Letter to Heads
of State of the European Union
by Lord Yehudi Menuhin, May 6, 1997
The following letter to Heads of State of
the European Union, calling for the creation of a European Cultural
Assembly, was sent by Lord Yehudi Menuhin, the great violinist,
conductor, and humanitarian who received the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation's 1997 Distinguished Peace Leadership Award.
In my opinion there is one element missing in the general concept
of the European Union -- It is the representation of the rich
diversity of European Cultures.
The peoples aspiring to national sovereignty must
be offered the alternative of cultural autonomy. We cannot afford
a proliferation of atom bombs and terrorists, nor can we deny
any group its own distinctive identity, its needs, traditions
and habitat.
The powers of globalization in science, in communications,
in commerce, the need to combat global menaces-- disease, pollution,
drought, famine-- through more effective and broader cooperation
amongst peoples must be compensated by cultural affinities conceived
on the scale of the human being.
Until now the sovereign state acted as the responsible
monolith for both functions; now they must each be represented
on the European stage by
1) the European Parliament,
2) the Assembly of Cultures.
To this end I am engaged in establishing a representation
of cultures at the level of a greater Europe. The representatives,
either designated or chosen, would have to enjoy the confidence
and trust of their group, but they would also have to speak with
the aim of reaching agreement..
The discussions, conducted in the presence of a
member of the European Court of Justice, would result in resolutions
or in further discussions, in arbitration or legislation. The
discussion concluded, the individual would return to home and
habitual work.
The mission, if successfully accomplished, would
entitle the spokesman or woman to become a member of the full
meetings of the Assembly of Cultures. Full meetings of the Assembly
would be held once or twice a year in Brussels or Strasbourg.
The Cultures would also remain in constant touch with each other.
This would lead to a renunciation on the part of any given culture,
of sovereign national and territorial ambitions. Gradually national
police and military requirements would take on a European character,
as great world powers would no longer be required to defend a
self-reliant Europe.
My foundation in Brussels is already furthering
this project with an office and a qualified gentleman in charge.
Europe would thus have another chamber of representatives:
the one elected by the citizens-- the European Parliament-- and
the other as a counterweight -- a forum of the different cultures.
Both houses would fully consider each other's attitudes
and propositions.
As I see it, Mr. Prime Minister, this is the next
stage in the constant evolution and development of our democracies.
I am convinced that an Assembly of Cultures can
play a decisive role in the emergence of a genuine European conscience,
which would constitute the best defense of its peoples and of
the community. The inclusion of cultures in Eastern Europe would
release a process of acclimatization whereby good neighborliness
and trust would permeate our Assembly of Cultures of greater Europe,
preparing them gradually for fuller membership in the Community,
a membership for which they are not qualified as yet, either economically
or, even more importantly, psychologically.
We cannot include in the evolved community of western
Europe wherein territorial ambitions have been outgrown, those
other peoples whose mentality still reverts to territorial control
and expansion. They are still psychologically unevolved and unprepared
for European Union.
This evolution could be immediately begun with
cultural contacts and expressions in every field, including the
political, of which evolution neither the political Parliament
of States, which are never completely free of mistrust, nor the
economic dictates of profitability in a free market are capable.
(See my letter to the Governor of Moscow.)
Up until now our European Union has not shouldered
its role of Guardian of cultures which would protect a human being,
his heritage, his rights, his creativity.
Europe will not survive on its past record alone,
however great are its contributions to democracy, to the arts,
the sciences and the social sciences; only when it will finally
give a shining example of a balanced, rich, diverse, multicolored
and harmonious society may other powers wish to emulate it rather
than destroy it.
Also, whilst keeping our powder dry, our hands
and our minds and doors must be open, generous and sharing.
For these reasons, Mr. Prime Minister, I would
ask you with a full heart to support the principle of the creation
of this representation of Cultures, and I would be very happy
if among the many issues you will discuss you could agree upon
two points:
1)that the European Union should be called 'The
European Union of States and Cultures'
and
2)that the European Union declares itself the 'Guardian
of European Cultures.'
