"Europe can only be saved if it 'returns to the source of its real values: its Christian identity', Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Tuesday at the opening of an international conference on persecuted Christians," The Hungary Journal reports.
"Those we are helping now can give us the greatest help in saving Europe," the prime minister said in his speech. "We are giving persecuted Christians what they need: homes, hospitals, and schools, and we receive in return what Europe needs most: a Christian faith, love and perseverance."
"The Hungarian people and their government believe that Christian virtues provide peace and happiness to those who practise them," Orban said, noting that protecting Hungary's constitutional identity and Christian culture was an obligation for each state agency under Hungary's fundamental law. "This legacy obliges us to protect Christian communities persecuted across the world as far as we are able," he said.
Orban noted that the first Hungarian tribes arrived in the Carpathian Basin 1,100 years ago but many other groups had come and gone before them. "To this day Hungarians are curious as to why we were the ones to survive," the prime minister said. "According to the most widely accepted answer, our military capabilities and vigour would not have been enough, so the key to our survival was our conversion to Christianity."
"There are some who see this as primarily a diplomatic feat or one of state organisation, and it was exactly those things, but first and foremost it was a spiritual rebirth and a real conversion," Orban said.
"The Hungarian people and their government believe that Christianity can help peoples and nations survive, just as it had happened with us," he added. "Our first Christian king was more than just a remarkable ruler," Orban said, adding that King St. Stephen had been a visionary who had given Hungarians guidance and a "spiritual and political compass".
The prime minister said Hungary was right to stand up for Christianity, arguing that "goodness inspires goodness" and Hungarians' commitment to helping persecuted Christians "breeds courage". "Our example can have a far reach," he said. "Actions can free those who are crippled and restore faith in personal action."
Orban said the question may arise whether there was already enough to be done about anti-Christian sentiment in Europe and if there was even a need to provide help to other continents. "The troubles of Christianity in Europe and the persecution of Christians in other places cannot be separated from one another," he argued.
"Europe is quiet," Orban said. "A mysterious force shuts the mouths of European politicians and cripples their arms." He said the issue of Christian persecution could only be considered a human rights issue in Europe, insisting that "Christians are not allowed to be mentioned on their own, only together with other groups that are being persecuted for their faiths." The persecution of Christians "is therefore folded into the diverse family of persecuted religious groups", he added.
The prime minister said that while religious persecution should not be underestimated, those who treated the persecution of Christians solely as a humanitarian problem failed to mention the most important thing. "It's not just the people and the communities but also the culture as a whole that is being subjected to an organised and comprehensive attack," he said. "Even in the land of our culture, our civilisation, the most successful Christian civilisation to date: Europe." He said this attack was being carried out through "the replacement of the population, immigration, stigmatisation, insults and the muzzle of political correctness".
Orban said there were many "good and true Christian politicians" in Europe today but they were stymied from openly stating their views due to a mix of constant coalition negotiations and succumbing to the power relations of Europe's media. Hungary, he said, was blessed with political stability, a public against migration, and a majority that demanded the protection of Christian culture. He said Hungarian politics started from the position that "we Christians have the right to protect our culture and way of life".
Orban said that unlike many politicians elsewhere in Europe, "we believe people should be encouraged to live and thrive where their ancestors have lived for centuries. So the Hungary Helps scheme is about rebuilding schools, hospitals and dwellings in troubled parts of the world and providing young people with an education at Hungarian universities", he said.
He said Europeans were wrong to think that the persecution of Christians could never take place in their own country. He said that even though Europe had suffered at the hands of terrorists several times, "many Islamic State soldiers" had come from western European countries while "Islamic masses" had migrated to Europe illegally and unchecked. Demographic forecasts indicate that the religious and cultural proportions in some European countries will change rapidly, he said, adding that Europe could only be "saved" by re-establishing its Christian identity.
"Hungarians believe Christian values lead to peace and happiness, and this is why our Constitution states that protection of Christianity is an obligation for the Hungarian state," [Orban] said.
"It obligates us to protect Christian communities throughout the world suffering persecution."
Orbán contrasted the large number of Christians among those who suffer for their faith with the indifference of most of Europe.
"Four out of five people persecuted for their faith are Christians and some 245 million Christians around the globe suffer extreme persecution," he said.
"And yet Europe remains silent again and again!" he continued.
"European politicians seem paralyzed and unable to do anything, insisting that it is all a matter of generic 'human rights.'"
The Hungarian Prime Minister argued that Christian persecution is not only an attack on people but on an entire culture, "including here in Europe." This persecution is sometimes violent but sometimes more subtle, including "population exchange through mass migration, stigmatization, mockery, and the muzzle of political correctness."
Orbán said also that Western Europe's indiscriminate acceptance of mass migration is a "time bomb" for the future.
"Western Europe has already provided dozens of militants to the Islamic State, and uncontrolled immigration has produced a radical change in the demographics of the population," he said.
The Prime Minister said that the only solution is for Europe to discover its Christian roots and reaffirm its Christian identity.
President Donald Trump of the United States sent a letter to the Conference saying that he is "gratified" that Hungary shares his country's dedication to religious liberty. The cordial message was read aloud by his domestic policy advisor Joe Grogan.
"The United States has always vehemently defended the unalienable right to live and worship freely according to one's conscience and beliefs," Trump wrote.
"I am gratified that Hungary's State Secretariat for the Aid of Persecuted Christians and the Hungary Helps Program share America's conviction in defending and advancing religious liberty, and I thank them for convening this gathering," he continued.
"This conference is an important reminder that we all have a responsibility to safeguard this sacred fundamental right."