Kattintani > FELADAT ÉS CÉL - AUFGABE UND ZIEL - MISSION AND GOAL
Kattintani > Az összes bejegyzés tartalomjegyzéke 2007. szeptember 10.-től

2012. szeptember 5., szerda

15.477 - Minden magyarhoz szól, aki követeli, hogy nyilvánítsák semmissé a Trianoni békeszerződést.


*** www.nemzetihirhalo.hu *************

PETITION: A Trianoni békeszerződés semmissé nyilvánitását követeljük

Minden magyarhoz szól, aki követeli, hogy nyilvánitsák semmissé a Trianoni békeszerződést. Ehhez több ezer szavazat kell. Itt az ideje, hogy tegyél valamit a magyarságért!

A magyar nép igazságot és kárpótlást követel a Trianoni békeszerződés miatt elvesztett jogokért és javakért. A magyar nép arra kéri az Európai Parlament testületét, hogy vizsgálja felül a trianoni döntést és mondjon felette új Ítélet, mely a magyar nép számára elégtételként szolgál. Egy népet sem, hagyott ennyire cserben Európa mint a magyart. Tehát a követelésünk jogos.


Csatlakozás itt:
http://www.causes.com/actions/1661781?recruiter_id=183665789&utm_campaign=invite&utm_medium=wall&utm_source=fb


Wass Albert: ".... az Úr... megszabadítani csak akkor fog benneteket, amikor visszatértek az Ő Törvényéhez s egymás szeretetében, egymás támogatásában NEMZETTÉ váltok újra. Lélekben tiszta, jellemben erős, szeretetben tántoríthatatlan, s az Úr Törvényének tudásában bölcs és engedelmes nemzetté, kikben önmagára ismerhet újra a Teremtő Atya. A szeretet ereje
mindenre képes, de a szeretet hiánya képtelenné teszi a legjobb szándékot is"!

The Treaty of Trianon was not negotiated but merely imposed upon Hungary by force:

what Trianon effected in actual fact was quite simply to endorse and legalize the occupations by conquest, achieved after the cessation of hostilities, by the armed forces of the so-called successor states, in stark violation of the armistice agreements concluded with the Allied and Associated Powers. (86)


The new borders of Hungary were determined on the basis of claims and information presented by the parties interested in the territorial dismemberment of Hungary. Hungary's objections and demands for plebiscites were not taken into consideration at the Peace Conference (87). In this manner, all ethnic, historical, geographical, strategic, and economic considerations were applied discriminatorily in favor of the successor states and to the detriment of Hungary in the determination of the new frontiers (88).


Hungary was forced to sign the Treaty of Trianon, but with the understanding that the possibility of future revision was open (the so-called Millerand letter) and that the acquisition of Hungarian territories by the successor states was conditional upon the latter's compliance with the treaties for the protection of national minorities (89). However, neither of these guarantees were respected by the Allies and the successor states (90).


All this was accomplished under the claim of serving justice and of realizing the ideals proclaimed by the Allies (President W. Wilson's 14 Points for the self-determination of the nationalities of Central and Eastern Europe). However, the terms and the methods of implementation of the Treaty of Trianon were in contradiction with the principles in the name of which the Allies claimed to have fought:


According to those principles "peoples and provinces are not to be bartered about from sovereignty to sovereignty as if they were mere chattels and pawns in a game", but "every territorial settlement involved must be made in the interest and for the benefit of the population concerned", and also "upon the basis of free acceptance of that settlement by the people immediately concerned". (91)


As a result, 3.5 million Hungarians were placed against their will in a minority status in the successor states (92). With only one exception where the outcome proved favourable to Hungary (the Sopron plebiscite), the populations of the transferred territories were not consulted as to which state they wished to belong to:


The Treaty of Trianon violated the principle of self-determination... The peoples living on the territories severed from Hungary did not constitute themselves separate political units. No action on the part of these peoples can be regarded as representing a wish either to break away from Hungary, or to form independent units. The so-called Rumanian, Slovak and Serb "National Councils" which were set up in certain towns had no justification whatever to consider themselves representative of the whole population in the sense that they had the right to decide anything in the name of that population. They had never been elected; they were self-constituted bodies. (93)


Therefore, under these circumstances, the Treaty of Trianon and the 1947 Treaty of Paris which reinstated it must be declared legally null and void.