Introduction to the European Year of Intercultural Dialogue
05.12.2007, 09:54
In his interview with EUobserver (EUobserver.com), the EU's commissioner for culture, Jan Figel, outlines, using a popular German expression for multi-ethnic communities, that: “After enlargement, and in times of globalisation, in times of growing migration, so-called 'multi-culti' realities are very visible.”
"The EU is the only 'geopolitical innovation' based on the respect for cultural diversity in the world, and, as such, is an attractive model to share," the Slovak commissioner said ahead of the official presentation of the "European Year of Intercultural Dialogue" on 4 December.
With a budget of €10 million, a series of community programmes involving culture, education, youth, sport and citizenship will be initiated throughout 2008. The aim is to create closer links between European peoples themselves and between their respective cultures.
"The European Union today is a more mature community, we all agree that market or business is not enough to keep people together," the commissioner said.
"Europe should be a community of people, of values," he continued, praising as an asset the somewhat contradictory notion of many cultures being a single entity and yet separate.
"We are living in one European home with a mosaic of pieces. The similarities are best seen from a distance, from other parts of the world," he explained. Speaking about his own experience, Mr Figel said that before the EU's enlargement eastwards in 2004, lack of knowledge and trust between the old East and West prevailed in Europe.
"The old West did not look to the East as much as the East looked to the West. He added that the debacle over the "Polish plumber"- Western countries fearing that Eastern Europeans would flood their countries to take their jobs and dump wages - seemed to be more based on "fear of the other", than on actual economic considerations.
"Chopin is not a threat", Mr Figel said jokingly, referring to the Polish 19th century composer. "And in many cases we have seen difficult, problematic or even conflicting expressions of this," he continued, referring to the uproar in the Islamic world in 2005 caused by a Danish newspaper's decision to publish of drawings of the prophet Mohammed.
Several European officials have since called for a "completely new dialogue" between the EU and the Muslim world.
"Dialogue is not a sign of weakness, but of maturity", Mr Figel said by way of reply.
Taking an example, he said that the aim of such a dialogue would not be to play "the good guys" while pointing the finger at Muslims.
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