NOBEL PRIZE SPEECHES ON EU I 2012
Nobel Peace Prize Lecture on behalf of the European
Union
Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council
and
José Manuel Durão Barroso, President of the European
Commission
Oslo, 10 December 2012
HERMAN VAN ROMPUY:
“From war to peace: a European tale”
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Heads of State
and Government, Members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Excellencies, Ladies
and Gentlemen,
It is with humility and gratitude that we stand here
together, to receive this award on behalf of the European Union.
At a time of uncertainty, this day reminds people
across Europe and the world of the Union's fundamental purpose: to further the
fraternity between European nations, now and in the future.
It is our work today. It has been the work of generations
before us. And it will be the work of generations after us.
Here in Oslo, I want to pay homage to all the
Europeans who dreamt of a continent at peace with itself, and to all those who
day by day make this dream a reality. This award belongs to th
War is as old as Europe. Our continent bears the
scars of spears and swords, canons and guns, trenches and tanks, and more.
The tragedy of it all resonates in the words of
Herodotus, 25 centuries ago: “In peace,
sons bury their fathers. In war, fathers bury their sons.”
Yet, after two terrible wars engulfed the continent
and the world with it, finally lasting peace came to Europe.
In those grey days, its cities were in ruins, the
hearts of many still simmering with mourning and resentment. How difficult it
then seemed, as Winston Churchill said, "to regain the simple joys and hopes that make life worth living".
As a child born in Belgium just after the war, I
heard the stories first-hand. My grandmother spoke about the Great War. In
1940, my father, then seventeen, had to dig his own grave. He got away;
otherwise I would not be here today.
So what a bold bet it was, for Europe's Founders, to
say, yes, we can break this endless cycle of violence, we can stop the logic of
vengeance, we can build a brighter future, together. What power of the
imagination.
Of course, peace might have come to Europe without
the Union. Maybe. We will never know. But it would never have been of the same
quality. A lasting peace, not a frosty cease-fire. To me, what makes it so
special, is reconciliation.
In politics as in life, reconciliation is the most
difficult thing. It goes beyond forgiving and forgetting, or simply turning the
page.
To think of what France and Germany had gone through,
and then take this step. Signing a Treaty of Friendship. Each time I hear these
words – Freundschaft, Amitié –, I am moved. They are private
words, not for treaties between nations.
But the will to not let history repeat itself, to do
something radically new, was so strong that new words had to be found. For
people Europe was a promise, Europe equalled hope.
When Konrad Adenauer came to Paris to conclude the
Coal and Steel Treaty, in 1951, one evening he found a gift waiting at his
hotel. It was a war medal, une Croix de
Guerre, that had belonged to a French soldier. His daughter, a young
student, had left it with a little note for the Chancellor, as a gesture of
reconciliation and hope.
I can see many other stirring images before me.
Leaders of six States assembled to open a new future, in Rome, città eterna. Willy Brandt kneeling down
in Warsaw. The dockers of Gdansk, at the gates of their shipyard. Mitterrand
and Kohl hand in hand. Two million people linking Tallinn to Riga to Vilnius in
a human chain, in 1989. These moments healed Europe.
But symbolic gestures alone cannot cement peace. This
is where the European Union's "secret weapon" comes into play: an
unrivalled way of binding our interests so tightly that war becomes materially
impossible. Through constant negotiations, on ever more topics, between ever
more countries.
It's the golden rule of Jean Monnet: "Mieux vaut se disputer autour d'une table
que sur un champ de bataille." ("Better fight around a table than
on a battle-field.") If I had to explain it to Alfred Nobel, I would say:
not just a peace congress, a perpetual peace congress!
Admittedly, some aspects can be puzzling, and not
only to outsiders. Ministers from landlocked countries passionately discussing
fish-quota. Europarlementarians from Scandinavia debating the price of olive
oil. The Union has perfected the art of compromise.
No drama of victory or defeat, but ensuring all
countries emerge victorious from talks. For this, boring politics is only a
small price to pay. It worked. Peace is now self-evident. War has become
inconceivable. Yet 'inconceivable' does not mean 'impossible'.
And that is why we are gathered here today. Europe
must keep its promise of peace. I believe this is still our Union's ultimate
purpose. But Europe can no longer rely on this promise alone to inspire
citizens.
In a way, it's a good thing; war-time memories are
fading. Even if not yet everywhere. Soviet rule over Eastern Europe ended just
two decades ago. Horrendous massacres took place in the Balkans shortly after.
The children born at the time of Srebrenica will only turn eighteen next year.
But they already have little brothers and sisters born after that war: the
first real post-war generation of Europe. This must remain so.
