey
to Albania, to his last to Romania. Perhaps the most striking way in which Pope
Francis exhorted us to return to our roots - following in the footsteps of
another great Europeanist, Pope John Paul II – was in receiving the Charlemagne
Prize. On 6 May 2016, addressing the heads of the European institutions, he
recalled, in the words of Elie Wiesel, that we need a "memory
transfusion" in Europe. In the words of the survivor of the Nazi
concentration camps, not only will it allow us not to make the same mistakes as
in the past, but it will also give us access to those acquisitions that have
helped our peoples to cross the historical crossroads they were encountering in
a positive way".
Pope Francis's dream for Europe is the same as that of the
founding fathers. As he said during the press conference on the plane returning
from his visit to Romania on 2 June 2019,, it is a dream to which we must
"return". A dream called "solidarity" which today more than
ever is needed to "update the idea of Europe". On the occasion of the
60th anniversary of the Treaties of Rome, receiving the Heads of State and
Governments of the European Union, Pope Francis stressed that "Europe
finds hope in solidarity, which is also the most effective antidote to modern
populism". Solidarity, he warned, "is not a good intention: it is
characterized by concrete facts and gestures". He also recalled that,
starting from solidarity, we must "start thinking in a European way
again".
It was March 24, 2017 when Pope Francis pronounced these
words. Only three years have passed and yet the last three months - with their
burden of suffering, death and anguish - make that speech seem much more
distant in time. Yet, it is precisely the crisis we are experiencing that makes
it more urgent, because - as was stated just three years later, in the
touching Statio Orbis of 27 March - this is truly the time of
solidarity in which "no one reaches salvation by themselves".
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2020-04/returning-to-the-dream-of-the-founding-fathers.html

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