According to László Kövér, common sense and a clear conscience are the sharpest weapons in the fight for the future of Europe. The President of the Parliament spoke about this at Nagytusnád in Székelyföld on Saturday afternoon at the inauguration of the Szent Rita day care center built with the support of the Hungarian state.
He stated: Hungarians and Székely people, in the spirit of common sense and a clear conscience, are not only fighting for themselves, "but for Europe to remain for the European people in the future; for Europe to remain the master of its own interests, its own material and intellectual resources; for Christianity to remain a sustaining spiritual and cultural force for all European nations; so that the protective family based on the union of love between a man and a woman remains the building block of society". He believed that the goal of the struggle fought in the name of common sense and a clear conscience is to ensure that every European has the right to freely inherit the native language, culture and homeliness of his ancestors, as well as to be able to freely pass this on to his descendants.
According to László Kövér, this is the only way European nations and their states can stay afloat, and only in this way can there be true European peace. He believed that every opened kindergarten, daycare center, and school that fulfills its God-given task strengthens the culture of life and thereby serves the cause of survival.
At the ceremony, parish priest Ede Csont recalled: the church built the day care center on the site of an old barn with HUF 182 million support from the Hungarian state, which was designed in such a way as to preserve the shape of the barn. He stated: by sticking to their language, culture, faith, and homeland, the people of Tusnad will not become second-class citizens of either Romania or the Hungarian nation.
The daycare center was built near the building of the local kindergarten and school. Both institutions provide space for afternoon sessions for their children. Mayor József Molnár considered it a challenge to persuade the Romanian state to partially cover the operating costs.
The new building was blessed by Archbishop Gergely Kovács of Gyulafehérvár.
In the afternoon, as part of a farewell, the archbishop blessed the St. Francis Church in Nagytusnád, built in 1818, which was renovated between 2015 and 2022 with the support of the European Union and the Hungarian and Romanian states.
Source: Magyar Hírlap
Picture: Ma7.sk