A Critical Review of „Hating Refugees Is Pretty Much As American As Apple Pie” by author Amanda Terkel, Senior Political Reporter, The Huffington Post In The Huffington Post article which was published in mid-November, a year which was marked by various terrorist attacks, the growth of one of the greatest threats to global security and the enormous rise in refugees seeking refuge in different parts of the world, this article attempts to highlight the feelings that the American public has and that formal policy authorities carried out against Syrian migrants. This article pays special attention to the stereotypical dealings of Americans who are guided by different suggestions presidential candidates urging that America should help migrants but not migrants who are Muslims. On the other side of these developments, the article compares the torture that once passed the German Jews, Catholics, Japanese-Americans …show more content…
In this part of the article relies on lobbying mentioned in the writing of The New York Times about first lady Eleanor Roosevelt's speech cautioning against intolerance toward refugees where she said: "We must not let ourselves be moved by fear in this country" Although the current US policies is in some parts really different from the policy during the time of Roosevelt, the article does not mention today's speech of President Obama to call on the generosity of the American people and a real welcome for Syrian refugees. He used the opportunity to address to the nation during the holidays and tried to open their hearts, while strongly underlined that the security procedures required for all who come to the United
middle of paper ... ... Daniels, Roger. A. Concentration Camps USA: Japanese Americans and World War II. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970.
My essay focuses on discrimination as one of the main challenges that refugees face. I discuss some instances of discrimination that occurred in the book, whether based on race or culture,
Murders inflicted upon the Jewish population during the Holocaust are often considered the largest mass murders of innocent people, that some have yet to accept as true. The mentality of the Jewish prisoners as well as the officers during the early 1940’s transformed from an ordinary way of thinking to an abnormal twisted headache. In the books Survival in Auschwitz by Primo Levi and Ordinary men by Christopher R. Browning we will examine the alterations that the Jewish prisoners as well as the police officers behaviors and qualities changed.
The atrocities that swept through Europe during World War II brought with them the cultivation of a horrific contagion: dehumanization. The memoir Night by Elie Wiesel exemplifies the spread of this disease by following Wiesel’s journey through the concentration camps of the 1940s. At the time, the stories may have seemed unimaginable, but today, historians cannot deny what happened during that dark time before liberation. Wiesel’s memoir can be used as evidence. Through their inevitable acceptance and continuation of the dehumanization displayed by the Nazis, prisoners of the WWII concentration camps were doomed to slow and painful deaths.
Thirty-one states are not welcoming refugees, seven are welcoming refugees, and twelve are not making a commitment to either side. Governors cannot legally deny entry to refugees but they can make it extremely difficult to gain access. Michigan governor Rick Snyder stated the following ‘It’s also important to remember that these attacks are the effects of extremists and do not reflect the peaceful ways of Middle Eastern descent here and around the world.’ (CNN). Mister Snyder does not welcome refugees to his state because the safety of his citizens is his number one priority but he does not want people to look down on refugees. American citizens do not want refugees in their communities. This is a prime example of xenophobia and could lead to backlash, discrimination, and violence directed towards refugees. Refugees would be targeted and become victims of hate
The Holocaust is the greatest atrocity ever committed. Millions upon millions of people were ruthlessly tortured and executed during the infamous reign of the Third Reich. The events and conditions surrounding Adolf Hitler’s rise to power have been extensively studied by historians, sociologists, political scientists, and psychologists in the hopes of preventing this state of merciless dictatorship from ever recurring. Due to the immensity of the Nazi campaign against those of the Jewish faith, that ethnic group is most often mentioned in association with the concentration camps and exterminations of the Third Reich. However, there were many other groups who were persecuted alongside the Jews. These groups include political dissidents, criminals, gypsies, the handicapped, Jehovah’s Witnesses, emigrants, and homosexuals (Heger 32). The plight of homosexuals is, perhaps, the most overlooked aspect of the Holocaust. Of all the concentration camps, Sachsenhaussen, just north of Berlin, was the most important in the imprisonment and execution of homosexuals. The conditions under which all prisoners here were forced to live were absolutely inhuman, but for homosexuals it was far worse. As the one group that was despised by both the Nazis and those who were imprisoned within concentration camps, gays were persecuted with the greatest enthusiasm, and because of the taboos surrounding their lifestyle, their tragedy was left unnoticed for nearly three decades.
