preview

The Syrian Refugee Crises And Rhetoric From A Small Boy 's Body Being Washed Up On A Beach

Good Essays

A sense of urgency and motivation to help the Syrian community was finally instigated after pictures of a small boy’s body being washed up on a beach on Turkey’s Bodrum Peninsula went viral. It was a reality check for the international community, not necessarily to directly halt the Syrian war but to at least lend them a hand in terms of escaping the turmoil. On March 3, 2016 the UN Refugee Agency recorded 2,715,789 refugees registered in Turkey, 1,067,785 refugees registered in Lebanon, 639,704 refugees registered in Jordan, 50, 909 registered in Sweden, 2,659 resisted in the UK, 158,657 registered in Germany. Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Hungary, France, Switzerland, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Greece is also giving asylum to Syrians.

With a high influx of refugees entering different countries xenophobia is resurfacing. Xenophobia has been prominent since the old customs and foundation to Nazism and Fascism. It started to die down but has resurged due new migration patterns and globalization. The Syrian refugee crises and rhetoric from far-right political parties’ have definitely made xenophobia stronger among people. After the Paris Attack, Marine Le Pen, the head of the ultra-conservative National Front party, vouched to “kick out foreigners who are preaching hatred on our soil, as well as illegal immigrants who have nothing do here(foreign policy),” and to wipe our Islam organizations and close radical mosques. Xenophobia isn’t just expressed verbally, it’s also

Get Access