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Immigration and Racism in Germany
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12202 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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2 / 1987 |
2,159 Words |
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James Bovard James Bovard is an associate policy analyst for the Cato
Institute and has written on foreign aid for the New York
Times and the Wall Street Journal. |
West Germany is currently suffering its worst immigration crisis since World War II. High unemployment and waves of Africans and Asians have caused sharply rising xenophobia, racial attacks, and increased hostility towards foreigners in general. The crisis stems partly from the Soviet Union and East Germany's efforts to sabotage, embarrass, and blackmail West Germany and partly from West Germany's welfare state.
The immigration crisis reveals much about the current status of East-West relations, the failure of the welfare state and guaranteed-income policies, and the limits of West German society. The current crisis is especially unfortunate since, for most of the postwar world, West Germany has been a model of open immigration and has taken in more than four million refugees during the past 40 years. Yet, the 108,000 refugees expected this year may result in permanently reducing the openness of Germany's borders.
Xenophobia is apparently on the rise. In Hamburg in north Germany, five young Germans - without provocation - chased a young Turk out of a bar, ran over him with their car, smashed his skull, and then killed him with an ax and clubs. The murder was widely believed to be racially motivated, and 10,000 people demonstrated to protest it in Hamburg a few days later.
As the Stuttgarter Zeitung observed recently, "the usual mindless antiforeigner feeling which manifested itself in slogans and open violence has long since been joined by a fear of coming into contact with Turks," the largest and perhaps most despised immigrant group in West Germany. "It is a feeling that has become so widespread that hardly any willingness exists to
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