WE DON'T KNOW HOW LUCKY WE ARE
(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard.)
On a sparkling autumn morning recently, I caught the train
from Masterton to Wellington.
It’s a trip I always enjoy, and not just because it enables
me to avoid the hassle and expense of parking in the capital. I usually take
reading material with me but the Wairarapa countryside is so pretty that I
spend much of my time gazing out the window.
On this particular morning the sun was shining, the sky was
blue and the countryside seemed to glow. The train was crowded, it being the
school holidays. Children chattered excitedly as they headed toward Wellington
for a day in the city.
The contrast between this idyllic scene and the magazine
article I was intermittently reading could hardly have been more striking. It
was a review by the eminent British historian Paul Johnson of a new book, Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of
World War II, by Keith Lowe.
Let me give you some grim statistics. Though World War I
killed more men in uniform, in World War II it was civilians who paid the
highest price for the savagery of leaders who seemed indifferent to the
terrible consequences of their actions.
In the Soviet Union, civilian deaths came to an estimated
16-18 million. In Poland, the country that suffered proportionately the highest
losses, more than 6 million died, a high proportion of whom were Jews. Germany
lost nearly 6 million civilians and Yugoslavia more than 1 million.
Lowe reminds us that although Britain was by far the most
humane of the major European combatants (prisoners of war who died in British
custody were an infinitesimal fraction of the number who died under the
Russians and Germans), it was not above inflicting misery on civilian
populations. The Allied destruction of German cities exceeded by a factor of 16
anything the Luftwaffe inflicted on Britain.
Debate still rages over the morality of British and American
bombing raids over the German city of Dresden in February 1945, which caused
huge civilian losses at a time when Germany was already on its last legs and
there seemed little to gain from the attacks.
But as the title indicates, the new book is concerned mainly
with what happened in Europe subsequently. Lowe demonstrates that instability
and power struggles triggered by World War II continued to grip parts of Europe
for decades.
Greece suffered terribly, plunging into a bitter civil war
that scarred the country for 30 years. Eastern Europe was subjugated by the
tyrant Joseph Stalin and liberated itself only 20 years ago. Yugoslavia was
united under the socialist strongman Marshall Tito but erupted again after his
death, when ancient ethnic tensions resurfaced in the Balkan atrocities of the
1990s. An estimated 100,000 people died in that ghastly conflict while the West
dithered.
What, you might ask, has all this got to do with a train
trip from Masterton to Wellington? Simply this: of all the countries in the
world, few have been as untouched by war and suffering as New Zealand. It was
impossible not to reflect, as the train rolled through the Wairarapa
countryside, that we are blessed to live in one of the most untroubled
countries on the planet.
Anzac Day reminded us that New Zealand’s losses in the two
world wars were among the highest, per capita, of any country not actually in
the war zones. In World War I we lost 18,000 men; in World War II, nearly
12,000.
But in most respects we are so isolated from world
troublespots that David Lange was once able to mock our global insignificance
by joking that New Zealand was a dagger pointed at the heart of Antarctica.
Yet we don’t have to look far for examples of suffering on a
terrible scale. Pol Pot’s genocidal Khmer Rouge regime (which New Zealand, to
its lasting shame, recognised as legitimate) was a reminder that our own corner
of the globe has its despots and mass murderers.
In East Timor, a brutal Indonesian occupation lasted more
than 25 years and caused an estimated 103,000 deaths while New Zealand, along with most other Western governments, obligingly looked the other way. Thousands of New
Zealanders enjoy holidays in the country that caused East Timor’s misery, and
our prime minister was recently in Jakarta courting Indonesia as a trading
partner.
On Kim Hill’s radio programme recently I listened to an
interview with entrepreneur Mitchell Pham who, as a boy, risked his life to
flee what was then a brutally oppressive communist regime in Vietnam. He and
his fellow refugees nearly died when their flimsy boat gave up the ghost and
were saved only by drifting close to an offshore oil rig whose
crew took pity on them.
Most New Zealanders, living in relative affluence and
security, can’t begin to imagine the hardship and deprivation that drives such people
to risk everything for a new start.
When we read of the agony other countries have endured –
genocide, starvation, mass displacement, the destruction of entire cities – it
puts our petty concerns (paid parental leave, the sale of farmland, the partial
privatisation of government-owned companies) into perspective. But I suppose
everything is relative.
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