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During WWII, European refugees fled to Syria. Here's what the camps were like.

Bilad al-Haramayn

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During WWII, European refugees fled to Syria. Here's what the camps were like.
This story is a part of
PRI's The World
April 26, 2016 · 12:45 PM EDT
By Evan Taparata (follow)
and Kuang Keng Kuek Ser (follow)


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US Army General Allen Gullion and Fred K. Hoehler, Director of the United Nation’s Division of Displaced Persons, stand before a map predicting the movement of European refugees of World War II. Many Europeans would find a haven in refugee camps in the Middle East.
Since civil war erupted in Syria five years ago, millions of refugees have sought safe harbor in Europe by land and by sea, through Turkey and across the Mediterranean.

Refugees crossed these same passageways 70 years ago. But they were not Syrians and they traveled in the opposite direction. At the height of World War II, the Middle East Relief and Refugee Administration (MERRA) operated camps in Syria, Egypt and Palestine where tens of thousands of people from across Europe sought refuge.

MERRA was part of a growing network of refugee camps around the world that were operated in a collaborative effort by national governments, military officials and domestic and international aid organizations. Social welfare groups including the International Migration Service, the Red Cross, the Near East Foundation and the Save the Children Fund all pitched in to help MERRA and, later, the United Nations to run the camps.

The archival record provides limited information on the demographics of World War II refugee camps in the Middle East. The information that is available, however, shows that camp officials expected the camps to shelter more refugees over time. Geographic information on location of camps come from records of the International Social Service, American Branch records, in the Social Welfare History Archives at the University of Minnesota.

In March 1944, officials who worked for MERRA and the International Migration Service (later called the International Social Service) issued reports on these refugee camps in an effort to improve living conditions there. The reports, which detail conditions that echo those faced by refugees today, offer a window into the daily lives of Europeans, largely from Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia, who had to adjust to life inside refugee camps in the Middle East during World War II.

Upon arriving at one of several camps in Egypt, Palestine and Syria, refugees first had to register with camp officials and receive camp-issued identification cards. These identification cards — which they had to carry with them at all times — included information such as the refugee’s name, their camp identification number, information on their educational and work history and any special skills they possessed.

Camp officials maintained a log that recorded the identification number, full name, gender, marital status, profession, passport number, special comments, date of arrival — and eventually, their date of departure.



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A handwritten note from the archive shows MERRA was overseeing over 40,000 refugees, mostly women and children, in refugee camps in the Middle East and North Africa as of July 1944.

Credit:
Courtesy of International Social Service, American Branch records in the Social Welfare History Archives, University of Minnesota

Once registered, recent arrivals wound their way through a thorough medical inspection. Refugees headed toward what were often makeshift hospital facilities — usually tents, but occasionally empty buildings repurposed for medical care — where they took off their clothes, their shoes and were washed until officials believed they were sufficiently disinfected.
Some refugees — such as Greeks who arrived in the Aleppo camp from the Dodecanese islands in 1944 — could expect medical inspections to become part of their daily routine.

After medical officials were satisfied that they were healthy enough to join the rest of the camp, refugees were split up into living quarters for families, unaccompanied children, single men and single women. Once assigned to a particular section of the camp, refugees enjoyed few opportunities to venture outside. Occasionally they were able to go on outings under the supervision of camp officials.

When refugees in the Aleppo camp made the several-mile trek into town, for example, they might visit shops to purchase basic supplies, watch a film at the local cinema — or simply get a distraction from the monotony of camp life. Although the camp at Moses Wells, located on over 100 acres of desert, was not within walking distance of a town, refugees were allowed to spend some time each day bathing in the nearby Red Sea.

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Croatian and Yugoslavian refugees work as cobblers at a refugee camp in El Shatt, Egypt during World War II.

Credit:
United Nations Archives and Records Management Section

Naturally, food was an essential part of refugees’ daily lives. Refugees in MERRA camps during World War II typically received a half portion of Army rations each day. Officials acknowledged that when possible, rations should be supplemented with foods that reflected refugees’ national customs and religious practices.
Those who were fortunate enough to have some money could buy beans, olives, oil, fruit, tea, coffee and other staples from canteens in the camp or during occasional visits to local shops, where in addition to food they could buy soap, razor blades, pencils, paper, stamps and other items. Camps that weren’t pressed for space were able to provide room for refugees to prepare meals. In Aleppo, for example, a room was reserved in the camp for women to gather and make macaroni with flour that they received from camp officials.

