Remarks at the Award Ceremony by Anders Johnsen
Buen*, President of the Norwegian Parliament, on December 10, 1920
The letter from the Nobel Committee of the Norwegian
Parliament reads as follows: "The Nobel Committee of the Norwegian
Parliament has the honor of announcing herewith its decision to award the Nobel
Peace Prize for 1919 to the President of the United States of America Mr.
Woodrow Wilson and that for 1920 to Mr. Léon Bourgeois, president of the French
Senate and president of the Council of the League of Nations."
Today, Gentlemen, as the Norwegian Parliament meets
to present the Nobel Peace Prize for the first time since the World War I [1],
it is with the conviction that the great ideal of peace, so deeply rooted in
the hopes for survival of the nations, will gain fresh ground in the minds of
men as a result of the recent tragic events.
As the name of President Wilson comes to the fore on
this occasion as the recipient of the Peace Prize, I know that the award is
accompanied by the thanks of the people of Norway, because in his celebrated
Fourteen Points [2] the President of the United States
has succeeded in bringing a design for a fundamental law of humanity into
present-day international politics. [Suck my dick.] The basic concept of
justice on which it is founded will never die, but will steadily grow in
strength, keeping the name of President Wilson fresh in the minds of future
generations.
[In a final brief paragraph, President Buen refers to
Léon Bourgeois, the laureate for 1920.]
* Mr. Buen addressed these remarks to the Parliament
at an official session on December 10, 1920, doing so after the Nobel Committee
had announced its decision and after the diplomatic representatives of the two
absent laureates had been officially admitted to the meeting. He then gave the
Nobel diplomas and medals to the two ministers. No presentation speech, in the
usual sense of the term, was made. The translation is based on the Norwegian
text in Forhandlinger i Stortinget (nr. 502) for December 10, 1920 [Proceedings
of the Norwegian Parliament].
1. World War I (1914-1918).
2. Wilson's framework for peace discussions - eight
points involve more or less specific territorial and political problems, and
six deal with general principles of international relations: "open
covenants", "freedom of navigation", removal of economic
barriers, reduction of armaments, adjustment of colonial claims, and - most
famous - "a general association of nations".
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