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About Europe: Philippe Cornu

Man with glasses and long hair wearing a Seaside Festival t-shirt, identified as Philippe Cornu, with About Europe Arts & Culture branding.

This text by YOUROPE’s honorary member and founding member Philippe Cornu is part of the project About Europe, in which YOUROPE and our sister network European Festivals Association (EFA) invite the cultural sector to engage in a public conversation about the evolution of Europe – as a continent, as a political entity, as a voice in the world and as a cultural society. Find all YOUROPE contributions to About Europe here.


Europe, to me, is not an institution. It is a feeling.

It is the moment when thousands of people from different countries stand together in front of a stage, singing the same song, even if they don’t speak the same language. It is the shared silence before an artist begins. The embrace between strangers. The understanding that culture can connect people faster and deeper than politics ever will.

For decades, festivals have created temporary societies built on respect, curiosity, freedom, and coexistence. In a time when division, fear, nationalism, and intolerance are growing again across our continent, these spaces have become more important than ever. Festivals are not just entertainment. They are living examples of the Europe we believe in.

As cultural organizers, we carry a responsibility. Not to preach, but to protect humanity, openness, diversity, and dialogue. The arts cannot solve political crises alone, but they can remind people what empathy feels like. They can create encounters instead of confrontation. They can give young generations hope, identity, and the feeling that they belong to something bigger than themselves.

Europe is not perfect. It never was. But Europe remains one of the few places in the world where freedom of expression, cultural diversity, solidarity, and democratic values are still defended collectively. We should never take that for granted.

With TAKE A STAND, YOUROPE and many festivals across the continent have already shown that culture has a voice and that silence is not an option when fundamental values are under pressure. Music and art have always been part of resistance, healing, and social progress. They help us imagine a better future before politics is able to formulate it.

For me personally, Europe also means memory and responsibility. My generation grew up with stories of war, separation, and destruction. Today’s generations must not grow up believing hatred and isolation are normal again. We need more places where people meet each other as humans, not as enemies. Festivals can be those places.

In the end, Europe is not built in Brussels alone.

Europe is built every time people gather peacefully, openly, creatively, and respectfully. It is built in clubs, theaters, streets, concert halls, and festival fields. It is built through culture.

And maybe that is why culture matters so much right now:

because it still reminds us what we have in common.


YOUROPE The European Festival Association
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Disclaimer:

Co-funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.