Hating in Athens
by Michelle Chen
Douglas
Kesse, a Ghanaian asylum seeker who recently landed in
Greece, was bewildered by how he was received in the cradle of Western
Civilization. Reflecting on the epidemic of anti-immigrant attacks, he
told human rights investigators, ”As human beings, we shouldn’t be
treated like this…. I am not an animal to be chased with sticks.”
When anti-immigrant violence flares up in our communities, it may
seem irrational, crazy, sometimes outright barbaric. But there’s one
universal rule that holds true around the world: xenophobic riots,
purges, and state crackdowns throughout history have hewed to a chilling
logic; people respond to real threats–primarily economic instability or
social upheaval–by lashing out at make-believe threats–like the
neighbor who came from Mexico to build your other neighbor’s house. This
is hardly unique to the U.S.: the anti-immigrant hatred that has
erupted across Europe is actually a chilling parallel to the bigotry
exhibited toward immigrants in places like Arizona. And in a place like
Greece, where economic crisis is tearing society apart, it’s open season
for xenophobia.
Saturday, July 21, 2012
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