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Outsiders:
A History of European Minorities
Panikos Panayi
The oppression of minorities has been a major
theme in the history of Europe. It has been a leading cause of disputes
over territory, often resulting in war. In modern times nation states have
demanded the undivided loyalty of their citizens. This has led to discrimination
and racism, and often to the persecution, at its most extreme in the Nazi
crusade against the Jews. Recent years have seen Ceausescu's persecution
of Hungarians and ethnic cleansing in the Balkans. Minorities, represented
by organisations such as the Basque ETA and the Northern Irish Catholic
IRA, are also responsible for many of acts of terrorism.
Outsiders is the first history of all European
minority communities by a single author. Panikos Panayi deals with the
classic dispersed minorities, the Jews and the Gypsies, as well as the
Muslims of the Balkans and the massive diaspora of Germans in eastern Europe
from the middle ages to 1945. Almost all countries have disadvantaged ethnic
and linguistic minorities: whether minorities without their own states,
such as the Bretons, Scots, Vlachs and Kurds; or those, such as the Russians
in Estonia or the Greeks in Turkey, who form linguistic and ethnic groups
different to the native majorities. During wars, and in particular the
Second World War, the existence of alien communities often led to persecution,
in turn bringing about huge refugee migrations. The result has been untold
suffering and the massive resettlement of European populations.
Since the Second World War, the demand for
cheap labour has led to an influx of immigrants from outside Europe, whether
from the Caribbean, India or Africa. This followed an earlier wave, in
which workers from the relatively poor Mediterranean countries travelled
north to the industrial heartlands. There has also been a massive migration
westwards of German-speakers. Although all EEC countries now operate strict
controls on immigrants, there is enormous pressure from both the east,
following the fall of Communism, and from the third world, where birth-rates
greatly outstrip that of Europe. The existence of this pressure, as well
as that of already sizeable non-European minority communities in all European
countries, is an inevitable determinant of Europe's history in the twenty-first
century.
224 pages 20 illus December 1998
1 85285 179 1 £19.99
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