Some, but not all, camps required refugees to work. In Aleppo, refugees were encouraged, but not required, to work as cooks, cleaners and cobblers. Labor wasn’t mandatory in Nuseirat, either, but camp officials did try to create opportunities for refugees to use their skills in carpentry, painting, shoe making and wool spinning so that they could stay occupied and earn a little income from other refugees who could afford their services.

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El Shatt, Egypt, 1945

Meanwhile, at Moses Wells, all able-bodied, physically fit refugees were required to work in a variety of occupations. Most worked as shopkeepers, cleaners, seamstresses, apprentices, masons, carpenters or plumbers, while “exceptionally qualified persons” served as school masters or labor foremen. Women performed additional domestic work like sewing, laundry, and preparing food on top of any other work they had.

Some camps even had opportunities for refugees to receive vocational training. At El Shatt and Moses Wells, hospital staff was in such short supply that the refugee camps doubled as nursing training programs for Yugoslavian and Greek refugees and locals alike.

In an article for the American Journal of Nursing, as well as in several reports she issued to the International Migration Service, a prominent nurse practitioner named Margaret G. Arnstein observed that students in the program were taught practical nursing, anatomy, physiology, first aid, obstetrics, pediatrics, as well as the military rules and regulations that governed camps. Because most had no formal education beyond grammar school, Arnstein noted that nursing curriculum was taught “in simple terms” and emphasized practical experience over theory and terminology.

The head nurses of the training program hoped they could eventually garner formal accreditation so that anyone who finished the program would be licensed to practice nursing after leaving the camps — at the time, nursing students in refugee camps were only able to treat patients because they were “emergency nurses” operating by necessity in wartime.

MERRA officials agreed that it was best for children in refugee camps to have regular routines. Education was a crucial part of that routine. For the most part, classrooms in Middle Eastern refugee camps had too few teachers and too many students, inadequate supplies and suffered from overcrowding. Yet not all the camps were so hard pressed. In Nuseirat, for example, a refugee who was an artist completed many paintings and posted them all over the walls of a kindergarten inside the camp, making the classrooms “bright and cheerful.” Well-to-do people in the area donated toys, games, and dolls to the kindergarten, causing a camp official to remark that it “compared favorably with many in the United States.”

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Tolumbat, Egypt, 1945
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Amman, Jordan, 2013
With pencils in short supply, young children at a World War II refugee camp in Tolumbat, Egypt write the words “naša škola,” or “our school,” into the sand. In December 2013, children attended class in an unofficial refugee camp in Amman, Jordan.

When they weren’t working or going to school, refugees took part in various leisure activities. Men played handball and football and socialized over cigarettes — occasionally beer and wine, if they were available — in canteens inside the camp. Some camps had playgrounds with swings, slides and seesaws where children could keep themselves entertained, and camp officials, local troops, and Red Cross workers hosted dances and put on the occasional performance for camp residents.



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Brief, handwritten meeting minutes reveal the issues that concerned camp officials, including refugees’ lack of privacy and “lack of freedom,” whether or not families should be separated from single refugees, whether refugees of different ethnic and national backgrounds should be separated, and so on. In their oversight of refugee camps, officials hoped to make camp life resemble regular life as closely as possible.

Credit:
Courtesy of International Social Service, American Branch records in the Social Welfare History Archives, University of Minnesota

Like today’s refugees, Europeans who found themselves in Middle Eastern refugee camps sought a return to regular life. The people who ran the camps wanted the same. According to the UN Refugee Agency, there are almost 500,000 Syrians registered as refugees in camps today. Almost 5 million people have been displaced by the conflict there.



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Greek refugees who lived in a refugee camp in Moses Wells, Egypt from 1945 to 1948 reunite with family members on their island home of Samos.

Credit:
United Nations Archives and Records Management Section

This story was produced with the help of Linnea Anderson, archivist of the University of Minnesota’s Social Welfare History Archives, who provided special access to and permission to reproduce the International Social Service, American Branch records that serve as the documentary basis for the accounts of refugee life. It was produced in partnership with the Immigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota.

http://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-...ans-who-fled-syria-egypt-and-palestine-during

The funny thing about this anti-immigrant hysteria in Europe is that by far the vast majority of the immigrants are not even Syrians or Arab for that matter but Sub-Saharan Africans, Afghans, Pakistanis, Iranians, Horners and many others.

