Orbán said Europe is going through “rough times” as waves of the pandemic and of migration come one after the other, and the continent’s political, military, economic and cultural weight wanes compared to the rest of the world.
He noted that Hungary is tied in the European Union, for the highest share of government spending on culture, adding that Hungarians identify as a “nation of culture”.
Orbán said Hungarians “can feel at home” in the building, the “excellent work” of the Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto.
Orbán said opposition politicians’ stand against the Liget Budapest project, which aims to rehabilitate the capital’s City Park, would not be forgotten. It isn’t by chance, he added, that “the mayor had other commitments today”.
Orbán said he would resist the “temptation for political revenge” on the Day of Hungarian Culture, but added that “we’ll take care of them in April”, referring to the upcoming general election.
Orbán said political debates in Europe today that pit “globalisation against Christian heritage, the bureaucracy in Brussels against national pride, immigration against family support, and gender politics against the protection of children”, put high culture and its mission in a new light.
The conflict, he said, is not between West and East, but between West and West, and it poses the threat of “cultural alienation”.
“We want to keep Europe a whole, and we must do something against cultural alienation,” he added.
“If there is a higher purpose which music – Hungarian music, too – can achieve, then it is this,” he added.