“The internment of Jewish refugees in Cyprus [following the Holocaust] offers a historical lens from which we can analyze contemporary migration crises,” says historian Eliana Hadjisavvas. |
By
Louise Rachlis
The topic of Jewish refugees held in camps in Cyprus between 1946 and
1949 is relevant to the refugee situation in the world today.
“The history of the Cyprus camps reminds us that in the face of
persecution and suffering, people will endure huge sacrifices in search of
safety,” said Eliana Hadjisavvas, a historian of modern Europe with particular interests
in migration and displacement, in an interview with the Ottawa Jewish Bulletin.
Hadjisavvas will be speaking at the Soloway Jewish Community Centre on
Wednesday, November 27, 7 pm, at “From Dachau to Cyprus: Jewish Refugees and
the Cyprus Internment Camps 1946-1949,” a Holocaust Education Month event
presented by the Shoah (Holocaust) Committee of the Jewish Federation of Ottawa
in partnership with the Cyprus Embassy.
“Now, as then, state-imposed draconian immigration measures have done
little to deter those who are desperate and displaced,” she said. “The
detention of people risking their lives for a better future will do little to
prevent global population movements. The internment of Jewish refugees in
Cyprus offers a historical lens from which we can analyze contemporary
migration crises.”
Although the history of the camps has remained relatively unknown, their
significance “must not be underestimated,” she said. “The Cyprus narrative
broadens and enriches our understanding of both the Holocaust and its
aftermath, demonstrating the way Jewish life continued following the horrors of
the Second World War.”
As the camps had traditionally been considered a mere “stopover” for
refugees bound for Palestine, she said her audiences “are often surprised to
learn how extensive the Cyprus program was.” More than 53,000 Jewish refugees
were interned in Cyprus between 1946 and 1949, and approximately 1,500 babies
were born.
“Although I was born and raised in the U.K., I am of Greek-Cypriot
descent and so was intrigued by this narrative,” said. “As I began to research
the subject, it became clear that very little had been written about this
topic, with the history of the camps often relegated to footnotes in wider
studies on the post-Holocaust period.”
According to Hadjisavvas, a number of young American and Canadian Jewish
men also played an active role in the Cyprus story.
“These machalniks (volunteers), many of whom had fought for the
Allies during the war, were dedicated to helping Europe’s surviving Jews by
assisting clandestine immigration passages to Palestine.
“Tasked with manning the immigrant ships, those captured by the British
would disguise themselves amongst the refugees to avoid detection and were
consequently interned in Cyprus themselves.”
Hadjisavvas recently completed a PhD in history at the University of
Birmingham. Her doctoral research examined the history of British-run
internment camps for Jewish refugees in colonial Cyprus, significantly
reconfiguring historical understandings of this period, moving the Cyprus camps
from the periphery to the centre of the question of post-war European migration
and British imperial politics through a transnational lens.
Eliana’s postdoctoral project at the Institute of Historical Research of
the University of London, “Migrant Movements in the Mediterranean: Jewish
Displacement in the British Empire, 1940-1950,” will centre on
interdisciplinary approaches to the study of migration.
“The High Commissioner of the Cyprus Embassy sent us a variety of
photographs of the detainment camps, which Eliana will be using to create a
photo-narrative exhibit,” said Anne Read of the Jewish Federation of Ottawa.
“This is in addition to her talk, which will address her own research, as well
as how her research has been received, on the same subject.”
Holocaust survivor Rose Lipszyc will tell her story of being interred in Cypress after being caught by the British in 1947 after reaching pre-state Israel. |
Rose Lipszyc, a Holocaust survivor who was caught by the British in 1947
in pre-state Israel and sent to an internment camp in Cyprus, will also speak
about her experiences there.
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