So, where there was war, there is now peace. But
another historic task now lies ahead of us: keeping peace where there is peace.
After all, history is not a novel, a book we can
close after a Happy Ending: we remain fully responsible for what is yet to
come.
This couldn't be more clear than it is today, when we
are hit by the worst economic crisis in two generations, causing great hardship
among our people, and putting the political bonds of our Union to the test.
Parents struggling to make ends meet, workers
recently laid off, students who fear that, however hard they try, they won't
get that first job: when they think about Europe, peace is not the first thing
that comes to mind…
When prosperity and employment, the bedrock of our
societies, appear threatened, it is natural to see a hardening of hearts, the
narrowing of interests, even the return of long-forgotten fault-lines and
stereotypes. For some, not only joint decisions, but the very fact of deciding
jointly, may come into doubt. And while we must keep a sense of proportion –
even such tensions don't take us back to the darkness of the past –, the test
Europe is currently facing is real.
If I can borrow the words of Abraham Lincoln at the
time of another continental test, what is being assessed today is "whether that Union, or any Union so
conceived and so dedicated, can long endure".
We answer with our deeds, confident we will succeed.
We are working very hard to overcome the difficulties, to restore growth and
jobs. There is of course sheer necessity. But there is more that guides us: the
will to remain masters of our own destiny, a sense of togetherness, and in a
way speaking to us from the centuries, the idea of Europa itself.
The presence of so many European leaders here today
underlines our common conviction: that we will come out of this together, and
stronger. Strong enough in the world to defend our interests and promote our
values. We all work to leave a better Europe for the children of today and
those of tomorrow. So that, later, others might turn and judge: that
generation, ours, preserved the promise of Europe.
Today's youth is already living in a new world. For
them Europe is a daily reality. Not the constraint of being in the same boat.
No, the richness of being able to freely share, travel and exchange. To share
and shape a continent, experiences, a future.
Our continent, risen from the ashes after 1945 and
united in 1989, has a great capacity to reinvent itself. It is to the next
generations to take this common adventure further. I hope they will seize this
responsibility with pride. And that they will be able to say, as we here today:
Ich bin ein Europäer.
Je
suis fier d'être européen. I am proud to be European.
JOSÉ BARROSO:
"Peace
is not mere absence of war, it is a virtue", wrote Spinoza: "Pax
enim non belli privatio, sed virtus est". And he added it is "a state of mind, a disposition for
benevolence, confidence, justice".
Indeed, there can only be true peace if people are confident.
At peace with their political system. Reassured that their basic rights are
respected.
The European Union is not only about peace among
nations. It incarnates, as a political project, that particular state of mind
that Spinoza was referring to. It embodies, as a community of values, this
vision of freedom and justice.
I remember vividly in 1974 being in the mass of
people, descending the streets in my native Lisbon, in Portugal, celebrating
the democratic revolution and freedom. This same feeling of joy was experienced
by the same generation in Spain and Greece. It was felt later in Central and
Eastern Europe and in the Baltic States when they regained their independence.
Several generations of Europeans have shown again and again that their choice
for Europe was also a choice for freedom.
I will never forget Rostropovich playing Bach at the
fallen Wall in Berlin. This image reminds the world that it was the quest for
freedom and democracy that tore down the old divisions and made possible the
reunification of the continent. Joining the European Union was essential for
the consolidation of democracy in our countries.
Because it places the person and respect of human
dignity at its heart. Because it gives a voice to differences while creating
unity. And so, after reunification, Europe was able to breathe with both its
lungs, as said by Karol Wojtyła. The European Union has become our common
house. The "homeland of our homelands" as described by Vaclav
Havel.
Our Union is more than an association of states. It
is a new legal order, which is not based on the balance of power between
nations but on the free consent of states to share sovereignty.
From pooling coal and steel, to abolishing internal
borders, from six countries to soon twenty-eight with Croatia joining the
family this has been a remarkable European journey which is leading us to an
"ever closer Union". And
today one of the most visible symbols of our unity is in everyone's hands. It
is the Euro, the currency of our European Union. We will stand by it.
Peace cannot rest only on the good will of man. It
needs to be grounded on a body of laws, on common interests and on a deeper
sense of a community of destiny.
The genius of the founding fathers was
precisely in understanding that to guarantee peace in the 20th
century nations needed to think beyond the nation-state. As Walter Hallstein,
the first President of the European Commission said: "Das System der 7ationalstaaten hat den wichtigsten Test des 20.
Jahrhunderts nicht bestanden ("The
system of sovereign nation-states has failed the most important test of the
20th century"). And he added
" through two world wars it has proved itself unable to preserve peace."
