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The Place of the American Republics and Canada in the New World Order*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Joseph F. Thorning*
Affiliation:
Carrollton Manor, Maryland

Extract

In the terrible flames of World War II, the Good Neighbor policy, as conceived by its architect, Sumner Welles, and promulgated by its popularizer, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, met the supreme test of “blood, sweat and tears.” Tried in the crucible of worldwide conflict, inter-American friendship met the challenge of totalitarian Nazi-Fascism triumphantly. As our Good Neighbors themselves often proclaimed in the course of the last five years, “Las Américas unidas, unidas vencerán.” “The united Americas will find victory in their united front.”

To emphasize the contribution of the other American Republics and Canada to our recent victory is a simple act of justice. The historical record discloses that, almost immediately after the Japanese sneak-attack at Pearl Harbor, the tiny Republic of Costa Rica, democratic to the core, hours before the Congress of the United States of America swung into action, had declared war upon the warlords of Tokyo. Although only Canada and the United States of Brazil actually despatched complete army divisions to fight on the battlefields of Europe, the other peoples in this Hemisphere, in overwhelming numbers, sympathized effectively with our cause, while their Governments, one by one, broke diplomatic relations with the Axis powers. In a most critical hour for the peoples of the Western Hemisphere, the spiritual unity of the American Republics and Canada established itself as a precious, sacred reality. Our enemies were regarded as the enemies of America; our friends the faithful allies of humanity, liberty and democracy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1946

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Footnotes

*

An address delivered at the University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, June 19, 1946, by Dr. Joseph F. Thorning, rector of St. Joseph’s, Carrollton Manor, Maryland, and Special Lecturer on Sociology in the Catholic University of Chile.

References

* An address delivered at the University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, June 19, 1946, by Dr. Joseph F. Thorning, rector of St. Joseph’s, Carrollton Manor, Maryland, and Special Lecturer on Sociology in the Catholic University of Chile.