1941

The European movement in the Resistance

The European idea was very much alive in the Resistance, which stressed the democratic nature of a future united Europe. Two documents signal the rebirth of the European idea. The Manifesto of Ventotene, entitled 'For a free and united Europe', was written in 1941, mostly by the Italian resistance fighter Altiero Spinelli assisted by his companion Ernesto Rossi. The second text, 'For All Mankind', by the French Socialist Léon Blum, circulated underground from 1941, and was not published until the end of the War. These authors were convinced that a European federation would guarantee peace on the old continent, particularly through the creation of shared armed forces. The non-Communist European powers met at Geneva in 1944 and drew up a draft declaration of European resistance. This text, written in the spirit of the works by Spinelli and Blum, stressed the need to move beyond national sovereignty and create a federal union to preserve peace.