Gość: A.D.
IP: *.mco.bellsouth.net
06.09.03, 03:49
>> Polacy zawsze sie czyms wslawiaja w swojej glupocie. Jak
donosi 'Guardian', katolom polskim potrzebny jest teraz swiety Schuman -
Rober Schuman, ktory byl min. spraw zagranicznych Francji w 1950 i tworca
Europejskiej Wspolnoty Wegla i Stali, ktora to sie przeksztalcila w Unie
Europejska. Nie majac wiele do zaoferowania reszcie Europy, Polska poza
zlodziejami takze chce zaslynac z...idiotyzmu, wynoszac na oltarze
francuskich ministrow. Spodziewam sie ze wkrotce rowniez i Bush zostanie
polskim swietym, zwazywszym ze jego du*e juz uwaza sie za relikwie i kolejki
staja do jej calowania... Nic tylko sie ...przezegnac
www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1036531,00.html
>>Polish Catholics urge sainthood for EU founding father
Ian Black in Brussels
Saturday September 6, 2003
The Guardian
It's enough to make a Eurosceptic blanch, but Robert Schuman, one of the
founding fathers of the European Union, may be heading for sainthood.
St Schuman is not a certainty: a group of Polish Catholics have launched an
investigation into whether the Luxembourg-born politician is a suitable
candidate before the Vatican - which is already under fire for beatifying
people too readily - can take up the case.
His sponsors say that Schuman's claim to heavenly fame is that he was
France's foreign minister in 1950, when he put forward a revolutionary plan
for pooling French and German steel production - to prevent the two
countries from ever going to war again.
What became the European Coal and Steel Community, run by a supranational
authority, was the embryo of today's EU. It was an undreamed-of success,
though certainly not the miracle normally required to qualify for
canonisation.
Schuman was born in 1886 and died in 1963. His memory is already celebrated
across the continent on Europe Day, May 9, the anniversary of the
announcement of his plan.
But the move takes admiration for the European project to unprecedented
levels.
Poland, the largest of the 10 countries joining the EU next year, badly
wanted to see a reference to God in the union's new constitution. Creating
St Schuman may be seen as an acceptable substitute.
Schuman's gift was to see that Europe would be built not by a vision but
by "concrete achievements which create a de facto solidarity".
Britain, however, was not impressed, and stayed out of the project when it
was launched in 1952.
"We will not hand over to any supranational authority the right to close
down our mines and our steelworks," said the Conservative MP and future
prime minister Harold Macmillan. "No government could do it, no party could
stand for it."
The investigation into Schuman's candidacy could be completed this year,
says the Polish Catholic news agency KAI.
Another European "founding father" being considered for sainthood is the
former Italian prime minister Alcide de Gasperi, Schuman's contemporary and
a devout Catholic.
The Pope has been accused of devaluing sainthood by canonising more people
than all his 20th-century predecessors put together and - as in the
controversial case of Mother Teresa - using a "fast track" to complete the
process.