With major strife in the Middle East, it is good to be reminded of someone who spent their life striving for unity in the world.
Pope
Francis could declare venerable the French statesman ROBERT SCHUMAN, a key
“founding father” of the European Union.
Robert Schuman
dedicated his life to serving the common good, seeking peace and reconciliation
with Germany
to create a community of European states.
His work
involved putting an end to the infernal cycle of war, the humiliating defeat,
the desire for revenge and more war.
Father Bernard Ardura, an official in charge of the proposed
French canonization said Robert Schuman’s efforts were ‘“the work of a
Christian, which serves as an example, even if the statesman “remained very
discreet about his personal life and his faith.”
Robert
Schuman was born in Luxembourg
in 1886. He had family roots in Lorraine,
contested territory lost by France
to Germany
in the Franco-Prussian War. After Lorraine
returned to France,
he served as one of the region’s Members of Parliament, in the Christian
Democrat political tradition. At one point during the Second World War, he was
arrested by the Gestapo and secretly imprisoned, according to his biography on
the website of the Robert Schuman European Centre.
He was France’s
Minister of Foreign Relations when he announced the forming of the European
Steel and Coal Community on May 9, 1950. The move is considered a first step
towards the creation of the European Union.
He was also
a key negotiator for the North Atlantic Treaty and the European Coal and Steel
Community. He served as the first President of the European Parliament which
named him “Father of Europe” when he left office.
Robert Schuman
died in the Diocese of Matz in 1963. His cause for sainthood began there over
30 years ago.
Last October,
Pope Francis discussed Schuman in the context of contemporary Europe.
We can either continue to pursue the path we have taken in the
past decade, yielding to the temptation to autonomy and thus to ever greater
misunderstanding, disagreement and conflict, or we can rediscover the path of
fraternity that inspired and guided the founders of modern Europe, beginning
precisely with Robert Schuman…
Today,
as many in Europe look to its future with uncertainty, others look to Europe with hope, convinced that it still has something
to offer to the world and to humanity..The same conviction inspired Robert
Schuman, who realized that ‘the contribution which an organized and living Europe can bring to civilization is indispensable to the
maintenance of peaceful relations.’ It is a conviction that we ourselves can
share, setting out from shared values and rooted in the history and culture of
this land.”
In
November 2003 remarks to the Robert Schuman Foundation, France’s main research center on Europe, St. John Paul II called Europeans to remember and
cherish their Christian roots. He praised Schuman for spending his political
life “in the service of the fundamental values of freedom and solidarity,
understood fully in the light of the Gospel.”
The
monument (at right) "Homage to the Founding Fathers of Europe" in front of
Schuman's house in Scy-Chazelles by Russian artist Zurab
Tsereteli, unveiled 20 October 2012. The statues represent the four
founders of Europe – Alcide de
Gasperi, Robert Schuman, Jean Monnet and Konrad
Adenauer.
No comments:
Post a Comment