Also numerous Europeans fled to nearby Arab countries during WW1 and thousands upon thousands of Italians fled to nearby Tunisia during WW2 as well. Many stayed. This migration and similar ones elsewhere from Europe actually occurred long before those world wars:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Tunisians

Not to mention the millions upon millions of European migrants and their descendants in North, Central, South America, Africa, Oceania etc. Of course the natives of those places also "loved" their presence. Anyway Europeans are mostly ME migrants who migrated from what is today the Arab world to Europe millennia upon millennia ago. Immigrants will continue to arrive to Europe (which is already a melting pot) and nothing will change that. Serves the European leaders well for meddling in the Arab world nonstop for 200-150 years and other areas of the world. It's too late to enect new laws, the last 50 years have altered Europe forever and nobody but Europeans are to be blamed for that.

Also so much for the bogus theory of "if Europeans migrated to Arab lands they would all get killed" that some right-wing nuts are propagandizing because their culture apparently gets threatened by 500.000 Syrians. What a weak culture if that is the case.:lol:
 
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Migrants posing as Syrian refugees for better chance at settling in EU

By Nick Logan

World Reporter/Global National Web Producer Global News

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Syrian migrants and refugees march along the highway towards the Turkish-Greek border at Edirne on September 18, 2015.​


As countries commit to accepting more Syrian refugees, the trade in forged Syrian passports is thriving.

Hundreds of thousands of refugees from the Middle East and Africa have made their way to Europe this year, paying smugglers and putting their lives at risk in order to make treacherous and dangerous sea crossings before trekking overland in hopes of being accepted in wealthier and more secure European countries.

But some feel posing as Syrian refugee gives them the best chance at being accepted into a new country, especially considering Germany said it would break EU rules accept Syrian refugees while other asylum seekers would have to make their claims in the EU state where they first arrived.

For legitimate Syrian refugees, those pretending to have escaped their country’s brutal civil war is one more frustrating challenge in trying to find peace and security.

“Look at these people, what are they doing here? We are the ones who are fleeing from war and slaughter, and now these men are taking away our space,” the Washington Post reported a 62-year-old Syrian named Mustafa saying at the train station in Vienna, Austria.

The Washington Post described “well-dressed Iranians speaking Farsi who insist they are members of the persecuted Yazidis of Iraq” and “Indians who don’t speak Arabic but say they are from Damascus.”

And some of those posing as victims of war are making no apologies.

“I am illegal, not refugee,” a man identifying himself as a 27-year-old Algerian named Hamza told the Post. “In my country, the only thing you can do there is either drugs or crimes. So I was in prison several times, for drugs, also for trying to kill another guy.” He recounted being offered food and shelter since telling people he came from Damascus.

Not even speaking a word of Arabic in some cases, some of those migrants are purchasing fake documents and passing themselves off as Syrians.


A reporter with the British newspaper the Telegraph claimed he was able to strike a deal for a boat ride between Turkey and Greece that included a false Syrian passport for 2,000 British pounds (approximately CDN $4,070).

Gordon Rayner wrote he struck the deal after contacting a smuggler through a Facebook group, called The Travellers’ Platform, and making just one phone call.

“Our reporter said he was concerned that he would be deported when he got to Greece. Would it be possible to get fake Syrian papers?” the Telegraph reported.

“‘It is possible,’ came the reply, ‘but it will cost you a lot – about $1,500 to $2,000 (£1,000 – £1,300). It’s not guaranteed that it will work, as it’s forged, so there is a danger you will be discovered.'”

The Telegraph learned it can cost just a few hundred euros to secure a false Syrian passport.

“You can buy a Syrian passport for 200 or 300 euros. Iraqi people sell them in Istanbul in secret places. They can tell people’s countries from their look, and they go to them on the street. There are people from Iraq, Jordan, Egypt who pretend to be Syrian,” the Telegraph reported 18-year-old Syrian “Elias” saying.


Nick Fagge, a reporter with the British tabloid the Daily Mail, published photos of the forged Syrian passport, licence and identity card he said he obtained through a broker along the Syria-Turkey border. The whole package cost him US $2,000.

Fagge reported “the trade was rife, both for Syrians who’d lost their documents but also other people… seeking a new identity or pretending to be Syrian.”

The documents Fagge reportedly bought were in the name of a Syrian man killed in Aleppo last year. The forger he obtained the documents from alleged ISIS supporters are “among the people going to Europe in this way.”

Europe’s border agency, Frontex, knows false documents are a problem — as an example, some 10,000 forged Syrian passports were seized in Bulgaria last month — but the agency’s executive director, Fabrice Leggeri, tried to assuage fears the situation will lead to terrorists infiltrating Europe.

