 Good morning, dear participants, dear colleagues, dear partners. Welcome to this fourth event in a series of events devoted to review the latest developments on European memory policies. The first of such events took place at the House of European History in 2018. And we would like to thank our partners for having ensured that we work together on the continuity of these events. The goal each year is to sit institutions around the table to exchange figures, analysis and indicators that have marked the past 12 months. Memory organizations and stakeholders are particularly welcome in the discussions, as this is an excellent occasion to exchange feedback and to discuss the way ahead. From the point of view of European integration, this year has been marked by two important anniversaries. On the one hand, the 80th anniversary of the Federalist Manifesto written by Artiero Spinelli and his comrades in the prison of Ventotene in the midst of World War II. On the other hand, the 17th anniversary of the Treaty of Paris giving the way to the first European community devoted to coal and steel, as we all know. Why the House of European History, where we were in 2018, can be seen as a place of reflection and awareness on all the main dynamics of contemporary European history, including the different memory regimes and the likelihood of a shared European memory. At the other side, the Jean Monnet House, where we are today, even in the virtual environment. At the Jean Monnet House, we particularly strive to place European integration among the topics of memory studies that we are increasingly concerned with. Both the House of European History and the Jean Monnet House are meeting places wide open to people and groups with all kinds of interests and points of view. Places where they and where we together can discuss and assert differences but hopefully also find a common ground. Concerning the development of memory regimes in Europe, I think that terms such as multi-directional memory are terms that can help addressing the impact of one memory, the memory of one victim group on another. And they are helpful to see that all the interactions between the memory memories and to avoid and overcome memory competition and memory conflict. To conclude, I would like to thank our partners, the European Observatory on Memories and the Instituto di Studi Federalisti al Tiero Spinelli for their collaboration. And we look forward to many more editions of the Taking Stock on European Policy Memories events, either in Jean Monnet House or in the House of European History in Brussels or virtually like today. So a warm welcome to all participants and thank you already for what I'm sure will be a very, very interesting and fruitful debate in the hours to come. Thank you very much. Constanze, thank you for your words. Good morning, bonjour, Buenos dias to everybody. And joining also from the European Observatory on Memories, my colleagues here and this fulfilled collaboration since many years ago with the European Commission, now also the DG Justice and the European Parliament colleagues from the Jean Monnet House and House of European History. And also the people who make possible with the Boradriketi, our team also, we all and other people from the Observatory, Fernanda Technical Issues. So, well, we are here to debate, to present also this new and broad new program that we are going to debate and to present today. The CERF program, who is including and talking about this Remembrance Public Policies on the European level from the European Commission, but also the colleagues from the European Parliament who has a big, big projects program and these big institutions dealing with the past. And as Constanze said, we have a broad and very big program platform from the next four years also and the next year dealing with these roots of the European Union, the values, the founders and this entertainment manifesto that we are collaborating nowadays with Spinal Institution too and I say hello to our colleagues there and you will see about 11.30 and you will attend this presentation of this small book that we are doing also with our partners around Europe, from the North to the South, from East to the West dealing with these public policies on memory. Regarding these many, many challenges nowadays we have, we still have in last year, last year we say, when did it go already? Hope in next year we can do it presentially, not virtually, not digitally, but we are here still digitally. I would say next year is the 10th anniversary also from the European Observatory Memories and we would love to organize some kind of a big event also with the Commission and the Parliament and you colleagues and we hope this time, I hope to be presential and all together in Brussels or even in Barcelona. So yes, we are going to deal with these important topics from the values, from the citizenship, from the rights, but also taking care of nowadays conflicts and debates that sometimes are the same and sometimes these new ones. And I'm just going to quote this kind of sometimes danger of this not only revisionism but also this relativism nowadays, not only about the crimes of the 20th century and this remembrance of policies of memory that we have to take care about but also with another challenges about, you know, integration, racism, gender and other problems. So thank you very much to be here and I'm going to leave the floor to Martí Grau who is coordinating with us. Martí, you have the floor, thank you very much and we'll follow. Thank you. Thank you very much, Constanza and Jardí. Well, it is also my pleasure to welcome you all to this fourth event of the taking stock of European memory policies in 2021. As it has been said four years ago, we thought it was convenient, it was useful to devote a day or two days actually in 2019 before COVID to analyzing the latest trends of the past 12 months every year. At the same time, it is a moment for discussion of if possible of hard data. So sometimes it's something that maybe it doesn't necessarily happen in other events because sometimes that leads to possibly to a more dry discussion or just to look at the hard facts of the hard data of figures of percentages of statistics, but it is at the end of the day useful and important that we take a moment to do that and then maybe a more lively part, a more colorful part that is devoted to the analysis of more conceptual issues of the developments that have happened over the years that allow us to have a more conceptual discussion. So both things will be in our program today. We're looking forward to all the presentations that are very interesting in scope, very diverse. As far as the Germany House is concerned, we would like to let you know that we hope soon we'll be able to host this kind of events again. But this year at least we could be a little bit closer to you via a new virtual device platform, this taller platform that probably many of you have already tested and experienced in the last three quarters of an hour or an hour or so, and I would like to encourage you to continue doing so throughout the day. That platform allows you to visit the museum virtually to browse the different objects, the different spaces the museum contains with videos with the visual materials. And also there's spaces for networking for getting to know each other. That is actually one of the initial goals of the taking stock events also that this networking part is changing at a more personal level, face-to-face, and we can almost do that via our avatars. Of course, it's not the same thing, but it's also a playful experience that I hope you will all enjoy. Again, on the Germany House more broader level for this year and the year to come would like to let you know that we have been developing a great deal of new infrastructures, of new activities for our visitors, for researchers, for practitioners also. In the year to come there will be a facility that will be able to host networks, universities, partners on site. So events will be able to be organized there with overnight stays. So I think that is an asset also for the future of this event. And not just, of course, I would like to encourage all of you also to let us know if we can support some of the activities that you all do throughout Europe and we'll be happy to see how we can help including this possibility of organizing events at the Germany House. After all, it's not just about what we do or about initiatives that we set in motion ourselves, but it's also about the platform that we want to provide to all of you for your own activities. So just a final word. I was talking about our own initiatives or our own input in all this. Well, we see ourselves modestly as an element to introduce maybe gradually but more and more also the memory of European unity and people who out of solidarity in many occasions out of the experience of war also decided to strengthen the bonds across nations and that meet European unity possible, not just or not always behind desks or in dark offices, but sometimes on the ground really just being out there as activists, as promoters, as grassroots promoters of this very much needed unity. So thank you very much to all, to our partners also to the European Commission present today. And of course, since the beginning, it has been an asset that the European Commission is taking part, taking an interest in this kind of meetings. We really appreciate that and we very much hope that this will continue in the future and it will be enhanced in the years to come and also all the other partners that have been mentioned. Also, I would like also to welcome very specially the Council of Europe for the first time in our meeting but via a very important initiative that has seen the light this year, the Observatory on History Teaching in Europe and we'll be able to find out more in the second roundtable later this morning. Well, thank you very much and maybe I think now the floor is to the first roundtable if I'm not mistaken. So I think Jordi, the floor is back to you.