Explore popular quotes and sayings by a German politician Helmut Kohl.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Helmut Josef Michael Kohl was a German politician who served as Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998 and Leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 1973 to 1998. Kohl's 16-year tenure is the longest of any German chancellor since Otto von Bismarck, and oversaw the end of the Cold War, the German reunification and the creation of the European Union (EU).
Nations with a common currency never went to war against each other. A common currency is more than the money you pay with.
We humans have an abyss inside us. The more power people have, the greater the danger.
People in Tel Aviv can not imagine, but in 1990, here in Leipzig or Dresden, whoever wanted to buy a car had to wait 14 years. The East Germans worked like people in the West, but the fruits of their labor were harvested by a criminal regime.
George Bush was for me the most important ally on the road to German unity.
My parents were Christians - Catholics, but not in the close-minded sense. I remember my mother to be a very pious woman, but she was never against other religions.
If a Chancellor is trying to push something through, he must be a man of power. And if he's smart, he knows when the time is ripe. In one case - the euro - I was like a dictator... The euro is a synonym for Europe.
Political life is like this - elections go back and forth. Representative democracy can only be successful if one sits down and says, 'That's it. I will connect myself,' - as I did - 'connect my existence to a political project.' Then you automatically have in your party a lot of people who say, 'If that fails, so do I'.
We all need Europe, not just those of us in Europe. And we Germans need Europe more than the others. Germany is the country with the longest border, the most neighbours, and is, by population and economic strength, the number one in Europe.
In German history, we don't have many reasons to be proud.
As a child, I personally didn't really get to know any Jews. I was eight years old when the Night of Broken Glass happened. And Ludwigshafen was purely a workers' city, so we didn't have a very big Jewish community. What I did know about the Jews, I heard from my mother. My mother was very much pro-Jewish.
The most important rule of the new Europe is: There must never again be violence in Europe.
The army is under orders to defend every place.
You didn't just pay lip service to the goal of overcoming the division of Europe and Germany... Rather, you put yourself at the forefront of those who encouraged us on the way to unity.
When people come to write about my period of office, I would be very happy if they say that I made a contribution to finding the happy medium again for the Germans.
I have made a very good living, for more than 30 years, by being underestimated.
Peace must be more than the absence of war.
I have every reason, despite the resentment and exasperation, to be proud. I have nothing better to be proud of than being proud of German unity.
I ask myself where Germany stands today and where it wants to go.
Russia is Germany's most important neighbor in the East, and it will remain so.
As a German, in view of the history of World War II and the terrible deeds of the Nazi period, I feel a special obligation to help as much as I can to develop European-Israeli relations and thus contribute to ensuring Israel's future and existence.
It was a stroke of luck that there were about four to six leaders in power in the mid-'80s who really trusted one another and could really make things happen.
Gorbachev's legacy is that he called time on communism, partially against his will, but in fact, he finished it off. Without violence. Without bloodshed. Beyond that, I am struggling to think of much else in terms of real legacy.
My childhood ended in 1942. I was 12, and for the next three years, I lived under incessant bombings. It was a life of constant fear.
I don't want to give myself grades. I will leave evaluation of my achievements to history.
I like everything that makes you fat.
The Christian Democrats always made you feel like the poor relation.
Where there is no will, no rules or laws can help.
Europe has, to put it mildly, been in a poor state since the transition to the 21st century. This is down to national issues, European missteps, and an economic and financial crisis that crashed down on us with enough force to dislodge the essential European idea.
Where is Germany now and where does it want to go? It's a question being asked by our partners and allies abroad. We have to return - urgently - to our old dependability. We have to make clear for others what we stand for, where we're headed, and that we know where we belong.
Solitary decisions, no matter how well-founded they may appear to individuals, must belong to the past - along with national, unilateralist action.
I knew that I could never win a referendum in Germany. We would have lost a referendum on the introduction of the euro. That's quite clear. I would have lost, and by seven to three.
For me it is completely clear that our air bases in Germany would be available to the Americans.
I experienced Nazism as a child. Like many of my generation, I was motivated by the desire to prevent another war at any price.
German and European unification are two sides of the same coin.
If one has no compass, when one doesn't know where one stands and where one wants to go, one can deduce that one has no leadership or interest in shaping events.
I have been underestimated for decades. I have done very well that way.
Isolated decisions, however well-founded they might seem to the individual, and national go-it-alone moves must belong to the past. They should not be the 21st-century method of choice, particularly because the consequences of the European community's actions must often be carried collectively.
When I was elected to head the German government, I was fortunate enough to find a partner in Francois Mitterrand.
In a democracy, if you don't get the votes, nothing else is possible, no matter how wonderful your dreams.
We were united not only by political respect for each other, but also by deep mutual sympathy as people.
Two decisions have damaged the stability both of the euro and of Europe: the premature admission of Greece to the euro area and the breach and subsequent weakening of the stability and growth pact.
Our shared historical experiences led myself and Mitterrand to the decision that we must do everything to prevent further wars.
We Germans have learned from history. We are a peace-loving, freedom-loving people. There is only one place for us in the world: at the side of the free nations.
There must be no question for us that we in the European Union and the eurozone stand by Greece in solidarity.
Germany is our fatherland; Europe is our future.
Simon Wiesenthal, like few others personally felt the shadow of history in its brutality.
I have been underestimated for decades. I've done very well that way.
The future will belong to the Germans... ...when we build the House of Europe. In the next two years, we will make the process of European integration irreversible. This is a really big battle but it is worth the fight.
The European Union Treaty... within a few years will lead to the creation of what the founding fathers of modern Europe dreamed of after the war, the United States of Europe.
Everybody should know that Germany will not go it alone: there will be no restless Reich.
I doubt that the evil spirits of the past, under which we in Europe have already suffered more than enough this century, have been banished for ever.