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The Struggle of the Homeless August 28, 2015

Posted by civilizedgraeme in Family, History, Independence, medical, Struggle, War.
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As one of the guarantors – alongside France and Germany – of the 1839 Treaty of London, the British promised to come to the aid of Belgium in the event of invasion and, good to their word, Britain not only recognized but was determined to protect Belgium’s independence and neutrality on the eve of World War One. Hence, when German forces were smashing their way across the Belgian countryside, Britain declared war on Germany on August 4, 1914.

The next day, on their way to attack France, as the heavily-armed and well-supported German invasion force advanced on its first military obstacle, the ring of forts around Liège, civilians were being executed en masse . Believing they were under attack from snipers, German commanders had their troops round up local inhabitants from surrounding villages, selected their victims and shot them; any left alive were killed at the point of the bayonet.

Soon after, cities were bombed and set aflame and hundreds of captured civilians were being similarly murdered. While hundreds of thousands of terrified Belgians fled, ‘the rape of Belgium’, as it became known, invoked the sympathy of the world. Newspapers across Britain supported their government’s decision to defend the honour of their ally and send troops and quickly popularized the negative image of ‘the Hun’ rampaging through ‘gallant Little Belgium’.

Although many millions of both soldiers and unarmed civilians were subsequently killed during the Great War, what is often overlooked is the impact on the families who were caught in the middle of vicious fighting, forced from their homes, fleeing from invading armies intent on killing anyone in their path. Current estimates among historians today suggest over 10 million people were displaced, sent running, losing all their possessions and considered refugees during the war.

A Belgian refugee summed up his feelings in 1914: “One was always a refugee – that’s the name one was given, a sort of nickname. One was left with nothing, ruined, and that’s how people carried on talking about ‘the refugee’. We weren’t real people any more”.

After the summer invasion, over 400,000 Belgians had arrived in Holland, and half that many crossed the border into France joining 150,000 French nationals at risk who also sought shelter and freedom elsewhere and a year later, with trenches hastily built from the English Channel to Switzerland, that number had reached nearly a million.

Initially, the Dutch Government decided to locate the Belgians in camps on the outskirts of towns such as Gouda, Nunspeet and Bergen op Zoom, although preferring to call them “Belgian villages” (in order to avoid the negative association with the “concentration camps” of the Boer War), where the emphasis of temporary housing was on health and hygiene.

Once the urgent needs of food and shelter had been assessed, other issues needed to be addressed: children were desperate to find their parents, and likewise adults sought their lost children. Refugees asked questions about their status and entitlements to relief, and many wanted the opportunity to work, while children needed to continue their schooling. Food, sanitary needs, and fresh clothing had to be found.

Emergency accommodation was found in railway stations, schools, empty factories, breweries, hotels, bathhouses, army barracks, monasteries, synagogues, theatres, cinemas, cafes, and even prisons. Local authorities, diocesan committees and other associations helped to provide underwear, shoes, linen, soap and other items.

In France, on the grounds that they were deserving “victims of war,” refugees received financial and other assistance from the government, as well as assistance from charitable organisations and from parish priests, and the organisations refugees themselves created, such as the Committee for Refugees of the Departement du Nord. Although many volunteer agencies were organized to assist the growing populations being displaced across continental Europe, the impact was nothing short of disastrous on local economies.

In its long history as a safe haven for refugees, Britain had given a home to French Protestant Huguenots in the 17th century and Russian Jews in the 19th century, and during the Great War would open its doors to its largest single influx of refugees and became home to 250,000 Belgians. They were initially welcomed and the government used their plight to encouraged anti-German sentiment and foment public support for the war effort.

In some purpose-built villages they had their own schools, newspapers, shops, hospitals, churches, prisons and police. These areas were considered Belgian territory and run by the Belgian government. They even used the Belgian currency. Elisabethville was one such sovereign Belgian enclave in Birtley, Tyne and Wear, named after the Belgian queen.

