Presidents Celebrate Hungarian-Polish Friendship Day
- 21 Mar 2016 8:00 AM
Áder noted upcoming commemorations to mark the 60th anniversary of the anti-communist uprising in Poland’s Poznan in June 1956 and Hungary’s anti-Soviet revolution four months later and said that the two peoples would commemorate “their long fights and heroic moments” together.
Concerning developments in 1956, Áder said that “the Polish example filled Hungarians with enthusiasm”, and the “painful disappointment and burning desire for freedom” led to the revolution.
The Stalinist dictatorship was doomed to failure because it “did not grasp the strength of empathy and solidarity; it failed to understand that those values make a nation a community, and that nation will become stronger than any dictatorship or occupying power,” Áder insisted.
Duda said that Europe was in a crisis of values, those values that European civilisation is built on. But Hungary and Poland are committed to saving those values and re-establishing them in Western Europe, he said.
Referring to 1956, Duda said that both Hungary’s revolution and the Poznan uprising demonstrated that neither people will succumb to oppression and will reject being stripped of values by which their families had lived for generations.
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MTI photo: Kovács Tamás
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