Life has been a little strange to be me because I usually
have more sympathy for migrants than I do for the native-born. You could say
that I was privileged to live the “expat” lifestyle in places like Spain,
Germany and England, so I had a very coloured view of being a foreigner in
someone else’s land. Even when I started
boarding at the age of 15, I was to all intents a “privileged” person.
Even when I lost the privileges of the “expat” background
and Daddy’s backing (also known as growing up in the real world), I remained
sympathetic to migrants, especially the Muslim variety. I grew up in England, where
I ended up sympathizing with the South Asian chaps over the Anglo-Saxons. I
grew up with jokes like “Why did the Romans build straight roads? – The stop
the Paki’s from building corner shops.” Jokes like this came from a truism –
Paki Muslim migrants built corner shops while the locals collected the dole.”
When I returned to Singapore, it was the Indians and the Arab Muslims who gave
me big breaks, while my own people wondered why I wasn’t good enough to become
a servant of the government or a multinational run out of New York or London.
With all this being said of my background, you could say
that it’s no surprise that my internal reactions towards the likes of Trump, Le
Pen and the other right-wing populist popping up all over the world, are
intrinsically violent. I look at someone like Donald Trump and his rhetoric
against Mexicans and Muslims and his half-hearted condemnation of Neo-Nazi’s
and I see the enemy of the people who cared for me. If Donald Trump were in
Asia, he’d be the typical overbearing White Executive who can’t help beating
the natives about how their livelihoods depend on his benevolence. For me, I’ve
been fortunate to never run into that type because the alternative to dealing
with such a person is to resign or get fired before you do violence to that
thing.
I know a few people who’ve suggested that my intrinsic
hatred for the “anti-immigrant” overwhelming white supremacist might have
something to do with the fact that I’ve lived a “sheltered” life. For example,
I’ve never had “cheaper” labour from elsewhere displace me. Just as I realise
that it’s my good fortune to be born with the mentality not to go to government
whenever I’m down, it also my good fortune to be born with the ability to imagine
that whatever my misfortunes, it never occurred to me to think of it as the
fault of someone else born elsewhere.
So, am I unusual and confined to an “ivory tower” when I am
physically unable to sympathise with the call of far-right populist? I like to
think not and I was recently relieved to find out that its actually natural to
think of right-wing populist as disgusting, when I spoke to Thomas, my step-dad
during the German elections.
However bad this may look.......
Unlike me, Thomas has deals with the worst stereotype of the
struggling Muslim migrant. For past two decades or more, he’s worked in a
hospital that serves the lowest of the low. He once mentioned that the joy of
delivering a baby is often ruined with the realization that the baby is bound
to grow up with a shit life because the parents are often shit (drug using
louts etc).
Amongst his worst clients are usually members of Germany’s
Muslim migrants. These are the type that come to Germany and the only word of
German they understand is the word for the “welfare office.” In short, his
clients are living and breeding off the taxes that he pays. He also deals with
incidents of women who are victims of domestic abuse and sexual violence (often
but always at the hands of family members).
You would imagine that someone with his experiences might be
more inclined to listen to the voice of the far-right xenophobes. Yet, when I
spoke to him about the results of the German elections, his only comment on the
rise of the far right “Alternative fur Deutschland” (“AfD) was “Simply
Disgusting.”
For all that is wrong with the Muslim Migrant community in
Germany, my stepfather, is like many good people in Germany – there’s worse –
the philosophy of the far right extremist.
This is inevitably worse
You could say that in many ways, we are shaped by the
experiences of our parents before us as much as we are shaped by our own. In my
stepdad’s case, it was growing up with a father who fought of the Russian front
and got scared fighting for a regime that the likes of the AfD seem to romanticize.
As bad as the migrants may be, as bad as a backward version
of Islam may be, it should be clear to any level-headed person that the
solutions preached by the extreme right are not solutions that any decent
people should stand for.
Germany was ruled by the Nazi’s who blamed everything on the
Jews. The killed lots of Jews, Gypsies and so on. Instead of a stronger Germany, there was a
weakened Germany that needed the rest of the Western World, particularly the
USA, to bail her out with Marshal Aid. The economic dynamo in the centre of
Europe that is modern Germany, is because modern Germany became a society that
allowed different people to flourish and it was a society that took responsibility
for its mistakes. Germany continues to pay for the Holocaust and it will
continue to do so. No right-minded person in Germany would be caught dead
chanting “Jews will not replace us.”
Migrants bring problems as well as benefits and policy
makers need to figure out how to minimize the problems while maximizing the
benefits. The answer, as history and the state of the current US
administration, has shown, is not in being singling out and pinning life’s woes
on any particular group of people.
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