However, as soon as the war ended, both British and Belgian governments appealed for the refugees to return home. As early as 1914, the Belgian Repatriation Fund had been created and in 1917 the British government set up a repatriation committee to expedite their return. Many Belgians had their employment contracts terminated, leaving them with little option but to go home. The government offered free one-way tickets back to Belgium, to get them to leave the country as quickly as possible.

Within a year of the war ending more than 90% had returned home. They left as quickly as they came, leaving little time to establish any significant legacy, with two notable exceptions: Hercule Poirot, subsequently created by Agatha Christie, and a single monument in London’s Victoria Embankment Gardens given in thanks by the Belgian Government. “It was the largest influx of refugees in British history but it’s a story that is almost totally ignored,” says Tony Kushner, professor of modern history at the University of Southampton.

In Britain, sympathy for Belgian refugees derived from a belief that they had suffered unspeakable torment at the hands of German troops. “Brave little Belgium” was a term commonly used in the UK, where “King Albert’s Book” allowed British dignitaries to pay “tribute to the Belgian King and people.” By 1916, 2,500 local refugee committees had been established and the secretary of the War Refugees Committee publicly applauded the efforts of local committees and Belgian refugees to find work.

Yet concern about the burden on the British taxpayer, the sacrifices made by British conscripts overseas, and anxieties about the “disreputable” sexual conduct of Belgian women, help explain why public sympathy began to diminish by 1916. Alternate plans drawn up in the UK to resettle Belgian refugees in Chile and South Africa came to naught in fact because the Belgian authorities insisted that refugees should contribute to national reconstruction in Belgium after the war.

After four years of fighting along the Western Front most Belgian refugees had returned by the end of 1919 to find countless cities and towns reduced to rubble: houses, shops, churches and temples, schools, office buildings, factories, warehouses, police and fire stations, simply were gone.

The French government had made no preparations for refugees before the outbreak of war. When Germany invaded, administrators attempted to disperse Belgian and French refugees to the interior of France and avoid overcrowding areas near the front. But refugees wished to stay as close as possible to their homes in the hope that they might return before Christmas.

As the war dragged on, and prior to the US declaration of war in 1917, the momentum increased in favour of the German forces and as they advanced towards Amiens and then Champagne in France, the number of refugees rose rapidly from 1.32 million in February to 1.82 million in July.

Keeping in mind it was a Serb national who had originally shot the Austro-Hungarian Archduke and his wife in 1914, rather than face imprisonment in Austria, Hungary or Bulgaria, many Serbs also fled to seek safe haven in France, and its colonies North Africa, and it is estimated at least 140,000 died while trying to cross into Albania.

In the first phase of the war, around 40,000 refugees of Italian extraction sought exile in Italy rather than remaining under Austrian rule. However, the greatest catastrophe occurred in November 1917 following the defeat of Italian forces at Caporetto, which resulted in some 400,000 Italian civilians fleeing to the south.

Some of the largest atrocities committed during and after World War I were directed at the Armenians. The population of 2 million was decimated by what was later recognised as the first genocide of the 20th century. Systematic persecution under the Ottoman empire meant that half of that population were dead by 1918 and hundreds of thousands were homeless and stateless refugees.

In 1915, Ottoman officials and military commanders turned on entire Armenian communities and forced men, women and children to trek across the desert in the most arduous conditions. Up to 250,000 Armenians evaded the deportations by crossing the Russian border in August 1915, although one in five died en route. More than 105,000 ex-Ottoman Armenians sought refuge in Russian-administered Erevan, quadrupling its size. They were the lucky ones. Women and children who survived the deportations and remained in Armenia were protected or abducted (depending on one’s point of view) by Turkish and Kurdish men.

Around 200,000 Jewish refugees fled Galicia and Bukovina in the first year of fighting (this figure does not include those who were either resettled within the region or dispatched to the Russian interior). They settled in Vienna and parts of Bohemia and Moravia. According to the Austrian Ministry of the Interior, by the end of 1915 some 386,000 refugees were living in Austria, two-fifths of them Jews.

