Streams of Refugees Seek Sanctuary in Europe

Horgoš, Serbia. 16 September 2015 -- A scene from the "Horgos 2" border crossing into Hungary, after the Hungarian police spread water on migrants. Hungarian riot police used tear gas and water cannons on migrants who tried to break through a razor wire fence and enter Hungary from the Serbian border in Horgos. Photo by Art Widak. Copyright Demotix

Horgoš, Serbia. 16 September 2015 — A scene from the “Horgos 2″ border crossing into Hungary, after the Hungarian police spread water on migrants. Hungarian riot police used tear gas and water cannons on migrants who tried to break through a razor wire fence and enter Hungary from the Serbian border in Horgos. Photo by Art Widak. Copyright Demotix

Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi's lifeless body lying in the surf on a Turkish resort. Desperate families slipping under barbed-wire fences and being teargassed as they try to enter Hungary from Serbia. Popular Greek tourist destinations Kos and Lesvos inundated with tents, volunteers, and long lines of refugees who have crossed the Mediterranean on unsafe dinghies.

Haunting images and heartbreaking stories like these flooded social media and mainstream media in 2015. More than 1 million refugees crossed the Mediterranean into Europe in 2015, four times more than the year before, according to the United Nations. About half came from Syria, where civil war has raged since 2011. A total of 3,771 died or went missing during the dangerous journey.

A total of 361,709 individuals arrived by sea in 2016. About a quarter of them came from Syria, one-fifth from Afghanistan and Iraq, and many others from several African countries like Eritrea and Nigeria. Although people continued to flee to Europe from violence, repression and catastrophe in their homelands, coverage of refugees in 2016 didn't the fever pitch of media attention reached in the latter half of 2015.

Once on European shores, asylum seekers have been greeted with a mixture of love and hate. Anti-immigration politics in Europe have gained momentum in recent years, and in the wake of attacks in Paris and Brussels far-right parties have pushed the idea that the stream of refugees put Europe in danger — even though most of those assailants were European citizens.

European leaders have struggled to address the refugee crisis. Many first arrive in Greece, a country already under strain from its wounded economy. Camps in Greece are crowded and often short of supplies; many refugees have left, travelling through the Balkans on their way to “friendlier” countries such as Germany. A plan to resettle refugees throughout the European Union in order to more fairly share responsibility has met resistance from several Eastern European countries.

In March 2016, European Union authorities struck a much-criticized deal with Turkey in which Europe will return all asylum seekers except Syrians to Turkey, and will take in one Syrian refugee in exchange. Turkey, which borders Syria, houses 2.7 million Syrian refugees, according to the UN.

Human rights organizations have questioned the agreement's legality. One Spanish journalist observed:

Hay un tufo antidemocrático, y por qué no decirlo, fascistoide, en muchas de las cosas que se dicen y hacen, en las justificaciones para expulsar refugiados como si fueran ellos los que violan la ley cuando la ley la violamos nosotros al impedir el refugio a los perseguidos por la guerra.

There is an anti-democratic, and why not say it, a fascist stink, in many of the things being said and done, in the justifications for expelling refugees as if they were the ones violating the law when we ourselves are violating the law by refusing refuge to those fleeing war.

‘It's not charity, it's solidarity from everybody to anybody’

Amid the high-level political bickering, ordinary citizens and local communities throughout Europe have organized welcome efforts for refugees and offered up their homes to them.

Refugees on their way from Hungary to Germany were met with applause and an outpouring of water, food and sanitary products in Vienna in September 2015.

Vienna, Austria. 1 September 2015 -- A banner is held up by a group welcoming refugees arriving from Syria and Afghanistan at Vienna Railway Station where they plan to stay overnight en route to Germany. Photo by Martin Juen. Copyright Demotix

Vienna, Austria. 1 September 2015 — A banner is held up by a group welcoming refugees arriving from Syria and Afghanistan at Vienna Railway Station where they plan to stay overnight en route to Germany. Photo by Martin Juen. Copyright Demotix

People in Portugal organized an online campaign to collect goods for refugees held in Hungary. One mother left the following message with her donation:

Pode não parecer muito, mas achamos que este gesto faz com que os nossos filhos cresçam a perceber que fazer pelos outros vai muito para além do “post solidário” nas redes sociais.

It might not be much, but we want our kids to see it and grow their understanding that helping others goes beyond a simple solidarity post on social media.

In Greece, a social kitchen cooked up meals for refugees by the thousands at the Kara Tepe camp on Lesvos. They explained on their blog:

It's not charity, it's solidarity from everybody to anybody…It's also love from human beings to human beings regardless of skin color, ethnicity or religion.

And activists in Athens occupied a vacant hotel to offer a few refugees shelter.

In France, a man from northeast England prepared hot meals for refugees out of an old converted bus.

