Austerity
policies and anti-terrorism strategies have become two of the strongest parts
of European government responses to the global crisis which has gripped the 21st
century……precisely the conditions for stoking up public fears about the wave of
refugees pounding European borders.
The
shocking scenes which hit us earlier in the year from the Mediterranean and now
from the Balkans show a crisis, we are told, as great as any in the post-war
period. Figures become meaningless after a time – so what are we to
make of the figure of 50 million “forced refugees” – quickly taken up to
60 and then 70 million?? This report is a
useful guide to the problem.
Before any comment, let’s remind ourselves of
some previous “flows”…..
·
Armenians
were brutally evicted from their lands by the Turks after accusations that they
had been helping the (Russian) enemy – the famous travel writer, Leigh Fermour,
paints a vivid picture in his final book of meeting up with some of their
descendants in the early 1930s in Plovdiv in central Bulgaria (as I did 75
years later).
·
Greek
aggression led in the early 1920s to savage ethnic cleansing and population
exchange between Turkey and Greece;
·
Italians
bled from the country in the early part of the 20th century – whether to
the US or my hometown in Scotland
·
Hitler’s
persecution of Jews in the 1930s led to a massive exodus from which America and
Britain were the beneficiaries;
·
no
quarter was given during the murderous Spanish civil war and led to a huge
refugee flow across mountains to southern France.
·
The
end of the war – and the radical redrawing of European boundaries by the
victorious forces – saw tens of millions of people forcibly removed from their
homes and trekking in all directions. Keith Lowe’s 2012 Savage Continent; Europe
in the aftermath of World War II rightly talks of it being “an until now
unacknowledged time of lawlessness and terror” to whose portrayal the final
section of Stephen A’Barrow’s recent Death of a Nation added a powerful
voice.
·
Post
war saw the first ships arrive in Britain with West Indians seeking a better
life – joining Indian and Pakistan middle class people whose restaurants woke
the country up from a gastronomic torpor…
·
and
Germany was, of course, the recipient of many Turks in the 1970s also seeking a
better life there….
In
1975 John Berger wrote a book called The Seventh Man - one in
seven of the working force in Britain and Europe was then an
immigrant. And indeed – full disclosure - so am I! My blog masthead
states, rather cheekily, that I am “a political refugee from
Thatcher’s Britain” but I am actually more of an economic refugee. It’s
the fees I earned from my work with (mainly) Danish, Dutch and German companies
when I chose to leave the UK in late 1990 that keep me in my current life-
style in Bulgaria and Romania. No need to make ironic comments – call it
“reverse flow”……
The
Scots and the Irish have a reputation for leaving their country to seek fame
and fortune in far parts of the globe and have done fairly well out of it –
although some of the early migrants were driven from their homes by rapacious
landlords (The Highland Clearances) and famine.
Commentary
This short but masterly
podcast about the situation puts to shame the outpourings of the
corporate media which spew their poison at us every minute of the day. A real
example of what a lone voice can achieve!!!! And the inestimable John Harris
gives an important lesson in lexicology
here
The
initial responses of the German people and leaders are what we expected in the
past when hearts and homes were open to those driven from their countries by
forces outside their control. This was my parents’ response in the early
1940s when they took in a family belonging to the Free French forces stationed
in my home town – I still remember the red, white and blue of the silver-crepe
ornament which adorned our front window at Christmas in the 1950s; and our PE
teacher was a refugee from the Greek Civil War……
But materialism and fear (the later instilled by the prejudice whipped up by the media) have hardened our hearts. It appears that the old spirit is still alive only in Germany….scenes at Munich central station described here. Two factors explain the initial positive German response – historical feelings of guilt and their current manpower needs - but that response is careless surely of the potential effects on the country’s social fabric. But the political position quickly changed
I
must confess to having some difficulty myself with the initial welcoming response
to the refugee flow from “liberals” whose secure lives all too easily lead them
to an insensitivity about the anxieties of the average citizen.
Update from 2 November blog
update from May 2017 https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jan/31/jared-kushner-grandmother-refugee-holocaust
Update from 2 November blog
update from May 2017 https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jan/31/jared-kushner-grandmother-refugee-holocaust