Leggeri told a French radio host, on Sept. 1, there was “no evidence to say that potential terrorists have come into Europe like this.” But he went on to say Europe needed to be “vigilant on all our borders.”

The agency is planning to soon increase its staff in Greece in “an effort that may help the agency to identify more false refugees,” the Washington Post reported Wednesday.

Overwhelmed by the refugee and asylum seeker crisis, the European Union approved a plan to relocate 120,000 asylum seekers, primarily from entry point countries Greece and Italy, among its 28-member nations.

http://globalnews.ca/news/2237011/m...refugees-for-better-chance-at-settling-in-eu/

Shameless people.
 
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the problem is not all of the "refugees" heading to Europe are coming from Syria or in danger . I would bet more than 80% are economic migrates. they are passing up staying in poorer countries in the Baltic and want to go to Germany,Sweden, and UK.


I don't see any rich Arab countries taking in refugees. at the very least they should spend a few $ billion to support refugees camps in Turkey and Jordan, and you know financing terrorists rats that are destroying Syria.
 
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Did you know that European nations themselves in Scandinavia, UK, Germany, Benelux etc. invited a few million Turkish laborers beginning from the 1960's and later invited/welcomed mainly Palestinian refugees from Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon and later Iraqis? It is not the fault of people who escape from wars and conflicts that are closely tied to European/Western policies.

Why? Because the locals did not want to do the the mainly manual jobs. They needed cheap labour.

Not to mention French policies in regards to former French colonies in the Maghreb and West Africa.

The European model and politicians are to be blamed. Don't blame the Syrians for trying to escape to neighboring Europe when the same West for decades supported local dictators or contributed directly to wars and conflicts. I don't recall any Arabs, Turks or other ME people migrating to Europe before WW2.

Until 15-10 years ago hardly any Western European nation demanded anything from migrants. If they could not work they would just be put on social welfare until they felt better. Ghettos were not created out of nowhere. It was an European idea to built ghettos so the foreigners could feel more secure among their own instead of forcing them out in the society to integrate actively. A country like Norway did that and they hardly have any problems with immigrants.

European politicians are a little bit late with their hysteria and they should realize once and for all that their active actions in the neighborhood have consequences for them as well.

Look at Libya. It was an European/Western idea first and foremost to remove Gaddafi and now look what is going on. Why do the West continue to support Israel fully when we all know that the rise of Jihadism has always been CLOSELY tied to the Palestinian question?

The Muslim leaders are bad enough on their own but when active Western policies are making everything worse, you have a bad cocktail. You can't have huge geopolitical, economic etc. interests in the Arab world/Muslim world and at the same time pretend that it's not your own business or that you have nothing to do with it. That's not how the world works.

The invasion of Iraq is the reason for most of the mess that we currently see. No single decision has been more harmful in the past 20 years I would claim.



The GCC is the main financier of those camps and in the case of KSA 500.000 Syrians live in KSA today. They can work freely (unlike in certain other countries) and have free healthcare, school etc. I agree that more should be done as well but there are limits to what small countries like Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, UAE etc. can do when they are already overrun by migrants. Iran has an obligation as well but nobody is point at them and how many Syrians have they welcome? I believe 0. Lastly a lot of this also has to do with the fact that Syrian refugees do not want to stay in the ME but they prefer to go to Europe.



millions of people crossing into Europe is wrong and you know it's wrong. I don't think you and your government would take kindly if millions of white infidels came pouring in Saudi Arabia with the expecting to live the easy life off your welfare system


this has been going on for years. even Gaddafi warned Europe would turn black if they didn't pay him to stop it.

http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/217290/Libya-dictator-Colonel-Gaddafi-s-migrants-blackmail


Europe politicians and elite are selling Europe future for cheap labor and votes for their parties.


I am not against immigration and refugees but this is a unchecked flood that will long term consequences for Europe.
 
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Economic migrants. True. most are economic migrants. But think about this before you vilify them. If oil had not been found in KSA is it possible that you might have been on one of those boats? I certainly canm imagine myself being on those boats if my circumstances had been differant. The drive for economic gain is one of the strongest human urges. Economic migration and search for greener pastures is innate in our condition.

@C130 Unless your ancestors were related to this fella

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then at some stage your ancestors were also part of one histories largest migration waves with economics being the primary driver. Of course governments will try to stop it but before you judge these migrants it would help to at least reflect. I am not saying let them all in but let us not judge these people too harshly.
 
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