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Michaëlle Jean

Dec
03
2008

Return from the State visit to Central Europe

by Her Excellency Michaëlle Jean

We set out on our recent State visits in the hopes of strengthening our transatlantic ties. My husband Jean-Daniel Lafond and I, along with a dynamic and diverse Canadian delegation, visited three countries in Central Europe: Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Slovenia was the fourth country on the program, but unfortunately, we were unable to do more than a brief stopover. I had to cut my visit short because of the political situation in Canada.

The bridges between Canada and Europe are built on a number of key pillars. First, our historical ties with these countries, including many of their citizens who, fleeing the famines of the 19th century and the repression of the Soviet regime in the 1950s and 1960s, found safe harbour on our shores and a place to put down roots. Our co-operation within international organizations and multilateral missions has been productive, as are our bilateral relations in a number of sectors. Recently, our governments signed mobility agreements, and Canada lifted the mandatory visa for Hungarian, Czech and Slovak citizens, which has opened up opportunities and allows for a greater flow of people, goods, experiences, expertise, knowledge and ideas.

The program for these visits included meetings and formal, official discussions with the heads of State and government, the presidents of parliamentary assemblies, various political representatives, mayors and governors, military authorities, and members of the diplomatic corps. To this, we added numerous opportunities for dialogue with civil society, youth, community and spiritual leaders, and community, cultural, academic and business representatives. We took our Art Matters forums and Youth Dialogues with us to Hungary and the Czech Republic. These discussions gave us the opportunity to broaden our understanding of the realities and challenges facing this region of Europe and to put them in perspective and compare them to our own experiences and realities here in Canada. The contribution of the delegates helped us to forge new ties, create new networks and lay the foundation for future collaboration. We need to focus on this kind of diplomacy on a human scale and on the strength of cultural diplomacy.

The issues most often raised during these discussions with the public dealt with the integration of minorities and the strengthening of social ties in diversity. They are interested in the Canadian point of view: our experience, our approaches, our structures, our resources, our laws, and our grassroots initiatives. This region of Europe has been profoundly shaped by History, totalitarian regimes, devastating wars, population shifts, and borders that have been drawn and redrawn. Today, all of these countries belong to the concert of nations that have come together in peace and stability within the European Union. These modern, dynamic and determined societies have succeeded in stabilizing their economies, carving out their rightful place in world markets, restructuring their institutions, and re-establishing the rule of law and democracy. They are building their future on the need to learn from a rich and complex past. 

The blogs written by the delegates and citizens we met along the way allow you to see how the visits unfolded and to gain an insider’s perspective on the concerns, discussions and discoveries.

I hope that they will inspire you and encourage you to explore the many possibilities and to strengthen and enrich our ties with these peoples of Europe.

1 Comments

Excellency,

I was pleased to have been able to participate in some of the Hungarian portion of your recent State Visit to Central Europe. I was there to represent the Canada-Hungary Educational Foundation which provided support - together with the Rakoczy Foundation of Canada - for the Canadian memorial which you unveiled on November 26th in City Park near the Hungarian 1956 monument. Although I was born in Hungary, I was standing there at the unveiling as a proud and grateful Canadian: proud to be represented by you as our Head of State, proud also of Canada's living diversity well represented in the members of your delagation and grateful to be a contributor to the project which pays tribute in a public space to Canada's generosity to refugees - as was reflected in your speech to the 150 or so people gathered for the occasion.

This public space, City Park (or Varosliget in Hungarian) was a favourite place of my Hungarian childhood. I lived in a street almost opposite the Canadian memorial, my school was a few hundred meters along one side of the square which now holds the Hungarian 1956 monument but where in 1956 the statue of Stalin was toppled. In fact, I was standing on the square with thousands of others on that evening. But the City Park for me also means the two beautiful museums of Heroes' Square, the lake on which I learned to skate (obviously in unconscious anticipation of becoming a Canadian later in life), the playgrounds and walks across the park, as well as the wonderful spacious Zoological Gardens (which I visit with pleasure whenever I can).

It gives me especial pleasure to note from your closing remarks on this State Visit above that in all countries you visited the most frequently raised issues related to the Canadian experience with the integration of minorities and the strengthening of social ties through the practice of diversity. It is this aspect of Canada that has made me (and millions of other Canadians wherever they or their ancestors came from) so proud to be a citizen of this country. Thank you.

Judy Young Drache
Canada-Hungary Educational Foundation
Fondation educative Canada-Hongrie
Ottawa
judyyoung - January 14, 2009-12:19:06

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