Humanity in times of war? The evacuation of French and Belgian children to Switzerland, 1940 – 1945
Item Status
Restricted Access
Embargo End Date
2100-12-31
Date
Authors
Sambells, Chelsea Ivy Meaghan
Abstract
This study investigates the evacuation of 60,000 French and Belgian
children to Switzerland between 1940 and 1945. This humanitarian
action was initially implemented by a coalition of Swiss charities but
because of its growing popularity and increasing scope, the Swiss Red
Cross joined the efforts in 1942. Despite the devastation, food scarcities
and logistical limitations of the Second World War, these children were
successfully fed, clothed and housed in Swiss households for three-month
periods before they returned home. Given the massive diplomatic and
material challenges, it is surprising that such a large transnational
evacuation for vulnerable, foreign children was generally effective. By
evaluating both how these evacuations were conducted and why
participating governments sought to support or prohibit their
implementation, this thesis reveals new information that challenges the
standard narratives of the wartime actions of the Allies, Nazi Germany
and Switzerland. Britain and America’s role in the evacuation does not
support their reputation as righteous victors, but as bickering
governments strategizing to strengthen their post-war political position
in Europe. Nazi Germany’s authorization of the evacuation deepens our
knowledge by demonstrating how “humanitarian” operations were
circuitously manipulated as a way to increase Nazi control. The
noteworthy hospitality of Swiss citizens significantly diverged from the
strict immigration policies imposed by their government, a finding which
both challenges and reinforces the controversy surrounding Switzerland’s
prohibitive, internationally-condemned refugee policies. Overall, this
thesis recasts each participant in a new light by questioning the
motivations of governments at war, the value of children in war, and the
logistics of wartime humanitarian operations.
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