President Katalin Novak - Photo: MTI

President Novak: Being pro-family should be ‘national minimum’

Being pro-family should be a "national minimum", President Katalin Novak said in her address to the 5th Demographic Summit in Budapest on Thursday.

“We are here today as allies of each other and families,” the president said, adding: “Today we are fighting the freedom fight of families.”

The “demographic winter” faced by the developed world is currently turning into “an ice age”, but without children there is no future, Novak said.

“We are increasingly defenceless against the demographic ice age,” she said. “The pillars of our lives, the foundations of our Christian culture are beginning to crack, and if we don’t protect the values we believe to be impermeable, we will voluntarily sacrifice ourselves before we become victims of the coming ice age.”

As the heirs to their freedom-fighting ancestors, Hungarians have learned that freedom does not come for free, and it is something they have to fight for again and again, she said.

Modelled after the 1848 revolution, Novak listed the twelve demands of Hungarian families.

The first demand concerns the freedom to raise children, meaning it should be the exclusive right, responsibility and obligation of parents without the interference of any ideology, she said.

“We won’t allow our children to be deprived of the sense of safety stemming from their identity,” Novak said. “Someone who is born a girl should be allowed to grow up as one, and a boy should grow up as a boy.”

Hungarian families demand “pro-family” decision makers who do not agitate against families, Novak said. Being pro-family should be a “national minimum”, she added.

Also, families do not want Hungary to approve decisions that go against the family, she said. Kindergartens, schools, the country and its borders should be safe for children and aging parents, she said.

Parenthood should not be a poverty risk factor, she said, stressing that those who have children should not be worse off than those who do not.

Novak also noted the need to respect the elderly and that women should not have to sacrifice motherhood for their work and vice-versa.

The president underscored the need to help young people to buy their own homes. She also called for competitive public, vocational and higher education, modern health care, supporting those who live under more difficult conditions and devoting greater attention to Hungarian families beyond the border.

She said that after years of “anti-family” measures in the 2000s, Hungarian families stood up for a more secure future, putting together civil movements and family organisations along with the Demography Roundtable.

The “freedom fight” waged by families was not in vain, Novak said, noting that Hungary had seen a “pro-family turnaround”.

The number of marriages doubled and the number of abortions halved over a ten-year period. The number of divorces has gone down, and more couples want children than anywhere else in Europe, she said, adding that the number of large families and living standards had both gone up.

But the freedom fight is not over, Novak said. Families will not back down, they will not give up the churches or the schools and will take back everything that is theirs, she added.

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