The Germans had tortured Elie Wiesel in the story “Night” during the holocaust because of his religion. He believes that the people who were indifferent and were just an observer caused the Germans to torture him. He thinks if people who were observers, st...
Wars have essentially been the backbone of history. A war can make or break a country. As the result of war, a country can lose or gain territory and a war directly impacts a countries’ economy. When we learn about wars in schools we usually are taught about when they start, major events/ battles, and when they end. It would take a year or two to cover one war if we were to learn about everything. One thing that is commonly overlooked and we take for granted, is prisoners of war. Most people think of concentration camps and the millions of Jews that suffered when prisoners and war are mentioned in the same sentence. Yes it is terrible what happened during WWII, but what about our troops that were captured and potentially tortured trying to save the Jews? How did they suffer? Being captured as a prisoner of war is just an on the job hazard. In this paper I will explain what POWs went through and how it has changes between countries, and I will only scratch the surface.
Empathy is not always easy to achieve. Currently as a nation we are debating whether or not we should allow the Syrian refugees into our country. After the attack on Paris and the ISIS threat against America next, it is easy to see why Americans would not want to let Syrian refugees into our country. It is a difficult decision to make, especially since most of the refugees are women and children. These refugees are trying to escape the terrors and wars that are going on in their home country. However, United States officials must remain cautious with who we are letting into our country at this time. Many citizens are nervous to let so many people into our country. The challenge that the United States officials face is if we
In human history, there have been few acts of psychological and physical torture viewed as being as cruel and insensitive as dehumanization. Dehumanization is the process by which a person or group of people are reduced to a subhuman level by some oppressor, and treated as an object or animal rather than a person. This process has been employed for centuries by various oppressors as a way to expedite the torture or killing of oppressed groups. Specifically, dehumanization was one of the tactics employed to carry out one of the bloodiest genocides in history: the Holocaust during World War II. The Holocaust represents over 9 million deaths, most of them the product of the mass killing of the Jewish people. One very well-known story of life during
America needs to accept the Syrian refugees because if they do not, the United States is abandoning its morals and leaving thousands of people stranded in danger. While Syrian refugees are often labeled as terrorists, they are actually the opposite. Through research by Lauren Gambino, Patrick Kingsley, and Alberto Nardelli, three writers from an English Newspaper, “The Guardian”, have found interesting results. They admit, “Syrian refugees are generally afraid of exactly the same thing that Americans are: Islamist terrorism” (Gambino 3).
Autumn Heydenreich 3rd hour 24 October 2014 Death Camps There are various times in history that nations of people are divided by war and conflict, but at the same time many people are brought together by their suffering. The Holocaust is a particular event in the world’s history that broke the trust between those persecuted and their persecutors and that trust will never fully return. So many lives were lost because a man gained power and was able to instill fear into everyone, whether they were with him or against him. Adolf Hitler could not have been satisfied by merely separating those he perceived as lowly from those he believed to be perfect, he had to have them killed before he was content.
The first chapter of the book provides a highly informative background and history to the concept of refugees, as well as their relevance to the modern international political system. The authors importantly point out that defining a refugee is not simply a matter of academic concern because resulting definitions may mean the difference between life and death for people in conflict zones. Defining a refugee involves political and ethical considerations, inevitably creating disagreement regarding the issue. For example, when refugees are defined in a certain way by the United Nations, research will consequently revolve around such definitions and will help support the status quo of the institut...
”(Knut Ritter) This shows that to Germans, it was complicated for Jews, but the things done to them were not
As German Chancellor Angela Merkel stated, “If Europe fails on the question of refugees, then it won’t be the Europe we wished for”. The Washington Post and the BBC News both wrote articles focused on the refugee crisis, but they both differ on how they approach the subject. The Washington Post’s article focused on five possible solutions to the refugee crisis, and the pros and cons of each possible solution. These solutions included doing nothing, establishing quotas for each country for the amount of refugees they must accept, taking military action against human traffickers, resettling refugees directly from and around Syria, and final solution bringing peace to Syria, Afghanistan, and the other surrounding states.