Poland to the Rescue

Apr 21, 2022

Marta Górczyńska is a human rights lawyer from Poland specializing in the protection of migrants, refugees and victims of human trafficking. Conducts monitoring missions to the borders and detention facilities for migrants and reports on human rights violations. Advocates for human rights-based approach for migration. Author and co-author of numerous publications in the topic of the asylum law. PhD candidate at the University of Warsaw.


Russia’s war on Ukraine has set off the largest movement of refugees in Europe since the last World War. More than around 5 million people, 90% women and children, have fled the country and at least another seven million people have been internally displaced. Those numbers, as well as the uncounted thousands of civilians who have been killed or wounded, are rising rapidly as President Putin intensifies his strategy of war on cities and on the people who live in them.

At least 2.7 million of these refugees have fled to Poland, a country with a spotty record—at best—when it comes to accepting migrants. But this time is different: even as the country builds a wall on its border with Belarus to keep out migrants from the Middle East, Poles and their government are welcoming the Ukrainians pouring across their border. Why the difference? What do the ordinary Poles who are receiving and sheltering the refugees think? Will there be limits to the hospitality as the war drags on? Could there be a silver lining to this horrible tragedy if it produces new attitudes to migration—or is that too naive?

Marta Górczyńska, a Polish human rights lawyer, is hopeful. She has seen and dealt with her country’s efforts to close the border with Belarus as well as its enthusiastic opening of the border with Ukraine (at least for Ukrainians). Will the better angels prevail? Are there implications for other situations as the tide of migrants rises globally?

What do you think? Comment below. 

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4 Comments

  1. Toni Segarra

    Only receive, welcome, some people who flee from the misery generated by wars. Isn’t it racism?
    And racism is not the origin of wars. Since racism means division, disorder, conflict, cruelty, war.

    Reply
    • Abdul Monir

      We have to find a new meaning to racism in this conflict situation when the number of displaced people is increasing day by day.

      Reply
  2. Abdul Monir

    I think that closing the border is not the solution and it will be inhuman too, but for this situation, we have to think out jointly a way of immediate and long term strategy & plan.

    Reply
  3. David Chang

    We fight for the world peace and human right.
    God bless us

    Reply

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