I’VE RECENTLY been reading a book by the English journalist
A A Gill. The Golden Door is a book
about America – a country that fascinates Gill, and in which he finds much to
like.
Gill’s observations about immigration particularly resonated
with me. Writing about the great wave of humanity that left Europe for America
in the 19th century, he cites some striking statistics.
Between 1800 and 1914, 30 million Europeans emigrated to the
New World. If that doesn’t sound a big number, consider it in this context:
Ireland lost one in four of its population, Sweden one in five. Five million
Poles, four million Italians and three million Germans crossed the Atlantic.
As Gill points out, “all entrances on one stage are exits
elsewhere”. While we tend to think of migration to America in terms of what
that country gained, Gill reminds us that it represented an enormous human loss
for Europe. Every departure was “a farewell, a sadness, a defeat”. The Irish
would hold wakes so that they could mourn those leaving.
He writes movingly of the “gut-wrenching finality of
separation”. Those departing would hug their mothers, drink a toast with
friends, take a last look at the old house, pat the family dog, and leave. Very
few would ever return.
Gill reminds us too that the people who left were usually
the ones who could be spared least. “Like a biblical curse, the biblical land
called the young and the strong from Europe: the adventurous, the clever and
the skilled.”
There are clear parallels here with the New Zealand
experience, because ours is an immigrant society too. We can’t be sure what motivated
the Polynesian voyagers who first settled New Zealand; some suggest
overcrowding on their home islands, depletion of food resources or warfare.
Others theorise that they may simply have been driven by an adventurous
urge to discover and colonise new lands. But whatever the explanation, they
were obviously looking for something better – and perhaps they too were the
young and the strong, the risk-takers.
My own forebears were certainly not prepared to accept the
status quo in the countries of their birth. On my mother’s side they were Irish
Catholics, economically disadvantaged and politically powerless. On my father’s
side, they were getting out of a country (Denmark) that had recently been
invaded by the Prussian army.
Life in Europe held even less promise for my wife’s family.
Her parents were forcibly transported from occupied Poland to Germany during
the Second World War and put to work in an arms factory. At the war’s end there
was nothing to go back to; their families had been wiped out and Poland had
effectively been taken over by Stalin’s repressive Soviet Union. It took 20
years for them to find their way to a safe haven in New Zealand.
Every New Zealand family has its own immigration story to
tell, but in every case someone made the risky decision to leave behind the
known and familiar and take a chance on the other side of the world. It’s equally
true of the many immigrants now arriving from Asia.
But what occurred to me, reading Gill’s book, is that in
recent decades the pattern has also reversed itself.
New Zealand has experienced its own exodus. Just as our
forebears left Europe for a better life and new opportunities, so, ironically,
large numbers of our own children have left New Zealand for much the same
reason.
Members of my generation have had to resign themselves to
the likelihood that their offspring will end up making their future in another
country. Even more ironically, many have gone back to the country their
ancestors abandoned: Britain.
There are echoes here of the 19th century
experience in countries like Ireland. We too have lost many of our youngest and
most talented. The crucial difference is that, thanks to cheap international
air fares, we are spared the unimaginably painful experience of saying goodbye
knowing we’ll probably never see them again.
My own situation is not unusual. Of our four children, three
live overseas: two in Australia and one in California. Only two of our six
grandchildren are growing up as New Zealanders. Many of my nieces and nephews,
too, find life elsewhere more rewarding.
Will they eventually come back? We can only hope so.
When the subject comes up in conversation with my kids,
certain themes emerge. Whatever attachment they feel to the country of their
birth, life is economically more rewarding for them elsewhere and the
opportunities are greater.
It’s an uncomfortable truth that New Zealand is a low-wage
country. My children say they could possibly live with that, but what they
can’t accept is the severe disjunction between wages and the cost of living
here.
Alas, getting living expenses into line with wages, or
vice-versa, is a challenge that seems to be beyond us.
1 comment:
Karl
A reflective and insightful post.
My own parents were the offspring of Irish immigrants, my dad the the 10th child of 14. Thank God for Catholicism, or I'd not be here.
One of our five children lives with her husband in Sydney, others have spent time in Australia and the UK but are back here now in NZ.
10 of our 12 grandchildren live in our city.
I don't like the expression but thanks to low cost international air travel, we do live in a global village.
If I was starting out again, I'd probably choose Australia over NZ, the opportunities are greater, the climate is better.
However, as I write this response from our holiday home on the beach in Golden Bay I ask myself this question. Could I afford this luxury in anywhere else in the world? Probably not, with the exception of Somalia, a land that brings with it other a host of other problems, and a culture that is foreign to me.
In the end, we choose thankfulness for what we have and the opportunities in life we have taken. The grass may appear greener elsewhere, and on one level it probably is. The secret, as the apostle Paul encourages us, is to be content regardless of personal circumstance.
Easy for me to say now perhaps, but it's been my philosophy even when times were hard.
Always enjoy your columns.
B.
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