
A European Renaissance: Recovering Our Soul to Rebuild the Future
Europe must rediscover its soul.
At first glance, this phrase may seem abstract. It is not.
We are living in an age of fractures. Wars are reshaping global balances. Societies are becoming
polarized. Citizens are anxious. Many feel disoriented, exhausted by a world that appears to have lost
its moral center of gravity.
And yet, never has the world needed Europe more.
Not merely its economic strength.
Not merely its institutions.
But what it represents when it is faithful to itself.
When one stands in Scy-Chazelles before the statues of Robert Schuman, Alcide De Gasperi, Konrad
Adenauer and Jean Monnet, one understands something essential: modern Europe was not born
from a market. It was born from a wound.
These men had witnessed war. They had seen the moral collapse of a continent. Their project was not
merely technical. It was ethical. They sought to transform the memory of conflict into an architecture
of peace. They understood that lasting prosperity could not be built upon permanent rivalry. They
made a civilizational choice: to place human dignity above revenge, cooperation above domination.
Today, our crisis is not merely institutional. It is deeper. We speak of competitiveness, energy security,
technological sovereignty, and we are right to do so. But what troubles our societies is not only
material instability. It is the loss of meaning.
We have perfected mechanisms.
But we have weakened purpose.
We have strengthened treaties.
But we have allowed the narrative to erode.
A civilization does not endure through management alone. It endures through vision. It endures
through an idea of the human person.
The real question today is not simply: What kind of Europe do we want?
It is: What conception of the human being do we wish to defend?
A European Renaissance would not mean a nostalgic return to the past. It would mean a deepening.
The first Renaissance rediscovered the human being. Post-war Europe rediscovered peace. The
Renaissance of the 21st century must rediscover conscience.
It must reconcile economy and ethics. It must prove that competitiveness can remain humane. It
must show that advanced technology can strengthen dignity rather than erode it. It must
demonstrate that cultural and religious diversity is not a threat, but a richness, provided it is
structured by shared values.
The world is watching Europe. Not because it is the most powerful, but because it can become the
most balanced. In a polarized world, it can embody democratic maturity. In a fragmented world, it
can embody cooperation. In an anxious world, it can embody responsibility.
But this requires a resurgence. Not merely political, but interior.
Europe will never be reduced to Brussels. It lives in our schools, in our universities, in our companies,
in our associations, in our cities. It lives each time an entrepreneur chooses ethics over immediate
profit. Each time an educator transmits dignity instead of fear. Each time a leader chooses long-term
responsibility over short-term advantage.
A Renaissance will not begin with a decree. It will begin with a convinced minority. It will begin with
consciences that refuse cynicism. It will begin with economic, cultural, and educational actors who
understand that prosperity without soul cannot endure.
We do not need growth alone. We need coherence.
We do not need security alone. We need meaning.
We do not need regulation alone. We need soul.
Recovering Europe’s soul does not mean uniformity. It means embracing a foundation: the
unconditional dignity of the human person, solidarity among peoples, and responsibility toward
future generations.
We do not have the right to consume the future. We do not have the right to hand down to our
children a prosperous but disoriented continent. We do not have the right to reduce Europe to a zone
of economic comfort.
The world needs a strong Europe. But Europe will only be strong if it remains faithful to its founding
intuition: transforming the memory of suffering into the energy of cooperation, transforming diversity
into unity, transforming power into service.
The European Renaissance is not a slogan. It is a responsibility.
It begins here.
It begins now.
It begins within us.
Adem Kumcu
President of UNITEE




