Comunità di S.Egidio


Paris, February 1, 2001
FELIX HOUPHOU�T-BOIGNY PEACE PRIZE 
AWARDED TO COMMUNITY OF SANT'EGIDIO

Paris, February 1 - UNESCO Director-General Ko�chiro Matsuura today awarded the 1999 F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny Peace Prize to the Community of Sant�Egidio represented by its Founder and President Andrea Riccardi.

The ceremony at Organization Headquarters was attended by, notably, Abdou Diouf, the former President of Senegal; Henri Konan B�di�, former President of the Republic of C�te d�Ivoire; former European Commission President Jacques Delors; Abou Drahamane Sangar�, Minister of Foreign Affairs of C�te d�Ivoire; Louis Michel, Vice-Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belgium; Mozambique Minister of Higher Education, Science and Technology Lidia Brito; Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Secretary General of Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie and former Secretary-General of the United Nations; and Sonia Mendieta de Badaroux, Chairperson of UNESCO�s Executive Board.

During the ceremony, Mr Matsuura described the Prize as �a major instrument for the promotion of peace in the world� and said that �the name of F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny which is associated to it symbolises the quest for human peace and brotherhood.� Mr Matsuura went on to pay tribute to the memory of F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny and to his commitment to peace, recalling the strong impression made on him by the late Ivorian President when he was a young diplomat in West Africa in the 1960s.

Mr Matsuura went on to praise the Community of Sant�Egidio�s humility, determination to listen to others and perseverance in its work for the very poor and in favour of inter-faith relations. �The Community has moved on to work for peace through dialogue, in various conflicts in which it has been made to act as mediator,� the Director-General said, adding that �the results it has obtained in this area are the finest reward it could wish for and prove the efficiency of its methods.� Mr Matsuura went on to recall �the essential role played by the Community in bringing peace to Mozambique, its considerable contribution to the peace process in Guatemala and its many endeavours in Europe, Africa and Latin America.�

Boutros Boutros-Ghali praised �the Community of Sant�Egidio�s genius in establishing dialogue and mediation.� Jacques Delors then said that �Professor Riccardi made himself available to everyone� and underlined the community�s work for the poor. He stressed mainly the way it had �extended charity to politics�, an example for governmental and non-governmental organizations alike.

Welcoming the fact that such an important prize is named after an African, Abou Drahamane Sangar� said that C�te d�Ivoire is proud and honoured to take part in the F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny Peace Prize-giving ceremony. Louis Michel recalled the role of the Community in �inter-faith dialogue and [dialogue] between believers and non-believers.� Henri Konan B�di� warmly welcomed the fact that the Prize was awarded to the Community of Sant�Egidio which �in a troubled world, toils to bring compassion, comfort and hope to victims� and �deserves the respect of all who struggle for a better world.� He expressed the hope that �the spirit of F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny inspire the people of C�te d�Ivoire in its desire for peace, love and fraternity� and declared: �Only dialogue, love, mutual understanding and tolerance, the essential fundaments of F�lix Houphou�t-Boigny�s philosophy, will allow us to pursue and reinforce the work he has accomplished.�

An international jury presided by former US Secretary of State and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Henry Kissinger chose the Community of Sant�Egidio in recognition of its contribution to the resolution of conflicts in many parts of the world, particularly in Africa and Latin America.

Representing Mr Kissinger, who was unable to attend, Jean Foyer, the Vice-President of the Jury, summed up the history of the Community �born in the aftermath of the Vatican II Council� which today numbers �20,000 members around the world.� He explained that it was not a religious congregation. He said the Sant�Egidio Community �is motivated by love, love for the poor, for progress, for their neighbour and is regenerating the process of mediation.� He concluded by saying that the Jury sought, above all, �to make the Community better known, rather than recompense it�. He said the Community aspired to �a higher recompense� and quoted the Sermon on the Mount: �Happy be the peacemakers, for they will be named the children of God.�

Upon receiving the Prize, Andrea Riccardi spoke of the community�s work over more than 30 years to fight against poverty in the North and in the South: �Sant�Egidio is a movement of women and men, present in nearly 60 countries including more than 20 African countries, who, moved by faith, lead lives of solidarity with the poorest and those injured by life.� Mr Riccardi declared that �among the numerous [forms] of poverty we face, the mother of all poverty is war.�

�In today�s world, [�] new frontiers are appearing: not only national but ethnic and religious [ones]. Frequently political groups unscrupulously use religious or ethnic motives to inflame aggression, especially after the collapse of many ideologies. [�] The suspicion, scorn and prejudice which seem to be an inevitable heritage of the past, become, on the ground, threatening passions.�

The Prize, consisting of a cheque for FrF800,000 and a peace diploma, as well as a gold medal, was created in 1989 by UNESCO�s General Conference at the initiative of 120 States. It is awarded annually to people, institutions or organisations which have contributed significantly to the promotion, research, safeguarding or maintaining of peace, mindful of the Charter of the United Nations and the Constitution of UNESCO.

Among other laureates are: Nelson Mandela and Frederik W. De Klerk (1991); Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres and Yasser Arafat (1993); King Juan Carlos of Spain and former US President Jimmy Carter (1994).