And several startups and NGOs in Europe made sure refugees, who rely heavily on the Internet to communicate with friends and loved ones as well as to apply for asylum, have access to WiFi.

Sometimes, all it takes is a smile to make a difference. After many recent reports of police brutality and unfair treatment of refugees in some European countries, a photo of a Serbian police officer smiling and holding a Syrian toddler went viral. Social media users praised the officer's compassion.

In an episode of Global Voices’ Hangout series GV Face filmed in September 2015, four of our contributors discussed volunteer efforts underway in Greece, Hungary and Germany to help refugees. They also offered their recommendations for anyone looking to donate or get involved.

‘The day that I became just a stupid number’

Missing from many of the mainstream media discussions about the crisis are the voices of the refugees themselves.

About half of all arrivals to Europe in 2015 and more than a third in 2016 came from Syria, where Bashar al-Assad's regime has ruthlessly targeted civilians with chemical weapons and deadly barrel bombs. ISIS and other militant groups have also made gains on Syrian territory, killing and torturing civilians mercilessly.

By some estimates, 470,000 people have been killed since civil war began in 2011. About a fifth of Syria's population — 4.8 million — have fled the country. Another 6.5 million are internally displaced within Syria.

Most Syrian refugees are in crowded camps in neighboring Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan. Some instead make the dangerous journey to Europe with the hope of starting afresh with their families. It isn't an easy decision, but the utter destruction of their homeland and the poor conditions in the camps leaves many Syrians with little choice.

For Zozan Khaled Musa, a 25-year-old refugee from Syria, the experience has been dehumanizing. In an essay, she recalled arriving to Greece:

Hundreds of people were standing in a line waiting their turn to be registered so they could take another boat to the main island of Kos. In Nera, when my turn came to get inside the office, they wrote the number “17” on my hand. I will never forget the day that I became just a stupid number on a long inhuman list. How shameful for humanity that so many people became nonhuman in that single helpless moment.

Marcel Shehwaro: “Revolt”. Taken during Arab Bloggers Meeting in Jordan by Amer Sweidan. Photo used with permission.

Marcell Shehwaro: “Revolt”. Taken during Arab Bloggers Meeting in Jordan by Amer Sweidan. Photo used with permission.

The difficulties don't end once a Syrian refugee is registered and settled. Syrian activist and Global Voices writer Marcell Shahwaro described her experience after taking refuge outside her war-torn country in “A Year Away From Syria“:

I chase away all thoughts of death, to the extent that a Syrian possibly can. I'm reconnecting with friends and I'm embracing the victim that is me. I pity her, love her, pray for her to gain strength and patience, and most importantly to gain forgiveness.

People from Afghanistan and Iraq, two countries plagued by insecurity in the wake of recent wars, make up a significant portion of the refugees reaching Europe too.

A worldwide exodus

In the last five years, the number of people forced to flee their homes has increased more than 50 percent, with 65.3 million refugees, internally displaced people and asylum seekers worldwide by the end of 2015, according to the United Nations. In 2015, more than 12.4 million people became forcibly displaced because of war, violence and persecution. That's 24 people newly displaced every minute.

While refugees in Europe and the humanitarian crisis in Syria have captured much of the world's attention, other conflicts are driving people to leave in search of safety elsewhere. The United Nations says thousands upon thousands of people fled Burundi, South Sudan, Ukraine, Central African Republic, Eritrea, Somalia and Sudan in 2015.

Some even worked with the United States forces as translators, but have been abandoned in their hour of need by American authorities.

With suffering widespread and asylum not guaranteed, a few refugees are turning back from Turkey and Europe and returning home, despite the danger.

In a story for Global Voices, a Syrian Kurdish man named Sheriff explained coming to Turkey, only to feel forced to leave: “I can't abandon my family at home.”

Thousands of refugees have drowned in the attempt to cross into Europe by sea. In September 2015, a 3-year-old Syrian toddler named Alan Kurdi was added to the long list of lives lost, alongside his mother and 5-year-old brother. A photo of his body washed up on a beach at a Turkish resort forced the world to confront the tragedies happening again and again on the Mediterranean.

After the media reported the Kurdi family had been trying unsuccessfully to get to Canada, Global Voices Iran editor Mahsa Alimardani asked with a heavy heart if a document should be able to determine life or death in this world:

There are many stamps in there, because this passport is accepted without much trouble in much of the world. My Dutch residency card is next to my passport. Why do I, above anyone else, deserve these documents that give me the freedom to roam and live where I choose?

Resources

The refugee crisis in Europe has many asking how they can direct their funds and attention to Syrian and other refugees. Jillian C. York‘s excellent guide to helping refugees, How You Can Help Syrian (and Other) Refugees, is a good place to start.

For more background on how this crisis came to be, read: