|
Charter of the German Expellees
Conscious of their responsibility before
God and men, conscious of their affiliation to the Western
Christian community, conscious of their German origin,
and realizing the common task of all nations of Europe,
the elected representatives of millions of expellees,
after careful deliberation and after having searched
their conscience, have resolved to make public a so-lemn
declaration to the German people and to the entire world,
defining both the duties and the rights which the German
expellees consider their basic law and an indispensable
pre-condition for the establishment of a free and united
Europe.
1. We,
the expellees, renounce all thought of revenge and retaliation.
Our re-solution is solemn and sacred in memory of the
infinite suffering brought upon mankind, particularly
during the past decade.
2. We
shall support with all our strength every endeavor directed
towards the establishment of a united Europe in which
the nations may live in freedom from fear and coercion.
3. We
shall contribute, by hard and untiring work, to the
reconstruction of Germany and Europe.
We have lost our homeland. The homeless
are strangers on the face of the earth. God himself
placed men in their native land. To separate man forcibly
from his native land means to kill him in his mind.
We have suffered and experienced this
fate. We therefore feel called upon to demand that the
right to our native land be recognized and realized
as one of the basic rights of man, granted to him by
God.
However, as long as this right has not
been materialized for us, we do not want to stand aside
under imposed inactivity, but rather want to strive
and work with all members of our nation in new, purified
forms of brotherly and con-siderate cooperation.
For this reason we claim and demand, today
as in the past:
1.
Equal rights as citizens, not merely before the law
but also in every-day life;
2. Just
and reasonable distribution of the burdens of the last
war among the en-tire German people and an honest application
of this principle;
3. Reasonable
integration of all professional groups of expellees
into the life of the German people;
4.
Incorporation of the German expellees into the reconstruction
work for Europe.
The nations of the world should become
sensitive of their co-responsibility for the fate of
the expellees who have suffered most from the hardships
of our times.
The nations should act in accordance with
their duties and their conscience as Christians.
The nations must realize that the fate
of the German expellees, just as that of all refugees,
is a world problem the solution of which calls for the
highest moral responsibility and for a commitment to
tremendous effort.
We therefore call upon all nations and
men of good will to join in the mutual endeavor to find
a way out of guilt, misfortune, suffering, poverty and
misery which will lead us all to a better future.

|