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PM Orbán honors 30th anniversary of Velvet Revolution

“We need simple human things: to live our own central European lives, to honor and protect our families, to enjoy our freedom, love our country and to be proud of our nation," the prime minister said.

During a 30th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution in Prague on Sunday, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said central Europeans had been self-confident enough to declare their region Europe's future thirty years ago. “And knowing our achievements in light of Europe’s situation we can say with all due modesty that, today, we are indeed the future of Europe.”

“We are ready for this mission,” PM Orbán said. “Thirty years ago we central Europeans showed that we could not only die for our countries and for Europe but could live and work for them too.”

“Today, we share not only a common destiny but common goals too,” PM Orbán said. “The cooperation of central European countries is written into the hearts of the people of central Europe”. He added that this is why the coming years would be about the success of central Europe and the Visegrad Group.

The prime minister said the Czech and Polish anti-communist resistance had served as a model for young Hungarians in the 1980s. He said this helped Hungarians to begin dismantling the communist system, adding that it was now clear that belonging to the ’68 generation meant something radically different in the West than in central Europe. Whereas the ’68 generation of the West strived to dismantle the Europe of free nation states and Christian culture, “our ’68-ers want to regain and protect these values.”

PM Orbán said the message of 1968 in central Europe is still the same. “We want to decide our own destiny,” he said. “We want to live as a free nation, not as an imperial colony or subordinate.”

“We are central European democrats and we must protect the sovereignty of nation states,” the prime minister said. “Because abandoning this [principle] would end our democracy,” he added.

The prime minister said it was not a new ideological system that would improve Europe today. “We need simple human things: to live our own central European lives, to honor and protect our families, to enjoy our freedom, love our country and to be proud of our nation.”

“Central Europeans have their own language: the language of freedom, independence and solidarity with one another,” he said.

“This language gives us an independent and distinct voice in the large family of European nations,” PM Orbán said. “This is why central Europe today is not only a geographical concept but a political, economic and cultural reality.”

Photo credit: Magyar Hírlap