Last week the House passed legislation introduced by Republican lawmakers to restrict Iraqi and Syrian refugees from resettling here in the U.S. Republican measures would require individual sign offs by top federal officials from every person from Iraq and Syria seeking refugee status. President Obama has vowed to veto the legislation if it reaches his desk. This comes as governors of at least 31 states have said they will not accept the refugees.
historical parallel with a different refugee crisis the country faced, this time in the 1930’s when Jewish refugees sought refuge here. A Case Western Reserve University History professor named Peter Schulman tweeted a Fortune Magazine poll question from 1939 that read, “Should the U.S. government permit 10,000 mostly Jewish refugee children to come in from Germany?” The results showed overwhelmingly the respondents said we should keep them out. Among those denied entry was Anne Frank, who famously wrote about her experience in hiding from the Nazis in, “The Diary of Anne Frank.” The documents released in 2007 show her father, Otto Frank, tried repeatedly to escape to the United States and Cuba before he was denied and the family went into hiding. Part of the ordeal faced by Jewish refugees during and after World War II was portrayed in the 1976 film, “Voyage of the Damned.” The film is based on the true story of the 1939 voyage of the SS St. Louis, which sailed for Havana from Hamburg Germany carrying 900 Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazis. The Cuban Government refused entry to the passengers, so the ship made its way to the United States, where the Coast Guard delivered the following message.
“Attention, Captain St. Louis. You are violating U.S. territorial limits. Do not approach any closer. Do not attempt to land. You will not, repeat, not be permitted to dock at any United States port. Acknowledge.”
The ship was left with no choice but to return to Germany. And number of people jumped off the sides of the ship and drowned. Many hundreds of the German Jews who were returned to Germany were exterminated in the concentration camps.
Ishaan Tharoor talking:
public opinion then seemed to reflect public opinion now. The analogy between what we saw in the 1930’s and what we’re going through right now is obviously in an imperfect one. Obviously, no one’s completely drawing a totally, completely identical parallel between Jewish refugees and Syrian refugees. The point is, of course, that the nativist response, then, has very clear echoes now.
this is a poll that is done by Gallup in early 1939 at a time when there was about to be a conversation in the U.S. about bipartisan legislation regarding a bill that proposed letting in 20,000 refugee children from Europe. Presumably, this meant refugee — Jewish refugee children. But that distinction wasn’t totally clear at the time. And there was this poll that you cited where, I think, more than two thirds of the respondents pretty much said, no, don’t let them in. And this reflected, yes, rank anti-semitism at the time, but also reflected other fears over immigration, over the perceived ideological threat that these alien refugees posed and reflected by and large the general nativism of the moment.
The bipartisan legislation that I mentioned didn’t pass as well. It was met by all sorts of opposition across the country with politicians, both Democrats and Republicans, making arguments that we hear now. At least we hear echoes of those arguments now, talking about this being the first plank to communistic takeover of the U.S., talking about the threat of, you know, disguised Nazi agents coming among the Jewish ranks. And so all this language of subversion, of fear of security threats, was very much heard then at the time as well.
Ilya Lozovsky talking:
I addressed a slightly different audience. I addressed my own community of Russian or Soviet born jews who have immigrated to the United States, either as refugees, you know, in the 1970’s and 1980’s, or as sort of more immigrants during the 1990’s. I myself was one of them. My family came to the United States in 1990 from Moscow. And I just found it very disturbing and heartbreaking, as I said in my piece, that this community would see such strong rejection of the now the Syrian refugees, and not for any kind of reasons that I view as defensible. We can talk about security. We can talk about how good is the vetting process. Those are legitimate concerns and questions of course after Paris, but a lot of these objections are based on, frankly, racist and bigoted views towards these immigrants. They’re not going to assimilate, they’re not like us, they can’t contribute to American society. Some commenters describe them literally as animals, as cockroaches. And that kind of dehumanizing language I find especially disturbing coming from my own community, which faced such discrimination both, not being able to come here during the second world war, but we — Soviet Jews benefited so much from the welcome we received in the United States after a very tough campaign fought by Americans of all kinds, jews and not, to encourage letting Soviet Jews immigrate to the United States. And I just think we should remember that and we should remember that these Syrian refugees are fleeing something so appalling at horrific that it’s hard for us to imagine and we should have a little more compassion. And if we have security concerns, let’s talk about them in an informed and sober way. And that’s not what I saw in my community, at least. So that’s what led me to write that piece.
To me, beyond what Donald Trump said, the most disturbing part of that clip was the cheering in the background because it sort of, to me, reflects the sort of nativist hysteria been whipped up by these comments. Even if Donald Trump never becomes president, this kind of discourse has been legitimized. And this is what I saw. This is exactly what I was responding to. And it reflects, I think, a very strong ignorance of who these people actually are and what they are fleeing from and what they could contribute, importantly, to this country.
Muslim Americans are just as integrated into American society has anyone else. They are largely middle class. They are productive citizens. They believe in all of the ideals, all the democratic ideals that we hold dear. And this kind of opposition to them reflects the same kind of proposition that before has been faced by Chinese immigrants, by Italians, by Irish, by Catholics, by Jews, by so many different groups. And in every case it has proven wrong. Everyone can assimilate, and this is somewhere the United States has a very strong advantage compared to Europe. We are good at integrating immigrants. It is good for our country. It is our moral imperative. And these kinds of arguments just don’t hold any water at all.
Ishaan Tharoor talking:
the point is not to say that Syria is Nazi Germany or the point is not to say that Jews and Syrians are identical. The point is not to say that this is a direct reflection of exactly what happened then. The point is very specifically that the exact same rhetoric used by politicians and others, prominent figures in the U.S., in the 1930’s, warning against the threat of these refugees is very, very similar.
And the nature of that response, when we think about what these people are fleeing, the fact that these are refugees who are fleeing horrendous conflict, living in dire circumstances in countries around the borders of Syria which are straining, really buckling under the pressures in burdens to accommodate them and host them, that this is part of an international responsibility that the U.S. certainly has, that the U.S. has taken up in the past. And that the important thing to remember in this context is that even after the Paris terror attacks, President Francois Hollande declared very clearly that France will continue to honor its commitment to take in 20,000 Syrian refugees, minimum, over the next two years. This is even in the wake of them suffering this kind of particular terror attack, which is for many wrong reasons, equated to the threat of Syrian refugees.
So if the French can get over this, the fact that there such hysteria in the U.S. is remarkable. And the point remains throughout that what is astonishing as well about the past week is that before the Paris terror attacks, the conversation around Syrian refugees in the U.S. was almost the opposite. The question was, why is the U.S. a taking so few — only 10,000 in the next calendar year, or in the next fiscal year — and then b, surely, things must be done to step up the process and taken more. And now in the wake of this attacks and the way certain political forces in this country have harnessed — have exploited the hysteria around the Paris terror attacks, we’re seeing a very, very different conversation.
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Ilya Lozovsky
editor at Foreign Policy. He recently wrote a piece for the Washington Post headlined “I’m a Russian-born American Jew. My people’s rejection of Syrian refugees breaks my heart.”
Ishaan Tharoor
foreign affairs reporter for The Washington Post. He previously was a senior editor at TIME, based first in Hong Kong and later in New York. His recent article in the Washington Post is called, “Yes, the comparison between Jewish and Syrian refugees matters”. His earlier article is titled, “What Americans thought of Jewish refugees on the eve of World War II”.
— source democracynow.org