Der Standard

Continent Of Refugees

-

At the heart of Europe’s confused response to the refugee crisis is a feeling, largely unexpresse­d, that these desperate Syrians are in some way a contaminan­t, that to allow them in will result in Europe’s getting something staining on its fingers — but also that somehow Europe is “full.”

It is very important to Europeans to see themselves as living in a lucky citadel of rationalit­y, a managerial environmen­t based around consumer choice. Each European state sees itself as organic and complete. The world outside consists of inauthenti­c migrant states (the United States), dictatorsh­ips and poverty. This pleased-withitself ideology has been central to Europe’s leaders and their view of the world. But it is also of a relatively new vintage, and speaks of a wish not to return to the bloody tumult that long defined European society.

There is hardly a corner of Europe that has not been torn to pieces by massacres, the flights of whole population­s and violent resettleme­nts, all fueled by ideologies every bit as violent and nihilistic as those of the Islamic State. Europeans love to imagine that ferocity and unreason are somehow, like Syria, “far away” — but if ever there was a part of the world that should feel a deep-rooted empathy for the plight of ordinary Syrians, it ought to be Europe.

Just consider the ground covered by today’s refugees, as they travel from Greece to Germany. In the last 100 years, Greece itself and the rest of the southern Balkans have undergone civil war, military regimes and catastroph­ic change, and been subjected to such brutality that the landscape would be almost unrecogniz­able to a traveler trudging northward a little more than a century ago.

This was a world that was, in many areas, heavily and deeply Islamic. But in a series of devastatin­g wars before, during and after World War I, this all changed. Every group suffered, but from Greece alone in the early 1920s some half a million surviving Muslims were expelled eastward. Almost every trace of Islamic architectu­re was destroyed.

Only Albania, through a quirk of internatio­nal statesmans­hip, and Bosnia-Herzegovin­a, which had been under the rule of the Hapsburg Empire, kept their Muslim population­s.

As today’s refugees head into Serbia, they find themselves in a country that was eviscerate­d by two world wars. After the Hapsburg army invasions in 1914, it is reckoned that at least half of all Serbian men died in combat or through starvation or reprisals. Next door, Bosnia-Herzegovin­a became another disaster area in the 1990s.

In Hungary, today’s refugees enter a country itself entirely shaped and created by refugees. The grim scenes at the Keleti train station in Budapest could not have happened at a more appropriat­e place. So many tragedies from Hungarian history have been played out in that building.

In both world wars, train after train of doomed soldiers left to cheers. Following Hungary’s defeat in 1918 and the implosion of the Hapsburg Empire, of which it had been a vital part, Keleti station filled up with thousands of Hungarian refugees fleeing ethnic cleansing by vengeful Serbians and Romanians. And they stayed: Despite the collapse of Central Europe’s economy after 1918, the permanent population of Budapest grew substantia­lly because there were so many terrified incomers.

And once the refugees make it to Austria and Germany, they are of course in countries which once conjured up the most ferocious, demonic ideologies of all, with the Holocaust towering over everything. These countries should be absolutely sympatheti­c to the refugees’ plight. Indeed, the emotional and moral clarity with which Angela Merkel has made her decisions stems from this and contrasts with the flounderin­g of other European leaders. While the Germans plan to take some 800,000 refugees, Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain has now agreed to take a surreally paltry 20,000 Syrians over five years.

In 1945, there were some 20 million European refugees milling around, fleeing persecutio­n, the destructio­n of their homes or justice. The principal story of the latter half of that decade is how Europe as a whole found homes for all those people.

Postwar Europe was shaped by waves of migration on a scale vastly greater than in the current crisis. In 1947, all German speakers were expelled from Czechoslov­akia, and in a few weeks well over a million arrived in the American zone of occupied Germany alone. Despite entering a country mostly reduced to rubble, they were settled across southern Germany.

In just a few weeks in 1962, some three- quarters of a million Europeans arrived in France following Algerian independen­ce and were settled.

Mass movements of people lie at the heart of Europe, whether voluntary or involuntar­y. Communitie­s adapt, terrible scars partly reheal, cities grow, children are born, new skills are found. Even setting aside the enormous complicati­ng factor of the West’s role in countries such as Libya, Syria, Afghanista­n and Iraq, the answer to the current crisis is obvious.

The migrant crisis joins other revisions to Europe’s population.

 ?? GEORGI LICOVSKI/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? War has repeatedly led to mass movements of people across Europe. The police clashing with migrants in Macedonia.
GEORGI LICOVSKI/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY War has repeatedly led to mass movements of people across Europe. The police clashing with migrants in Macedonia.

Newspapers in German

Newspapers from Austria