What is Europe Day?
You may have come across a reference in a diary or elsewhere to the
fact that 9 May is "Europe Day" and perhaps asked about its significance.
Probably very few people in Europe know that on 9 May 1950 the first
move was made towards the creation of what is now known as the European
Union.
In Paris that day, against the background of the threat of a Third World
War engulfing the whole of Europe, the French Foreign Minister Robert
Schuman read to the international press a declaration calling France,
Germany and other European countries to pool together their coal and
steel production as "the first concrete foundation of a European
federation".
What he proposed was the creation of a supranational European
Institution, charged with the management of the coal and steel industry,
the very sector which was, at that time, the basis of all military
power. The countries which he called upon had almost destroyed each
other in a dreadful conflict which had left after it a sense of material
and moral desolation.
Everything, therefore, began that day. That is why during the Milan
Summit of EU leaders in 1985 it was decided to celebrate 9 May as
"Europe Day".
Every country which democratically chooses to accede to the European
Union endorses its fundamental values of peace and solidarity.
These values find expression through economic and social development
embracing environmental and regional dimensions which are the guarantees
of a decent standard of living for all citizens.
While Europe as such has existed for centuries, the elements which
united it, in the absence of rules and institutions, have in the past
been insufficient to prevent the most appalling tragedies.
The integration of Europe will not come about in one day or even in a
few decades. Deficiencies are still numerous and there are evident
imperfections. The project which was begun just after the Second World
War is still very new. In the past, efforts at European union were based
on domination of one group over another. These attempts could not last,
because those who had been conquered had only one aspiration: to regain
their freedom.
Today's ambition is completely different: to build a Europe which
respects freedom and the identity of all of the people which compose it.
Only by uniting its peoples can Europe control the mastery of its
destiny and develop a positive role in the world.
The European Union is at the service of its citizens. While keeping
their own specific values, customs and language, European citizens
should feel at ease in the "European home".
A new idea for Europe: The Schuman Declaration - 1950-2000
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