That is the question I asked - are they refugees fleeing war or economic migrants trying to get into a prosperous, safe, well managed country and the consensus amongst the members here is that they are the latter. If they were refugees feeling war they wouldn't pay E4,000 to get into a leaking boat and risk their lives leaving Turkey a stable safe Muslim country.
Greetings again Johnny,
Mmm… (gently) I'd say the "consensus" you're talking about is actually what you believe and what you want to justify to yourself and try to convince other people of.
Refugees fleeing war are
exactly the sort of people you'd expect to risk their and their children's lives to get somewhere safer. Why on earth would someone who is in a safe and stable place take their babies and children and pay large sums of money to risk drownings, beatings by boarder guards, racist hecklings, trudging in the rain across unknown countrysides, suffocating in trucks …?
The fact that pregnant women and parents of children are risking their lives and the lives of their little ones speaks to me of the desperation of these people to find sanctuary. Refugee camps are
not a safe and stable place to be. They are holding pens where lives are in stasis. These are not places
anyone would want their children to grow up in. They are not places where you can build a life.
Do refugees hope to build better lives for their children? Of course they do! And from what Canada has experienced of refugees, they tend to make excellent citizens who work hard and contribute to their host society. And their children tend to become integrated and productive members of society. Why? Because they tend to be brave and grateful people who want a better life for their children.
I had neighbours who were Hungarian refugees. I had friends growing up who were refugees from Vietnam, from Central America, from Iran. My children (who had a refugee father) are friends with the children of refugees from Somalia. All these people came from very diverse places, but they all have become part of the Canadian mosaic. (smile) In all their beauty and human failings.
(gently) I understand that you are uncomfortable with your neighbours in the UK that you don't know very well. But as Sister Herb has suggested, perhaps you could take steps to get to know them better? We fear what we do not know. But when we deal with our fear, we can open such doors of freedom and wonder…! (smile) as Eric H has… walking the dark streets at night to grasp the hands of broken strangers.
May God, the Almighty, Bolster our courage and Help us to take steps into the dark unknowns in our lives… and into the brightness of His Pure Light.