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The Nobel Committee of the Norwegian Parliament has this
year awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to the Belgian Dominican,
Father Georges Pire, for his efforts to help refugees to
leave their camps and return to a life of freedom and
dignity.
Father Pire's work is known to all of us in Western Europe.
We have read in the newspapers of this man who, on his own
initiative, has set himself the task of rescuing the
handicapped refugees, the «Hard Core», or the residue. These
are the old and infirm who remained in the camps, doomed to
stay there without hope of a brighter future, men for whom
our hard, ruthless world, which has taken Efficiency and
Working Capacity as its idols, has had no further use.
Just seven weeks ago, we in Oslo had the pleasure of hearing
Father Pire speak of his work for these refugees. His talk
in the Great Hall of the University was reported in the
national press; so most of us in Norway are acquainted with
both the practical ventures he has launched and the
difficulties which he has encountered. Father Pire told us
then that his aim was not merely to rescue individuals from
material want, but also to restore to each of these
unfortunate human beings the self-confidence dulled by the
many years languished away in refugee camps.
Father Pire himself tells us that it was on February 27,
1949, when he was thirty-nine years old, that he suddenly
became poignantly aware of the refugee problem. Until that
day he had, as a Dominican priest, been actively engaged in
helping the suffering, and especially the children. But a
conversation with a colonel in UNRRA awakened him to the
plight of the refugees, and he began to ask himself what he
could personally do to save some of the displaced persons
who were still detained in the camps and who were in the
majority old and infirm, with little hope of building up a
new existence for themselves and their families by their own
endeavor.
Father Pire began with an attempt to establish a sponsorship
scheme; that is to say, he tried to place refugee families
living in the camps in contact with private individuals, or
«godparents», who were willing to write to them, send
parcels and perhaps money. Today 15,000 «godparents» from
twenty countries correspond with 15,000 refugees. In other
words, refugees have been put in touch with people outside
the camps who, they know, have a kind thought for them. Just
imagine what joy the arrival of letters and parcels must
bring to them! They have in this way a tangible proof of
someone's willingness to reach out a helping hand.
But, and this is a big but, their own place is still in the
camps and only in the camps. By visiting the refugees,
Father Pire has learned to know what this means.
And so, in 1950, he began his work to help the refugees to
leave the camps. In the first place, there was the problem
of the old people. Within four years he had succeeded in
founding four homes for the old people, all in Belgium,
where they, to use Father Pire's own words, «are left in
peace to dream of their lost homeland». Here they are
provided with shelter, clothing, food, medicine, and here
they will be cared for until they die.
As I have said, Father Pire's homes for the old owe their
existence to voluntary work and to donations from
individuals. In fact, when building these homes, Georges
Pire had to give an undertaking to the Belgian government
that he would not ask for help from official sources. The
same conditions were imposed on his subsequent work which
has been financed solely from private contributions. Is it
then surprising that Father Pire spends a large part of his
time in raising money for his projects? For Father Pire
never begs, and we must remember that the vast proportion of
the cash received is donated in small sums from people of
average income.
Shortly before the Belgian society was transformed into an
international organization, Father Pire and his closest
collaborators had founded another society whose aim was the
relief of every form of distress in whatever part of the
world it might arise. This organization took the name Europe
of the Heart in the Service of the World (L'Europe du coeur
au service du monde) and invited all countries to become
members without regard to any division, whether of frontier
or religion, language or culture. In this way it has
progressed far beyond the refugee work in Europe, for now
Father Pire appeals to all that is best in the West
European, exhorting him to promote the feeling of
brotherhood among men and asking him to face his
responsibilities to the inhabitants of the rest of the
world.
I have tried to give a brief outline of
Father Pire's work: his sponsorship scheme for refugees, his
homes for the old, and his European Villages. I have
described his intentions in creating Europe of the Heart in
the Service of the World. If his achievement is judged
solely on the number of refugees he has rescued, then some
might say that it is not great. But, as is so often the
case, it would be dangerous to judge on the basis of numbers
alone. Of far greater importance are the spirit which has
animated Georges Pire in his mission and the seed he has
sown in the hearts of men, for they give us the hope of a
harvest to come: man's selfless work for his needy
fellowman.
Presentation Speech by Gunnar Jahn, Chairman of the Nobel
Committee Mr. Jahn delivered this speech on December 10,
1958, in the Auditorium of the University of Oslo Copyright
© The Nobel Foundation 1958.
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1958/press.html
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