The uniqueness of the European project is to have
combined the legitimacy of democratic States with the legitimacy of
supranational institutions: the European Commission, the European Court of Justice.
Supranational institutions that protect the general European interest, defend
the European common good and embody the community of destiny. And alongside the
European Council, where the governments are represented, we have over the years
developed a unique transnational democracy symbolised by the directly elected
European Parliament.
Our quest for European unity is not a perfect work of
art; it is work in progress that demands constant and diligent tending. It is
not an end in itself, but a means to higher ends. In many ways, it attests to
the quest for a cosmopolitan order, in which one person's gain does not need to
be another person's pain; in which abiding by common norms serves universal
values.
That is why despite its imperfections, the European
Union can be, and indeed is, a powerful inspiration for many around the world.
Because the challenges faced from one region to the other may differ in scale
but they do not differ in nature.
We all share the same planet. Poverty, organised
crime, terrorism, climate change: these are problems that do not respect
national borders. We share the same aspirations and universal values: these are
progressively taking root in a growing number of countries all over the world.
We share "l'irréductible
humain", the irreducible uniqueness of the human being. Beyond our
nation, beyond our continent, we are all part of one mankind.
Jean Monnet, ends his Memoirs with these words: "Les
nations souveraines du passé ne sont plus le cadre où peuvent se résoudre les
problèmes du présent. Et la communauté elle-même n'est qu'un étape vers les
formes d'organisation du monde de demain." ("The sovereign
nations of the past can no longer solve the problems of the present. And the
[European] Community itself is only a stage on the way to the organised world
of the future.")
This federalist and cosmopolitan vision is one of the
most important contributions that the European Union can bring to a global
order in the making.
The concrete engagement of the European Union in the
world is deeply marked by our continent's tragic experience of extreme
nationalism, wars and the absolute evil of the Shoah. It is inspired by our
desire to avoid the same mistakes being made again.
That is the foundation of our multilateral approach
for a globalisation based on the twin principles of global solidarity and
global responsibility; that is what inspires our engagement with our
neighbouring countries and international partners, from the Middle East to
Asia, from Africa to the Americas.
It defines our stance against the death penalty and
our support for international justice embodied by the International Court of
Justice and the International Criminal Court, it drives our leadership in the
fight against climate change and for food and energy security; it underpins our
policies on disarmament and against nuclear proliferation.
As a continent that went from devastation to become
one of the world's strongest economies, with the most progressive social
systems, being the world's largest aid donor, we have a special responsibility
to millions of people in need.
In the 21st century it is simply
unacceptable to see parents powerless as their baby is dying of lack of basic
medical care, mothers compelled to walk all day in the hope of getting food or
clean water and boys and girls deprived of their childhood because they are forced
to become adults ahead of time.
As a community of nations that has overcome war and
fought totalitarianism, we will always stand by those who are in pursuit of
peace and human dignity.
And let me say it from here today: the current
situation in Syria is a stain on the world's conscience and the international
community has a moral duty to address it.
And as today marks the international human rights
day, more than any other day our thoughts go to the human rights' defenders all
over the world who put their lives at risk to defend the values that we
cherish. And no prison wall can silence their voice. We hear them in this room
today.
And we also remember that last year on this very
podium three women were honoured for their non-violent struggle for the safety
of women and for women’s rights. As a
Union built on the founding value of equality between women and men, enshrined
in the Treaty of Rome in 1957, we are committed to protecting women's rights
all over the world and supporting women's empowerment. And we cherish the
fundamental rights of those who are the most vulnerable, and hold the future in
their hands: the children of this world.
As a successful example of peaceful reconciliation
based on economic integration, we contribute to developing new forms of
cooperation built on exchange of ideas, innovation and research. Science and
culture are at the very core of the European openness: they enrich us as
individuals and they create bonds beyond borders.
Humbled, and grateful for the award of the Nobel
Peace Prize, there is no better place to share this vision than here in Norway,
a country which has been giving so much to the cause of global peace.
The "pacification
of Europe" was at the heart of Alfred Nobel's concerns. In an early
version of his will, he even equated it to international peace.
This echoes the very first words of the
Schuman Declaration, the founding document of the European Union. "La paix mondiale". "World Peace," it says, "cannot be safeguarded without the
making of creative efforts proportionate to the dangers which threaten
it."
My message today is: you can count on our efforts to
fight for lasting peace, freedom and justice in Europe and in the world.
Over the past sixty years, the European project has
shown that it is possible for peoples and nations to come together across
borders. That it is possible to overcome the differences between
"them" and "us".
Here today, our hope, our commitment, is that, with
all women and men of good will, the European Union will help the world come
together.
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