First it was Hungary. Now Slovenia and Austria are thinking about doing the same: building fences to control the flow of refugees entering their countries. But if some EU states believe that putting up walls will make Europe’s refugee problem disappear, or that they can shut themselves off from the crisis, they are making a big mistake.
Erecting walls will put even more pressure on the Western Balkan countries that are already struggling with tens of thousands of refugees trekking across this part of Europe. And it will lead to a fortress Europe—precisely what the Eastern members of the EU didn’t want the union to become vis-à-vis their own Eastern neighbors once they joined the EU in 2004. The new member states didn’t want their neighbors isolated from Europe.
The hard reality facing European leaders and their publics is inescapable. Europe is facing the largest movement of people since World War II. It is also facing one of its biggest social and cultural challenges, which all EU countries will eventually have to accept. Failing that, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently said, the EU could be destroyed.
Merkel is not a politician who exaggerates or who likes to indulge in scaremongering. Over the past two months, she has tried to use her dogged determination to persuade her EU partners to at least take their share in giving shelter and security to the hundreds of thousands of refugees who have already made their way to Europe.
But Merkel’s success in keeping the EU together over the sanctions imposed on Russia in 2014 and in keeping the eurozone together during Greece’s financial crisis has not been replicated in the case of the refugees. It’s as if a Germany that showed leadership during both of these previous challenges to the EU is now expected to assume leadership in the refugee crisis—but this time without the rest of the EU in tow.
As it is, Germany has been remarkable in the way it has kept its doors open to refugees, despite growing opposition to this policy from Merkel’s own conservative bloc. Sweden, Austria, and Greece (as if Athens did not have problems of its own) have also been magnanimous in accepting refugees.
But as this handful of countries is discovering, solidarity—a word so many EU countries invoke when they want EU support—is absent. Up against resistance from many member states, the EU has been unable to deliver on a problem that affects all EU countries, whether or not they build walls to insulate themselves from refugees.
Why is this so? European leaders can always blame populist movements for their reluctance to accept refugees. And certainly, populist parties and politicians who simply don’t want foreigners settling in their cities, towns, and villages are gaining ground.
EU states that believe they can shut themselves off from the #refugeecrisis are making a mistake.Tweet This
In Germany, there is hardly a day without some attack on shelters for refugees or some despicable hate e-mails sent to politicians and local government officials who try to mobilize as much support as possible for the refugees.
But at the same time, there is hardly a day without another citizens’ movement springing into action in some way or other. A lawyer I know has organized his law practice to give German lessons to a group of Syrian and Eritrean refugees. “We contacted the local municipality that takes care of the refugees, bought a simple teaching manual, and now give classes at least once a week,” he told me. It’s all done on a voluntary and free basis.
These kinds of spontaneous actions humanize the refugee problem. Perhaps this is the key to trying to understand why Europe has been so unprepared and so unwilling to pull together in dealing with the crisis. The refugees are seen as foreign, meaning not European—not that the word “European” can be clearly defined.
Jarosław Kaczyński, the nationalist, conservative leader of Poland’s Law and Justice party, which won the country’s parliamentary election on October 25, has heaped racist scorn on the refugees. He is not alone. Viktor Orbán, the prime minister of Hungary, who built a wall along the Hungarian-Serbian border to keep out refugees, said the migrants would undermine what Europe stood for: its Christian values.
Cultural walls exist even where there are no physical barriers. Leading Slovak and Czech officials harbor the same fears and suspicions about having Muslims living in their countries—as do anti-immigration parties in the Netherlands, France, and other EU countries.
In short, because the refugees are predominantly Muslim and come from nondemocratic countries, their backgrounds have become confused with a kind of Islamophobia. This fuels support for populists but also frightens many people who fear the impact of immigration on the fabric of their societies. It’s as if they don’t have self-confidence in their own societies.
#Merkel has put a huge emphasis on integrating #refugees quickly.Tweet This
That is why Merkel has put a huge emphasis on integrating the refugees as quickly as possible, not only by teaching them German, getting the children into school, or establishing job-training schemes, but also by spreading the culture and values of democracy in a secular society.
It is a mammoth challenge that Merkel has made one of the main pillars of her refugee policy. It is a challenge she keeps repeating to the German public because she and her advisers know the high price to pay if integration, which is such a long-term process, fails.
With no end in sight to the refugees fleeing the war in Syria, one wonders how the EU and European governments would respond if the 1.4 million Ukrainians who have been internally displaced by the war and destruction in parts of eastern Ukraine sought refuge in the EU.


Comments(5)
"It's as if they don't have self-confidence in their own societies" - what an extraordinary smug reaction to what is happening in Europe. It is this sort of attitude, that Euro-liberals know best what is good for the great unwashed, that has led to the current crisis. By the way, it is the great unwashed, the mass of ordinary people who fear for what is being done to their societies by the millions of Muslim colonists in Europe, that pay the taxes, man the armed forces and police, and, do all the jobs necessary to maintain the social systems the Euro - liberals believe in. Without their efforts, the academics, social commentators and, dare I say it, journalists, would have to engage in the type of physical labour they look down upon. Only when the multiculturalism myth is finally laid bare for all to see - as the migrant crisis is starting to do - will people begin to appreciate the true cost of the dogmatism of those like Merkel have imposed on their people.
Many in Europe think (and rightly so) it is better to be citizen of country being part of “Fortress Europe” then Europe devoid in part or totally of European traditions and values. My experiences tell me this wave of migrants will not integrate. When housed in bigger clusters, in short time will change character of cities (as they will not decide to live in countryside). If not stopped at the Schengen borders (assuming this idea of free movement will not die (courtesy of migrants) expected sheer number of humanity lured by irresponsible call of Mrs. Merkel will flood Germany and other EU richest countries because forceful allocation against wishes of citizens of newest members of EU will not stop migrants in march to expected better social condition in Germany, be it legally or not... Anyway, current maneuvers to distribute migrants by quotas in my opinion spell danger for unity of EU. Mrs. Merkel promised, Mrs. Merkel should deliver.
I really find these assumptions mystifying. Borders have been defended for centuries from barbarian invasions yet , apparently intelligent people seem to honestly think there is no way to stop some largely unarmed groups of young men from the Middle East and Africa to enter and cross them. Fences and barriers are not fool proof but they can help regulare the flow. If the barrier is breached you arrest the person and deport them. If need be you shoot them. That is how Europe should handle this. First close the outer border , if that is impossible do it further up from Greece and surrender it to the hordes. The refugees from Syria should be helped through the United Nations , which should pay for the building and maintenance of regional refugee camps. That is where all legitimate tefugees should be send. Refugees from Africa or Asia the same in their regions.
Accepting a few hundred thousand war displaced Syrian refugees is something Europe can and should do. Accepting millions of economic migrants from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria, Eritrea, Sudan and everywhere will destroy Europe. Dempsey seems unable to distinguish between the two.
"...Merkal has put great emphasis on integrating ..." Words don't integrate nobody. Mass-quarters in Berlin Tempelhof is German reality of "integration". How do you imagine to integrate 1 million newcomers mostly without qualification and from a very different cultural background (not only muslim but from a traditional society)?
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