Refugee Bloodlines: America and Europe Can’t Be
Hypocrites Any Longer
By
William Hawes
March 10, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
-
As the Middle East-North Africa region continues to
convulse with earth-shaking war, Western-backed
jihadi terror, and sectarian divisions, the modern
world’s media continues to avert its eyes. As the US
presidential race gains steam, American journalism,
even the well-meaning “left”, chronically
under-report progress made in Syria, the cease-fire,
the Syrian Arab Army’s (SAA) progress, and NATO-Gulf
Nations’ utterly destructive policies, lies, and
duplicity. Saudi’s illegal war in Yemen barely
registers as a blip on mainstream outlets. As all
this goes on, disturbingly, refugees from the
whirlwind of chaos and destruction are being
denigrated as second-class citizens as they enter
the European Union. In the US, the problems are just
as bad, as Congress and the Washington establishment
seem intent on pursuing blatantly anti-immigrant
policies.
In 2015,
approximately 1.3 million migrants applied for
asylum in the European Union. Estimates show an
expected similar or higher amount for this year, in
the range of 1.5-2 million. Over 3,000 refugees died
trying to cross the Mediterranean in 2015.
Conditions are simply brutal for those who do make
it to the EU. In Greece and Hungary, refugees wait
patiently as surveillance is increased, checkpoints
and fences multiply, militarized police battalions
patrol, and razor wire is strung up on their way to
their destinations.
In
Sweden, thousands of unaccompanied minors and also
adults are having problems finding employment and
integrating. In Denmark, authorities are considering
confiscating refugee assets worth over something
like $1,400 dollars- a pittance. In Germany,
migrants are being told their families may not be
eligible to make the journey to join them, causing
many to return to Iraq and Syria. In Calais, France,
violence and arson continue as refugees live in
make-shift shacks, endure freezing temperatures, and
the brutality of riot police.
In the US,
last November the House voted in favor of the SAFE
Act, 289-137, on a bill that would expand background
checks and halting refugees entering from Syria and
Iraq. In January, the Senate barely overturned the
bill 55-43. The US has only let in approximately a
meager 2,300 Syrian refugees, and most are women and
children. (1) The process currently can take as long
as two years, with vetting from FBI and DHS.
Certainly, the US Congress has fallen off the deep
end into paranoia and xenophobia to even consider
such racist measures as the SAFE Act.
As has been
pointed out many times, the one million refugees so
far taken into the EU represents only 0.2% of the
total EU population of 500 million. Surely, a
responsible and humane program could be implemented
throughout the Schengen area with minimal problems,
if only member nations overcome their fears and
delusional projections of the minority migrant
“Others”. The issues blocking such progress are not
social integration, assimilation, and demographic
cultural problems, but are ultimately political.
They relate to the way national politicians use
identity politics to disparage and dehumanize
refugees and immigrants.
Ultimately,
news stories and sympathetic photo-journalism do
little to express what refugees are going through.
If a picture paints a thousand words, then engaging
face-to-face with dialogue and compassion for
refugees and immigrants and their struggles can
paint a million. The words may not pour out, but be
sure to look your companion square in the eyes. When
I spoke with my own grandfather, the words were not
plentiful, to put it lightly. His look, the depth of
sorrow in his eyes, spoke for itself. He seemed to
be saying: “Please, I do not want you to know about
this. I can’t talk about this. It is too painful.”
Ever since then, I have never blinked when
expressing solidarity with refugees worldwide. It is
seared into my consciousness, my blood, into my
bones.
I have
seen the look elsewhere. When I asked my friend from
Lebanon about what he had seen in the civil war, he
simply replied: “Everything…everything”. His eyes
shone, and I saw and felt the same tinges of anger
and sadness. He was staring directly at me, his eyes
steady. I did not push him after that. I had seen
the look before.
At
university, I experienced the look again: my friend
from Germany was from the former GDR. He spoke of
his elder family member, who was in the “secret
police”. His eyes had the same knowing, the same
endurance of immense suffering, the same desire for
liberation, the desire for the unadulterated freedom
of the human spirit. Here was a real-life analogy to
Harry Potter: just as Voldemort was
“he-who-must-not-be-named”, my friend would only use
the phrase “secret police”. He could not bring
himself to say Stasi, even though they had not
existed for over fifteen years when we discussed
this.
The UN
documents about 60 million worldwide refugees. (2)
This figure is almost certainly an under-estimate,
as it doesn’t factor in massive numbers of political
and economic migrants. A more thorough accounting
might put the number at anywhere from 75-150
million: about 1-2% of the entire world’s
population.
If the US and
European politicians continue to use xenophobia and
racism to promote hate against refugees, our entire
civilization will crumble into the dustbin of
history. Of that there can be no doubt. The
Enlightenment project of emancipation and universal
rights can’t be allowed to be rolled back because of
anti-immigrant fear.
After the
tragedy of the Vietnam War, the US response to calls
for help was abysmal. However, the US did help
resettle over one million people. The terrible
events unfolding in North Africa and Southwest Asia
deserve a similar response, starting now.
If there
is any sense of goodwill and humanism left in world
leaders, they must accept the UN Declaration of
Human Rights (3) in its entirety and begin to build
a framework for accepting millions of refugees into
the “developed” world. The undeniable truth is that
many of us in the US and Europe are descendants of
immigrants and refugees ourselves. Despite the
prejudices of the past, our ancestors were not
turned away by tear gas, guns, batons, labyrinthine
legal troubles, and barbed wire. Citizens in Europe
and the USA must speak out and join hands in unity
with refugees against the tides of intolerance,
before it is too late.
William Hawes
is a writer specializing in politics and
environmental issues.
Notes:
-
http://www.factcheck.org/2015/11/facts-about-the-syrian-refugees/
-
http://www.unhcr.org/558193896.html
-
http://www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/
|