Europe Day

Europe Day
European Flag deployed in Strasbourg (France) during Europe Day 2009
Observed by Council of Europe
European Union
Europe
Significance Establishment of the Council of Europe / European Union (Date of the Schuman Declaration)
Date 5 May and 9 May
Frequency annual

Europe Day is the name of two annual observance days, 5 May by the Council of Europe[1] and 9 May by the European Union which recognise the peace and prosperity within Europe both have achieved since their formation.

The first recognition of a "Europe Day" was by the Council of Europe, introduced in 1964 and made a public holiday by Ukraine in 2003 held on the third Saturday of March.[2] The European Union later started to celebrate its own European Day [3] in commemoration of the 1950 Schuman Declaration, leading it to be referred to by some as 'Schuman Day'.[4] Both days are celebrated usually with the displaying of the "European flag".[5]

History

The Council of Europe was founded on 5 May 1949, and hence it chose that day for its celebrations when it established the holiday in 1964.

The "Europe Day" of the EU was introduced in 1985 by the European Communities (the predecessor organisation of the EU) The date of commemorates the Schuman Declaration of 9 May 1950. The declaration proposed the pooling of French and West German coal and steel industries, leading to the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community, the first European Community, established in 1952.

A "raft of cultural icons" was launched by the European Commission in 1985, in reaction to the report by the ad-hoc commission "for a People's Europe" chaired by Pietro Adonnino. The aim was to facilitate European integration by fostering a Pan-European identity among the populations of the EC member states. The European Council adopted "Europe Day" along with the flag of Europe (technically not called a "flag" but an "emblem") and other items on 29 September 1985 in Milan.[6]

Following the foundation of the European Union in 1993, observance of Europe Day by national and regional authorities increased significantly. Germany in particular has gone beyond celebrating just the day, since 1995 extending the observance to an entire "Europe Week" (Europawoche) centered on 9 May. In Poland, the Schuman Foundation, a Polish organisation advocating European integration established in 1991, first organised its Warsaw Schuman Parade on Europe Day 1999, at the time advocating the accession of Poland to the EU. Observance of 9 May as "Europe Day" was reported "across Europe" as of 2008.[7] The EU's choice of the date of foundation of the European Coal and Steel Community rather than that of the EU itself established a narrative in which Schuman's speech, concerned with inducing economic growth and cementing peace between France and Germany, is presented as anticipating a "vocation of the European Union to be the main institutional framework" for the much further-reaching European integration of later decades.[8]

The European Constitution would have legally enshrined all the European symbols in the EU treaties, however the treaty failed to be ratified in 2005, and usage would continue only in the present de facto manner. The Constitution's replacement, the Treaty of Lisbon, contains a declaration by sixteen members supporting the symbols.[9] The European Parliament "formally recognised" Europe Day in October 2008.[10]

See also

References

  1. https://www.coe.int/en/web/portal/-/europe-d-1
  2. Signifying Europe by Johan Fornäs, Intellect Ltd, 2012, ISBN 1841505218
    Police to strengthen maintenance of public order in Kyiv on May 18, Interfax-Ukraine (16 April 2013)
  3. Nicole Scicluna, European Union Constitutionalism in Crisis, Routledge (2014), p. 56
  4. Does the EU have a "National" Day? Archived 2009-05-04 at the Wayback Machine., European Commission Delegation to Ukraine.
  5. Due to the objection against adopting symbols of statehood, the 1985 adoption of the "European flag" had only been possible by avoiding the official use of the term "flag", so that the "European flag" is still officially "a logo or emblem eligible to be reproduced on rectangular pieces of fabric". (Scicluna, 2014, p. 56) The proposal to officially adopt it as the flag of the EU was made in the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe (2004) which however failed to be ratified. Instead, the Treaty of Lisbon (2007) includes an annex signed by sixteen members which declares that the European flag, anthem, motto, currency, and Europe Day "will for them continue as symbols to express the sense of community of the people in the European Union and their allegiance to it."
  6. Nicole Scicluna, European Union Constitutionalism in Crisis, Routledge (2014), p. 55.
  7. Lamming, R. (9 May 2008) Europe Day, but not in Britain Archived 2009-05-04 at the Wayback Machine., Federal Union
  8. Scicluna (2014:56), citing F. Larat, "Present-ing the Past: Political Narratives on European History and the Justification of EU Integration", German Law Journal 6.2 (2005), 274290.
  9. "Official Journal of the European Union, 2007 C 306-2 , p. 267". Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  10. Kubosova, Lucia (9 October 2008). "No prolonged mandate for Barroso, MEPs warn". EU Observer. Retrieved 2008-10-09. "with the fate of the Lisbon Treaty still unclear, the European Parliament on Wednesday decided to officially recognise EU flag, anthem and motto as the symbols of the bloc's plenary. The anthem, based on the "Ode to Joy" from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, will be performed at the opening ceremony following each European election and at formal sittings. The motto, 'United in diversity', will be reproduced on all Parliament's official documents, and the celebration of Europe Day on 9 May will be also formally recognised, says a report approved by 503 votes in favour 96 against and 15 abstentions. The symbols were first officially referred to by the European Constitution, a document rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005 and replaced by the Lisbon Treaty, which does not mention them."
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