In setting your sight high, even upon the unattainable,
you will attract the vast majority of people to your side, for
you will have given them to understand that vision and that a
future do exist; that clear and inspiring, noble purposes can
still be pursued -- and not only garages to repair outworn, outdated
mechanisms, reflexes and obsessional thoughts, narrow, timid,
and vulgar.
As Prime Minister you are spokesman for and to
all your people -- rich, poor, old, young, of all colors and denominations
-- and of all political parties, for, of course, as soon as you
confine yourself to one political party or to an alliance you
will be opposed by others, several of which may have valid attitudes
and arguments.
Will you allow me to say that neither the purposes,
nor the measures, nor the problems, nor all that which may link
these problems together, are presented with clarity and against
their backgrounds of weights and forces, which it would be essential
to do if you really want to convince a people, critical, experienced,
tested and tried, a people of essentially good character, yet
wary and cynical.
The measures which you feel obliged to take consist
in part of responses to financial and economic problems, which
relate to social and civil ones, which in their turn are connected
to Europe, to foreign affairs, but very specially to the quality
of education, to health, physical and intellectual, to a creative,
moral code based on a consensus of values, heritage and traditions,
which are at the very heart of a civilization, however complex
it may be.
Your own poor, suffering, aged, young, sick, the
sad unemployed, all the frustrated, the malcontents, the drugged,
the ill-informed and violent, this living tinder cannot be ignored--
a multitude rarely considered by political parties, except gingerly
at election time.
Solemn personal promises will not suffice.
May I suggest that the very words are : to work
towards a civilization founded on a positive reciprocity, on the
balance of right with responsibility, and on duties and obligations
incumbent on all.
As a rule I would say that rights belong to those
at the mercy of others and who lack an official voice.
Thus, for instance, children (who, within their
capacity, safety and well-being should also exercise responsibility)
or the sick, or trees, would have rights in respect of their helplessness,
while, on the other hand, others by virtue of authority, knowledge,
skill, experience and influence should carry the responsibilities;
thus, the passenger has rights, where the chauffeur has specific
responsibilities; the patient has the right, the surgeon the responsibility.
Our task is to build a civilization of positive
reciprocity. An education for reciprocity would concern itself
with the teaching from earliest infancy of the voice, by song
and speech, with everything which is absorbed and learned by example
and imitation-- dance, mime, a body language, a use of hands,
mind, heart and fantasy, in crafts, arts, in thoughts and speech,
in poetry, in compassion, in wonder. In this way the abstract
studies, beginning with reading and writing, can more easily sprout
on a humanely fertilized soil or soul.
As you know, this is exactly the description of
what I pursue through the works of my Foundation (The International
Yehudi Menuhin Foundation) (the project is called MUS-E) in the
more difficult schools (violent and prejudiced) in Europe. We
now have a formal working arrangement with the Ministers of Culture
and Education in Spain and Portugal. This improved society based
on reciprocity, on the mutuality of services, on the recognition
of our interdependence and upon our desire to learn, would tend
largely to reduce our exaggerated dependencies on money itself.
I would maintain that everyone, including the unemployed,
have the right to a lifelong education, to music and opera, to
theater and to sports, as well as to the basics of life-- even
holidays (a "change of air") -- provided in part by
special electronic credit cards, by mutual services and the venues,
facilities, theaters and schools, provided by the state, by private
funds, and maintained by the people with free time. The financial
field of action could thereby be substantially reduced. People
would have the obligation to live without hurting their neighbor,
whilst enjoying a reciprocal liberty and serving, as they can
and may be inclined to, the needs of others. On such a basis a
healthy capitalism could flourish, never exceeding the limits
imposed by pollution, by the abuse of nature, of our mother earth,
of our resources, never breaking all bounds in the sale of arms,
drugs, children, nor in poisons of all sorts which apparently
share our economies.
I would propose that salaries be related not only
to the employer's resources but also to a given, regional, national
(a European) income. Thus salaries would adjust to the given well-being
of a country.
We must rethink basic rights and responsibilities.
These are all to life, ours and all other lives and all life upon
which we depend, and not to money alone.
Forgive me if I allow myself to seize one of those
rare moments of historical opportunity to urge you to engage upon
a renewal of options and at the same time a return to certain
codes pronounced some two thousand and more years ago.
Respectfully,
Yehudi Menuhin
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