六合彩开奖结果

鈥楻eady to face the world鈥: From gulag hardship to lifelong community

SSHRC Storyteller finalist Amanda Chalupa explores how refugees rebuild their lives

With waves of refugees sweeping across the world today, are there lessons to be learned from people uprooted by political turmoil more than 70 years ago?

Amanda Chalupa鈥檚 PhD research focuses on a group of Polish children who were forcibly removed from their homes during World War II and deported from occupied Poland to Soviet labour camps. Many who survived migrated south, through Iran, to refugee camps in East Africa, South Africa, Lebanon, India, Mexico and New Zealand.

The base of the "Polish Children's Memorial" in Pahiatua, New Zealand. Photo credit: Amanda Chalupa, 2017.

Chalupa is a doctoral student in Social and Transcultural Psychiatry at 六合彩开奖结果. Her three-minute video about this research,听,听has earned her a spot among the 25 finalists in the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada鈥檚 2017听听challenge. The competition asks Canadian postsecondary students to show the real-world impact of their research.

Chalupa concentrates on the children鈥檚 recovery in these refugee camps -- especially in Tanzania (then Tanganyika) and New Zealand 鈥 and on the policies and practices that prepared them for eventual resettlement. 鈥淧erhaps unique in the history of refugees, these children later went on to host joyful reunions, gathering together from whatever distant part of the world became their homes, cherishing and reliving some of their refugee camp experiences,鈥 she says.

Tales of an odyssey

Born and raised in Montreal, Chalupa first heard her grandparents tell their 鈥渟tories about that whole journey 鈥 about transport by cattle cars, starvation, death, the Siberian cold, being in the gulag鈥 but also about the magic, adventure, and fun of their refugee camps in Africa,鈥 where they lived for nearly a decade before immigrating to Montreal.

For her Master鈥檚 thesis, under the supervision of Dr. C茅cile Rousseau, Chalupa interviewed members of Canada鈥檚 Polish community, attended reunions in Poland and the U.S., and studied documents from New Zealand, England, and Poland. For her PhD research, she has since expanded on that work by traveling to New Zealand to interview people who settled there. She has also met with hundreds of others, in South Africa, Tanzania, Australia, across Europe and the U.S., as well as with their children and grandchildren.

Two Polish refugees in front of their huts in Tengeru, Tanganyika. Photo credit: Jonathan Durand family archive.

Warm welcome cherished

While Chalupa continues to collect and analyze data, some key findings are already emerging:

  • Welcome practices can have a lasting effect on newcomers.听When hundreds of Polish orphans arrived in New Zealand in 1944, for example, they were welcomed by the country鈥檚 prime minister, Peter Fraser. Along their train ride to the refugee camp in Pahiatua, people from local towns came out to greet them, waving Polish and New Zealand flags. 鈥淭hat welcome experience is something that many continue to cherish at this point in their lives,鈥 Chalupa notes.
  • Refugee-camp design has the potential to help build social networks and a sense of community.听In the Polish refugee camps in East Africa, for example, schools were quickly established, and social activities such as scout troops and dance groups were organized. Most of those interviewed during her research 鈥渉ave said that the stability they were able to have in these refugee camps helped them to lead normal lives again,鈥 Chalupa says. 鈥淎 normal kind of life developed in abnormal circumstances. As one survivor notes in the video: 鈥榳hen we came out of Africa, we were ready to face the world.鈥欌

Two former Polish refugees at a reunion of the Afrykanczycy in Wroclaw, Poland. They are holding papers with the names of their refugee camps. Behind them is a poster titled "We were there" above a map of Africa, on which reunion participants wrote their names to correspond with which camp(s) they had lived in. Photo credit: Jonathan Durand, 2014.
More than 70 years later, the dances the refugees learned in those camps are still among the highlights at their reunions, Chalupa says. 鈥淭hey have composed songs and poetry about those years, published newsletters, and written both collective memoirs and personal ones.鈥

鈥淥f course, I am not suggesting that everyone who went through the gulags and refugee camps are leading marvelously happy lives. Also, reunions are only attended by some of the survivors,鈥 Chalupa says. 鈥淏ut the fact that so many have recorded and continue to celebrate their positive experiences is important to note and try to understand. These findings are particularly relevant today when the refugee crisis is the greatest since the Second World War.鈥

SSHRC Storytellers Showcase

The Top 25 SSHRC Storyteller finalists, representing 14 postsecondary institutions from across Canada, will compete in the听听at the 2017听听from May 27 to June 2 in Toronto.听

Contacts:

Amanda Chalupa
amanda.chalupa [at] mail.mcgill.ca

Chris Chipello
Media Relations Office
christopher.chipello [at] mcgill.ca
514-398-4201

Top photo:听Polish refugee children in Tengeru, Tanganyika. Photo credit: Jonathan Durand family archive.

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