Because they were considered a risk to British security, 7,000+ internees were deported, the majority to Canada, some to Australia. The liner Arandora Star left for Canada in July 1940 carrying German and Italian internees, but it was torpedoed and sunk with huge loss of life.
2,542 men were taken to Australia on the Dunera, which sailed a week after the Arandora Star. According to the BBC, the internees were subjected to humiliating treatment and intentionally abysmal conditions on the two-month voyage. Many had their possessions destroyed by the British military guards.
The ship arrived in Australia in June 1939, then the men was taken for internment in the tiny rural towns of Hay in New South Wales and Tatura in Victoria. Among the men on the Dunera who had so threatened Britain’s very security were artists Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack, art historians Franz Phillipp and Ernst Kitzinger, photographer Henry Talbot, composer Felix Werder, mathematician Dr Felix Behrend and Franz Stampfl, later Australia’s most brilliant athletics coach.
Whereas the British guards on the Dunera were brutal and anti-Semitic, the Australian guards were reported to be kind and generous with their own food and cigarettes. The internees were placed in barracks that housed 28 men apiece. Barbed wire and guard towers surrounded the perimeter, but the guards rarely intruded and the internees ran their own affairs through an elected parliament. They developed soccer teams, a choral and theatre group; they printed a newspaper and they “published” books. So educated were these men that while they were interned in rural prison camps, they set up their own unofficial university to pass the time and to deal with Australian summer.
Tatura Internment Camp, Victoria
The Dunera story is a testament to the human spirit, the ability of young men to survive, despite the Holocaust that befell their parents and siblings in Europe. Today the Dunera Museum in Hay is an internment centre that houses exhibits documenting the history of one of Australia’s lesser moments in history. It is located in Hay’s old railway station platform and two train carriages.
The second factor was Australia’s status as a self-described “British society.” As Australian Memories of the Holocaust noted Prime Minister Stanley Bruce said in 1928 that he wanted Australians to remain “essentially a British and white people.” In April 1938 the Australian Interior Minister, John McEwen, wrote in a Cabinet submission: “The Jews are highly intelligent as a class and usually make a success of whatever occupation or business they fellow, but in view of their religious beliefs and strict rules as regards marriage, they remain a separate race, and this failure to become properly assimilated in the country of adoption appears to create difficulties in any country where they form a considerable proportion of the population.” Even the Labour opposition party didn’t want Jews coming in. Labour MP Albert Green said about Jewish refugees in 1939: “My opposition to this proposal is far stronger than it would be if the immigrants were of the Nordic race and came from northern European countries. People from those places would help to develop Australia.”
Dunera Museum, Hay
A Conference on German and Austrian Jewish refugees was held in Évian-les-Bains in France in July 1938. The Australian delegate to the Evian Conference was the Minister for Customs, Colonel Tom White, whose speech which has become notorious as representing the negative attitudes taken by most delegates at the conference. He said: “Under the circumstances Australia cannot do more. Undue privileges cannot be given to one particular class of non-British subjects without injustice to others. It will no doubt be appreciated also that, as we have no real racial problem, we are not desirous of importing one.”
The nations of the world could have saved some of Central Europe’s 500,000 Jews at Évian, but they offered little more than token gestures. Some countries accepted quotas of Jewish refugees. Australia’s quota was 8,000. Our practice was marginally more generous than our politics, and eventually we took in about 10,000. Compare this with other quotas: Canada 8,000, Britain 65,000 and the USA 190,000.
Some people DID criticise Evian. The Sydney Morning Herald editorialised: “There cannot but be disappointment with the negative nature of the speech made by the Australian representative... It is a truism that the Commonwealth has no racial problem and no desire to import one. On the other hand it prides itself on being a democracy with a strong tradition of tolerance, and any undue suggestion of racial intolerance constitutes a betrayal of our cherished traditions.”
But Australia was a large and thinly populated country which obviously could have accepted many more refugees, had the political will been there. By contrast, poorer nations took larger quotas: Argentina took 50,000, Paraguay 20,000, Chile 14,000, Bolivia 12,000 and Cuba 4,500, although not all these quotas were actually filled before emigration became impossible after 1940.
Many central European Jews could have been saved, if the international community had been prepared to act firmly before 1939. These deaths remain a dark stain on the collective conscience of the western democracies. Even after nearly 70 years, Michael Danby MP reminded us to ask ourselves how was it that so few were able to escape while so many were left to die. Through a combination of good luck, desperation and the unpredictable generosity of others, only a small fragment of the doomed Jewish population of Europe was able to escape in time and find refuge in other countries, including Australia. Australians need to be honest about our past and we also need to be honest about the tragedy of refugees in the current era.
ex-railway station, Hay