Generally speaking the language used to characterize the refugee movement in Russia and Eastern Europe reinforced the widely-shared sense of calamity. Some witnesses believed that the “boundless ocean” of refugees could never properly be navigated. More typically, contemporary observers in the Russian interior used language that was directly reminiscent of a disaster like a river bank being broken. Thus “flood”, “wave”, “deluge”, “avalanche” and volcanic ‘lava’.

The refugee crisis provided opportunities for professionals to carry out important relief work. Some of the nurses who were attached to the Scottish Women’s Hospitals and American Women’s Hospitals remained in the field. AWH nurses were employed in Macedonia until the 1930s, for example. Quaker relief workers stayed on in Russia and Poland to assist with famine and typhus relief.

Edith Pye and Hilda Clark, a midwife and obstetrician, respectively, established the Friends War Victims Relief Committee in France in 1914. They worked extensively with refugees in northern France and afterward moved to Vienna to assist malnourished children. Clark then devoted herself to various relief and reconstruction projects in Poland, Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria and Turkey. Both women also assisted child refugees from Spain after 1936.

Likewise Francesca Wilson travelled from France to Corsica, to assist Serbian refugees, and Yugoslavia, before joining Pye and Clark in Vienna. She too became involved in relief work in Spain.

Impressive and ever-lasting careers were thus forged in the crucible of the Great War, despite the atrocities that continue today. Lest we forget.

The Struggle for Financing August 22, 2015

Posted by civilizedgraeme in Family, History, Independence, Marketing, Struggle, War.
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Wars not only cost lives, they cost money. French nationalists, after losing the Franco-Prussian War and subjected to (and obligated to pay) war reparations totaling five billion gold francs, took their pound of flesh in return at the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 forcing Germany to pay 132 billion gold marks to the victors. Although suspended by Adolf Hitler prior to the outbreak of WWII, and which was reduced after the war in 1953, Germany actually paid the last of the debt in 2010.

As a sidebar, it is interesting to note after the Second World War German leaders agreed not only to a policy of pastoralization but to pay the Allies in machinery and manufacturing plants, whereby factories were actually dismantled and sent to France and Britain, while the United States harvested its technologies and patents, as well as scientists and researchers. Also, in addition to cash paid, millions of prisoners and civilians were forced to work in European and Russian plants for years.

It has been calculated that the Great War in total cost the Allied Powers, from 1914 to 1918, over 125 billion dollars, whereas it cost the Central Powers over $60 billion. In retrospect, the war directly led to the Great Depression, World War II and the Holocaust, and the Cold War, impacting the lives of many more millions of people around the world, including immigration and emigration, as the various empires collapsed and better opportunities were sought for children across oceans.

In the United States, World War I led to prohibition, women’s suffrage and eventually civil liberties. The war not only led to the collapse of the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, German and Russian (and some would add the British) empires, but sparked colonial revolts in the Middle East and Vietnam. In Canada, both conscription and income taxes were introduced (temporarily) during the war; in fact, a lack of income tax was provided as an incentive to attract immigrants before the war.

After the war, independent republics were formed in Austria, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, and Turkey. The latter had controlled most Arab lands which subsequently came under the control of Britain and France, specifically their oil companies. Sadly, the mass murder of Armenians in Turkey was a consequence of the war, as was the influenza epidemic that killed over 25 million people worldwide, more than the war itself.

Nonetheless, there were some positive advancements made during the war, such as those related to hospitalization, medical care and treatments in general for the wounded, sick and infected, at home and on both the Western and Eastern fronts, as well as battles fought at sea and in the air, and in African nations, Italy, Greece, the Balkans, the Middle East and the Falkland Islands.

Quite a few innovations were to emanate from the war:  sanitary napkins, facial tissues, the sun lamp, daylight saving time, tea bags, the wrist watch, the zipper, stainless steel and vegetarian sausages.

It has been well documented that many companies benefited financially from their inventions and contributions to the war effort, on both sides of the conflict and for various reasons, balanced between patriotism and profit. As we understand it today, prior to 1914 nations simply did not have military-industrial dependencies in place to finance research, develop infrastructure and indeed manufacture and distribute the various disparate materials necessary to win a modern war.

