EMPIRE UNITY
CLOSER THAN EVER PEACE AND DEMOCRACY INFLUENCE FOR GOOD (From "The Post's" Representative.) LONDON, ly Ay 25. "At the present tii.-e the Ei xpire is closer in its unity than ever before," the Duke of Kent declared at the Empire Day banquet of the combined Empire Societies. A distinguished gathering, numbering some 1500, was present, including representatives of all the Dominions, India, and many of the colonies. The High Commissioner, Mr. W. J. Jordan, accompanied by Mrs. Jordan, represented New' Zealand.
"The world has moved far and fast since I attended your last banquet," the Duke of Kent continued. "But there has emerged one great future— the unity of the Empire. It is th 9 realisation that the Empire is in practice what we all hoped in theory that it might one day become. The Crown is more than gold and jewels—it is the link binding the British Commonwealth of Nations; it is the link binding the ideals of these nations into a solid unity, working for peace, prosperity, and for the benefit of mankind."
"If ihe Empire is to continue its great influence for good throughout the world," he added, "we must maintain that unity evenly and consistently through every, phase of its development. Unity is the very corner-stona of its fabric, and if that corner-stona were ever displaced its whole chai> acter would be changed."
The Duke added: "I met somebody the other day who made a remark which impressed me very much. 'We are,' he said, 'in great danger of losing all our standards of judgment. There is practically no principle which 20 years ago was absolute which has not been discarded.'
"I do not entirely agree with him, but I think there is a great deal of truth in what he said. We are ia great danger of deceiving ourselves into the belief that all this change is progressive, and unless we maintain some stable and guiding principle for our everyday affairs we shall find that, in reality our progress has been retrogrcssion. PERIOD OF GREATNESS. "If we remember the Empire, if we honour and love it, and if we look upon it as the mainstay of peace, order, and civilisation in its highest sense, then we may make the twentieth century a period of greatness in the history of the world. I hope that this will be our achievement and our contribution to the welfare of mankind.'* The Duke also referred to the value of the work of the Empire societies. Thoy helped to make contacts and; added to the realisation that Empire unity must never be thought of as something which only showed itself in times of crisis and war. Lord Stanley, making his first speech as Dominions Secretary, said that it had always been his ambition to ba appointed to that post, a desire that had been intensified by the very happy six months he had spent as UnderSecretary. Mr. Mac Donald, however, was a hard man to follow. He had never put a foot wrong, and his culminating feat had been the happy out* come of the Anglo-Eire negotiations. The Dominions Office, he added, appreciated very much the work 1 that the various Empire societies were rendering. They had done a tremendous lot to foster relations in all parts of the Empire, and in making visitors feel at home in England. Formerly, the English had rather bad reputations as hosts. Visitors had declared them to be "all right when we get to know them, but by the time we know them it is time to go home." Thanks to the societies, England was rapidly losing that reputation, and it was quite impossible to exaggerate the service they; were rendering. INTERDEPENDENCE. Mr. Mac Donald said that the first letter he had received on taking over his new post was addressed "Mr. Malcolm Mac Donald, British Minister's Triumph, Dublin and London." It came from a distant part of the colonial Empire by air mail, and he had to pay 4d postage. He opened the letter with keen anticipation, and read the following message: "Please send, me 500 rupees as cheque 'or notes currency order. lam here." Then followed in great detail the name and address of the sender. The letter was handed over to the tender mercies of the Colonial Development Fund CommitMr. R. G. Menzies, Australian Attorney-General and Minister for Industry, said that the first problem with which the British Empire was faced was that of making the British voice as effective as possible in the cause of peace. If we were to make ourselves felt we must speak with one voice. A second problem was that of preserving our democratic system of Government in the world. This would require great thought and great positive action on our part. By that he did not mean action against other nations, but intimate domestic action in our minds and in our own house. Referring to the question of Dominions' independence, Mr. Menzies said: "The Dominions, while conscious of thefr independence, are conscious that their independence depends upon the independence of them all."
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Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 151, 29 June 1938, Page 12
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849EMPIRE UNITY Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 151, 29 June 1938, Page 12
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