18.09.2015.

An Appeal from Central Europe

We are facing a humanitarian crisis on an enormous scale. Hundreds of thousands of refugees from the Middle East and Africa are attempting to reach Europe in search of safety, hope, and the chance to lead a normal life. Not so long ago, we were the ones knocking on Europe's door.

We must not deny them our help. Regrettably, there are many in our region who disagree. After 1989, there were doubts in the European Community regarding the capacity of Central European countries, from the Baltic States through Romania and Bulgaria, to integrate with the West, owing to our history, political traditions, and the state of our economies. Yet, our part of Europe has not been the principal cause of the threats to the Union in this difficult decade.

But this rift within a united Europe resurfaces  today. This time it has a moral dimension. It is true, we are not accountable for the instability and collapse of refugees' home countries. We are not the ones who have turned them into states plagued by incessant fear, where people are at risk of violent death, and where human life is "solitary, poor, brutish, and short." Unlike the former colonial and imperial powers that took in large numbers of immigrants after the Second World War, have little experience of co-existing with people of different cultures, from far-off lands.

Nonetheless, as human beings, we have a duty to show compassion and to provide them with assistance. This is also our duty as Europeans. The European community was founded on the principle of solidarity. Today we must not refuse to take joint responsibility for the Union, nor turn a blind eye to human suffering and the situation of countries most affected by the rising tide of migration.

In refusing to help, we deny the idea of European solidarity. Furthermore, we undermine the solidarity that other nations have shown towards our countries. That would erode the foundations on which, for the past 25 years, we have been building our security, our prospects for development and our hope of escaping the historical tribulations of war, foreign rule, and poverty.

In the name of our humanity, our principles and values, we call upon the authorities and people of our region to demonstrate practical solidarity towards refugees so that they may find safe haven in our midst and enjoy freedom to choose their own future.

1.       Bronisław Komorowski, president of Poland from 2010 to 2015

2.       Aleksander Kwaśniewski, president of Poland from 1995 to 2005

3.       Jerzy Baczyński, editor-in-chief of the „Polityka” weekly, Poland

4.       Gordon Bajnai, former prime minister, Hungary

5.       Mirosław Bałka, sculptor, Poland

6.       Zuzana Bargerova, lawyer, Human Rights League,Slovakia

7.       Zygmunt Bauman, sociologist, University of Leeds, Poland-Great Britain

8.       Igor Blaževič, founder of One World Festival

9.       Uldis Bērziņš, poet and interpreter, Latvia

10.     Henryka Bochniarz, president of Konfederacja Lewiatan, Poland

11.     Michał Boni, member of European Parliament, former minister of administration and digitalization, Poland

12.     Marek Borowski, senator, former finance minister, vice prime minister and Marshal of the Sejm

13.     Bogdan Borusewicz, marshall of the Senate, Poland

14.   Martin Bútora, sociologist, adviser to the president, Slovakia

15.   Bogusław Chrabota, editor-in-chief of the „Rzeczpospolita” daily, Poland

16.   Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz, former prime minister, Poland

17.   Liudas Dapkus, deputy editor-in-chief of the “Lietuvos rytas” daily, Lithuania

18.   Aleš Debeljak, poet and essayist, Slovenia

19.   Pavol Demeš, former minister of foreign affairs, Slovakia

20.   Tibor Dessewffy, president of DEMOS Hungary, Hungary

21.   Ivaylo Ditchev, professor of social science, writer, Bulgaria

22.   Magda Faltová, director,  Association for Integration and Migration, Czech Republic

23.   Władysław Frasyniuk, former dissident and member of parliament, Poland

24.   Rajko Grlić, director, Croatia

25.   István Gyarmati, diplomat, Hungary

26.   Tomáš Halík, theologian and writer, Czech Republic

27.   Agnes Heller, philosopher, Hungary

28.   Agnieszka Holland, director, Poland

29.   Štefan Hríb, editor-in-chief, “.týždeň.” weekly, Slovakia

30.   Michal Hvorecký, writer, Slovakia

31.   Ivars Ījabs, political scientist, Latvia

32.   Josef Jařab, former senator, rector emeritus of Palacký University in Olomous, Czech Republic

33.   Leszek Jażdżewski, editor-in-chief of the „Liberté!” quarterly, Poland

34.   Jerzy Jedlicki, historian of ideas, former dissident, Poland

35.   Jana Juráňová, writer, Slovakia

36.   Aleksander Kaczorowski, journalist and essayist, Poland

37.   Éva Karádi, editor-in chief of the „Magyar Lettre Internationale” quarterly, Hungary