Gillette made and sent to the front millions of razors which were needed and eagerly used by unshaven soldiers, especially those who had suffered and died enduring a poison gas attack while fumbling to put on a rubber mask atop their (lice-filled) beards. It is no secret millions of pens made their way to the front in kits for soldiers needing in a moment of solace to put their thoughts to paper and send quiet reflections back home to friends and family members.

One such note was a poem written by a Canadian doctor during the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915, titled In Flanders Fields; it was used in advertisements by the British and Canadian governments to raise funds from the public by helping to sell war bonds at home, which ultimately made John McCrae famous, but he died of an infection on the Western Front before the war ended. These much-needed funds were to offset the millions already being borrowed from the financiers of the day.

In 1918, over 4,000 soldiers of Britain’s Army Postal Service were delivering twelve and a half million letters a week to the front. During the Great War the fountain pen was not an insignificant weapon, as these letters were known to be a morale booster for their armed forces.

Stateside, a Christmas-season Parker ad shows a firm-chinned, mustached army officer and a boyish, smiling aviator wearing a leather helmet and goggles, who emerge from the leaves of a holly wreath, framing a popular wartime catch-phrase: “Keep the home fires burning,” while the Sheaffer Pen Company assured customers its lever filler was the pen “for Uncle Sam’s Fighting Boys” and was “The Gift of Gifts for Soldiers and Sailors” to boost sales.

At the outset of the First World War, many countries were ill-prepared to finance their initial efforts, not to mention maintain and increase operations on a global level for the next four years. In 1913, following the passing of the Federal Reserve Act, US Congressman Charles Lindbergh stated: “The Act establishes the most gigantic trust on earth. When the President signs this Bill, the invisible government of the monetary power will be legalized. The greatest crime of the ages is perpetrated by this banking and currency bill.” The Federal Reserve is in fact a private company.

In Europe, in 1914, the Rothschild family loaned money to the Germans, British and French, while also controlling three of the leading European news agencies: Wolff in Germany, Reuters in England and Havas in France through which public interest in these respective countries was manipulated.

Mayer Amschel Rothschild founded in the late 18th century an extensive banking dynasty by sending four of his sons to major European cities with instructions to remain loyal to the family at any cost (the fifth son remained behind to manage the family business in Prussia) whereupon they bankrolled various kinds of national infrastructure projects. They were family bankers indeed, but the families with which they did business were the royal houses of Europe.

Despite its neutrality, the US was not immune to the pressures of its financiers. “The war should be a tremendous opportunity for America,” wrote J.P. Morgan in a letter to President Woodrow Wilson on September 4, 1914 immediately after the outbreak of hostilities along the Western Front.

Twenty years later the US Senate would conduct an investigation into the causes of WWI and, specifically, why the United States had entered it. Called the Nye Committee, it was headed by Senator Gerald Nye (R-North Dakota). Their investigation focused primarily on the munitions industry and its influence on the federal government, but also on the Wall Street banks.

After nearly two years of investigation the committee found that between 1915 and January 1917, before entering the war, the United States had lent Germany 27 million dollars, while at the same time lending Britain, France and their allies $2.3 billion!

When the Russian government began to topple after the February Revolution in 1917, Wall Street pressured Wilson’s government to come to the aid of their allies, and their outstanding loans. Within months the United States was at war. Due to Nye’s investigation, it is known the profits that Wall Street banks made from these war loans were enormous.

Before the war had begun, the French firm of Rothschild Freres had cabled Morgan and Company in New York asking for $100 million. From that point going forward, J.P. Morgan became the main point of contact in the United States for allied war effort borrowing.

After surveying the U.S. mobilization and financing for the war, the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Hugh Rockoff stated that perhaps the greatest impact of World War I was a shift in the landscape of ideas and the proper role of government in economic activities.  When the war began, the U.S. economy was in recession. But a 44-month economic boom ensued from 1914 to 1918, as Europeans began purchasing U.S. goods and later as the United States itself joined the war.

