Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
The refugee crisis now overwhelming Europe
has led to the continent’s publics veering from one extreme to another, like a
drunk driving a car erratically from side to side on a road, in their response
to this ongoing catastrophe.
Last summer, three-year-old Alan Kurdi, a
Syrian boy, washed up on a Turkish beach, drowned while his family was trying
to reach Europe.
Suddenly, there was a huge wave of sympathy for those trying
to escape the horrific wars in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere in the Muslim world.
On New Year’s Eve, a very large group of
men, very many of them Middle Eastern asylum seekers, were involved in a wave
of violent assaults on women in Cologne, Germany. Since then, similar incidents
have been reported in other European cities.
In response, many Europeans have reacted
with hostility to all migrants entering Europe.
This form of political “bipolarity” appears
to be an emotional, rather than rational, response, which to a large extent has
been fuelled by the mass media, in particular television.
Little Alan Kurdi pulled at people’s
heartstrings because this is human nature. All children are innocents, of
course, but many, due to their cultural, religious and social backgrounds, will
not remain so. (Hitler and Stalin were once kids.)
On the other hand, the criminals engaged in
sexual harassment and thievery in Cologne and elsewhere, are clearly a minority
of the men coming to Europe seeking a better life, and to castigate an entire
group because of them is clearly xenophobic.
Neither extreme makes sense, nor should
either become the basis of a reasoned, calm debate about the larger issues
facing Europe: how many people can the continent absorb without losing its
historic cultural and ethnic makeup?
Will such a large mass of people arriving
in so short a time be assimilated into the norms and values of European
democracy, including respect for gays, women and other minority populations?
Will they embrace the liberal secular character
of these societies, with their separation of religion and politics?
In an opinion piece published in the New
York Times on Jan. 9, Anna Sauerbrey, an editor on the opinion page of the
Berlin newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, asserted that “Integration will fail if
Germany cannot resolve the tension between its secular, liberal laws and
culture and the patriarchal and religiously conservative worldviews that some
refugees bring with them.
“We cannot avoid that question out of fear
of feeding the far right,” she wrote. “But integration will also fail if a full
generation of refugees is demonized on arrival.”
These are the questions that need to be
addressed, and emotions in one direction or the other, dictated by specific
events, should not affect the policies of decision-makers in governments.
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