Cosac elnökeinek találkozója (2024. július 28-29.)

 

 

Interparliamentary Conference on Cultural Heritage and the Identity of Traditional National Minorities

Budapest, 4-5 December 2024

 

 

 

 

Overview of the conference

Documents

Background notes

Photos

Videos

 

Károly Pánczél, Chair of the Committee on National Cohesion

Dear Visitor,

I cordially welcome you on the occasion of the Hungarian presidency in the second half of 2024. The presidency, through interparliamentary cooperation, provides an opportunity for the directly elected representatives of EU citizens, and committee chairs to meet and exchange ideas.

Since 2010, Hungary has been paying particular attention to the national minority communities living in Hungary and to those with a Hungarian identity living outside the country's borders. Since 2011, a dedicated committee has been dealing with Hungarians living abroad, and since 2014, in addition to the fact that national minorities living in Hungary have preferential parliamentary opportunities and advocacy seats, they can also assert their interests in the committee representing national minorities. Since 2010, we have extended the Citizenship Act, and we provide every assistance to help our compatriots to be proud of their Hungarian nationality, wherever they may live in the world. The reunification of the nation across borders has been achieved.

It is important to note that indigenous national minorities are not second-class citizens; their communities have contributed to the enrichment of Europe's cultural heritage and rightly expect to preserve their identity and be recognised as state-building factors everywhere. Strong communities make strong states, and strong states make a strong Europe. It is important for all European citizens to reflect together on our past, our identity, and our communities for the sake of our European future, since securing the freedoms of Europe's national minority communities – some 50 million European taxpayers – still remains a challenge on our continent.

It is our common interest and responsibility to address indigenous national minorities on the basis of European values by understanding and incorporating our traditions and common interests.

The Interparliamentary Conference on Cultural Heritage and the Identity of National Communities, to be held in Budapest on 4-5 December 2024, provides a splendid opportunity for delegations from the Member States' Committees to be informed and to express their views on these issues. We look forward to welcoming you in Budapest!

 
   

 

Welcome Address by Imre Ritter, Chair of the Committee on National Minorities in Hungary

“Nationality and patriotism are the secret that unite everything. To develop the first as far as possible, to make the second a reality in all our hearts in our motherland, and thus to awaken a peaceful and quiet, but vibrant future for our country, is (...) our most sacred duty.”
Count István Széchenyi (Stádium, 1831)

Dear Visitor,

Five per cent of Hungary's 9.6 million people declare themselves as belonging to one of the 13 acknowledged minorities. In fact, in Hungary we do not talk about minorities, but about nationalities, but for the sake of simplicity and international clarity, let us stick to the term minorities. Slovenes are the smallest indigenous community in Hungary, and the Roma the largest. Other acknowledged minorities include Armenians, Ruthenians, Greeks, Bulgarians, Poles, Ukrainians, Serbs, Croats, Slovaks, Romanians and Germans.

The Committee on National Minorities in Hungary is the initiating, proposing, commenting and government monitoring body of the National Assembly, concerning the interests and rights of these almost 500,000 citizens. This work was carried out by 13 advocates in the 2014-2018 parliamentary term. Since the election of the Members of Parliament in 2018, the Committee has been operating with a full-fledged – German – national minority representative in addition to the advocates.

The task of the Committee is to resolve the problems of indigenous minorities in Hungary, to advance their issues, to pave the way for the achievement of our goals planned for the near and distant future, and to accelerate progress. This process of advocacy is truly multifaceted. It is up to us, as minorities, to formulate what is a matter of nationality policy. We must clearly demonstrate to the Hungarian National Assembly and the Government what we demand and expect, and what we can do for the development of our homeland, Hungary, in order to protect and further enrich the values we have jointly developed and established over the past centuries.

The conference entitled “Cultural Heritage and the Identity of National Communities” – to which I respectfully and cordially invite you – draws attention to the preservation of Europe's diverse cultural traditions, including the survival and development of the indigenous nationalities of Hungary.

 

 

     

Overview of the conference 

 

The conference titled “Cultural Heritage and the Identity of Traditional National Minorities”, to be held on 5 December 2024, is an interparliamentary event organised by the Hungarian National Assembly in the framework of the Presidency of the Council of the European Union. The conference addresses the linguistic and cultural heritage in the Europe of nations, including the protection of minorities, the protection of the identity of both national minorities and majorities, and, in this respect, the good practices in the Member States and their regions.

Participants are  delegations  from  the  relevant  committees  in  the  national  parliaments  of  the  EU  and  invited  guests  from  certain  European  regions.

This year's 75th anniversary of the founding of the Council of Europe, which also serves as a reference point for the EU in the protection of minorities in Europe, provides a good opportunity for prominent representatives of the organisations that constitute the international institutional system for the protection of minorities to give an assessment on various aspects of the topic.

The conference is closely linked to the Presidency conclusions adopted on 23 April at the Conference of Speakers of the European Union Parliaments in Palma de Mallorca, which stated that the Speakers:
“Commit themselves to continue working to support the European Agenda for Culture of 2018, bearing in mind that to protect culture, and understand its relevance for the construction of egalitarian societies, is  to  protect  democracy,  fundamental  rights  and  freedoms  and  the  Welfare  State.”
“Consider it necessary to defend the cultural and linguistic plurality of the European Union, understood as one of our main shared heritages, and that, in accordance to the principles and the rules laid down in the Constitutions of each Member State, minority languages be promoted, and their use encouraged, in all fields of life, including the parliamentary sphere.”

We hope that the participants will be able to report on good practices in line with the principles enshrined in the constitutions of each Member State, as well as with the fundamental European values, so that the meeting can raise awareness of the issue.

 

 

     

Documents

 

 

     

Background notes