In 1914, the United States was a net debtor in international capital markets, but following the war began investing large amounts internationally, particularly in Latin America, thus “taking on the role traditionally played by Britain and other European capital exporters.” With Britain weakened after the war, New York emerged “as London’s equal if not her superior in the contest to be the world’s leading financial center.”

Rockoff concluded that the scope and subsequent speed of government expansion were likely due to the emergence new economic and political leaders, who in turn inspired future generations of reformers with a new view of the world and its order.

 

The Struggle Among Family August 1, 2015

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In 1865, after four bloody confusing years, the northern forces of the Union defeated the southern forces of the Confederacy, ending a so-called civil war that had pitted brother against brother and, with the states finally united, expansion westward was soon a matter of American policy. Recognizing the opportunities on many levels provided by a growing nation and a productive people, businesses in this ruthless era swallowed their competitors and politicians astutely noted the benefit of continued geographic expansion, whether by force or negotiation.

In March 1867, Queen Victoria provided Royal Assent to the British North America Act and several months later the Dominion of Canada was created, and many Europeans bought tickets to find refuge in a vast and civil country – notwithstanding the issue of land ownership still in dispute across the western provinces. So, nearly two decades later in 1885, to control their fertile prairies, to feed their growing empire, British soldiers quashed angry rebels in Saskatchewan and, to solidify its authority, the new Government of Canada then hanged opposing Metis and Native leaders.

Prosperity assured and the last spike driven, a decade would pass before Canadians would be sought to fight against Dutch and African farmers during the Second Boer War in 1899, following the discovery of gold in the Transvaal. A year prior, in 1898 patriotic American armies had defeated Spain in a series of battles to acquire sugar-rich Cuba and Puerto Rico, as well as the islands of Guam and Philippines. A war that ended the Spanish Empire effectively launched a new empire and American forces would soon be needed to protect expanding economic interests abroad.

In the hundred years following the defeat of Napoleon, numerous empires ruled by regal and noble families fought each other for colonies and the resources they provided. Competing for land, to forge their empires, were the armies of Russia, Germany, Austria-Hungary, France, Britain and the Ottomans, supported at home by a wildly nationalistic newspapers and magazines constantly feeding the appetites of naturally competitive humans, always hungry for more and prepared to fight, equally proud of their rulers’ stance and each proclaimed victory in the field.

The bubble burst in 1914. In the month that followed the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife while traveling in a motorcade along a narrow Sarajevo street, battle lines were quickly drawn as were allies for the war to come. Nationalism fomented by imperialism, aided by militarism and fueled by capitalism, had launched the First World War. Indeed it was a global conflict fought on many lands, and many lives were lost, many millions in fact as empires collapsed. Recovery would take decades, and yet again the world was plunged into another war.

Queen Victoria had married Prince Albert, son of Ernst, Duke of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha in 1840, and remained a member of the House of Hanover. King Edward VII was the only British monarch of the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, and he reigned for nine years at the beginning of the twentieth century, and was succeeded by King George V who replaced the German-sounding name with that of Windsor during The Great War. However, the title survived in other European monarchies, including the Belgian Royal Family and the former monarchies of Portugal and Bulgaria.

At the outbreak of war, the royal rulers of three empires were cousins: King George V of Britain, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, and Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. In fact, all three were equal descendants of King George II of Britain. The struggle among them proved personal as George would deny Nicholas asylum after the Russian Revolution in 1917. After being captured by the Bolsheviks, Nicholas and his family would be subsequently executed by firing squad.

Despite mobilizing its army against them – on behalf of Serbia – Russia did not declare war with either Germany or Austria-Hungary; whereas Germany declared war with Russia, France, Belgium and Portugal in August 1914 but not any other country, and Britain declared war with both Germany and Austria-Hungary, as well as Turkey and Bulgaria. It is estimated that 10 million military personnel died during the war (7 to 8 million due to combat and 2 to 3 million due to accidents, disease and while held captive), and there were nearly 7 million un-armed civilian deaths.