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The refugee experience remains inextricably linked to Jewish identity

The government must sit down with refugee organisations and develop safe and legal routes for desperate young people to reach our shores, writes Edie Friedman.

January 21, 2020 16:10
Kindertransport children
3 min read

It is an uneasy coincidence that during the very time when we commemorate seventy-five years since the liberation of Auschwitz, the House of Lords has been debating a bill which removes protections for refugees fleeing present-day atrocities.

The Lords were considering an EU Withdrawal Bill from which the so-called Dubs amendment—which sought to protect unaccompanied child migrants’ right to reunite with their families in the UK after Brexit—has been removed. According to Lord Dubs, the Holocaust survivor and Labour peer who proposed the amendment, the government claims it has withdrawn the amendment in order to avoid tying its hands in Brexit negotiations.

For many in the Jewish community, the amendment’s erasure has hit a raw nerve. The Kindertransport, when Britain allowed the entry of almost 10,000 mostly Jewish unaccompanied children from Nazi-occupied Europe, retains an iconic place in the public imagination as an example of Britain at its generous and humane best (though many maintain that the government of the day could have rescued many more).

At the height of the Syrian refugee crisis in 2015, then Prime Minister David Cameron spoke of a scheme to take in Syrian refugees as another Kindertransport moment for the UK. The reality did not match the rhetoric. The indomitable Lord Alf Dubs, who himself arrived in the UK on the Kindertransport in 1939, has led this struggle for the young refugees that succeeded him. He demanded the government admit 3,000 unaccompanied young people, only around 5% of those seeking asylum in Europe. The government eventually accepted admission of an unspecified number (480, it later transpired), and agreed to incorporate a commitment to family reunification in the EU Withdrawal Bill. It is this already flimsy commitment which has now been abandoned by Boris Johnson, in a decision that certainly feels like an extension of the hostile environment, which we had hoped was a policy of the past.