38.   Dávid Korányi,former undersecretary of state, deputy director of the Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center, Hungary-United States

39.   János Kornai, Professor Emeritus, Harvard University and Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary

40.   András Kováts, director, Menedék - Hungarian Association for Migrants, Hungary

41.   Dominika Kozłowska, editor-in-chief of the „Znak” monthly, Poland

42.   Ivan Krastev, chairman of the Centre for Liberal Strategies, Bulgaria

43.   Marcin Król, historian of ideas, University of Warsaw, Poland

44.   Andrius Kubilius, former prime minister, Lithuania

45.   Jarosław Kuisz, editor-in-chief of the “Kultura Liberalna” internet weekly, Poland

46.   Ewa Kulik-Bielińska, director of the Stefan Batory Foundation, chairman of the European Foundation Centre

47.   Tomasz Lis,editor-in-chief of the „Newsweek Polska” weekly, Poland

48.   Ondřej Liška, former minister of education, chairman of the Green Party, Czech Republic

49.   Ewa Łętowska, former ombudsman, Poland

50.   Vita Matiss, political analyst, essayist, Latvia

51.   Jiří Menzel, director, Czech Republic

52.   Adam Michnik, editor-in-chief of the „Gazeta Wyborcza” daily, Poland

53.   Piotr Mucharski, editor-in-chief of the “Tygodnik Powszechny” weekly, Poland

54.   Alvydas Nikžentaitis, president of Lithuanian National Historians Committee, Lithuania

55.   Zbigniew Nosowski, editor-in-chief of the „Więź” monthly , Poland

56.   Janina Ochojska, president of Polish Humanitarian Action, Poland

57.   Andrzej Olechowski, former finance minister and minister of foreign affairs, Poland

58.   Jurica Pavičić, writer, Croatia

59.   Márta Pardavi, co-chair, Hungarian Helsinki Committee, Hungary

60.   Solomon Passy, former minister of foreign affairs, Bulgaria

61.   Jiří Pehe, political scientist and writer, Czech Republic

62.   Petr Pithart, former prime minister, Czech Republic

63.   Adam Pomorski, president of the Polish PEN Club, Poland

64.   Wojciech Przybylski, editor-in-chief “Respublica Nowa” and “Eurozine”, Austria-Poland

65.   László Rajk jr., architect, designer and political activist, Hungary

66.   Rein Raud, author and cultural theorist, Estonia

67.   Adam Daniel Rotfeld,former minister of foreign affairs, Poland

68.   Martin Rozumek, director, Organization for Aid to Refugees, Czech Republic

69.   Andrzej Seweryn, theatre actor and director, Poland

70.   Sławomir Sierakowski, director of the Institute for Advanced Studies, Poland

71.   Martin Milan Šimečka, writer, journalist, Slovakia-Czech Republic

72.   Marta Šimečková, journalist, interpreter, Slovakia

73.   Karel Schwarzenberg, former minister of foreign affairs, Czech Republic

74.  Aleksander Smolar, chairman of the Stefan Batory Foundation, Poland

75.  Ladislav Snopko, playwright, former minister of culture, Slovakia

76.  Andrzej Stasiuk, writer, Poland

77.  Petruška Šustrová, former dissident, Czech Republic

78.  Jerzy Szacki, sociologist, University of Warsaw, Poland

79.   Małgorzata Szczęśniak, set designer, Poland

80.   Monika Sznajderman, editor, Wydawnictwo Czarne, Poland

81.   Soňa Szomolányi, political scientist and sociologist, Slovakia

82.   Erik Tabery,editor-in-chief of the „Respekt” weekly, Czech Republic

83.   Béla Tarr, director, Hungary

84.   Stefan Tafrov, diplomat, human rights activist, Bulgaria

85.   Vesna Teršelič, direktore documenta - centrs, kas nodarbojas ar pagātni, Slovēnijā

86.   Róża von Thun und Hohenstein, member of European Parliament, Poland

87.   Dubravka Ugrešić, poet and essayist, Croatia

88.   Rimvydas Valatka, journalist, former member of parliament, Lithuania

89.   Magdaléna Vášáryová, member of parliament, Slovakia

90.   Tomas Venclova, poet, Lithuania

91.   Krzysztof Warlikowski, theatre director, Poland

92.   Jakub Wygnański, chairman of the board, Unit for Social Innovation and Research – Shipyard, Poland

93.   Adam Zagajewski, poet and essayist, University of Chicago, Poland-United States

94.   Péter Zilahy, writer, Hungary

95.  Andrzej Zoll, former president of the Constitutional Tribunal, Poland