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AUSTRALIA: Their Country's Good
From distant climes, o'er widespread
seas we come (Though not with much éclat or beat
of drum);
True patriots all, for be it understood We left our country for our country's
good . . . And none will doubt but that our
emigration Has proved most useful to the English
nation.
In the century and a half since Convict George Barrington wrote these lines on emigrating to Australia, millions of free men have made their homes in the subcontinent Down Under. But the immigrant everywhere is normally suspect of having left his country, if not for his country's good, then out of political or economic necessity. Only in the decade since World War II has Australia, by means of a vast and wisely planned immigration scheme, banished the last vestiges of the emigration stigma. Last week the drums were beating as, with much eclat, bright and chirpy Barbara Porritt stepped ashore at Melbourne. She was Australia's millionth immigrant since 1945.
"Populate or perish." onetime Prime Minister "Billy" Hughes told Australia after World War I, but it took World War II to awaken 7,000,000 Australians to the peril of living in a large, empty country on the edge of Asia. Said Immigration Minister Arthur Calwell. launching a new large-scale immigration scheme: "We may have only 25 years to ... justify our exclusive possession of this continent."
Broken Prejudices. Working swiftly and realistically, giving priority to carpenters and builders, Australian immigration teams took the pick of Europe's D.P.s. When the International Refugee Organization pool dried up, Calwell made bilateral agreements with Italy, The Netherlands, Germany and Malta for a regular flow of immigrants, tried to induce Americans to emigrate, and succeeded in getting some 10,000 of them to settle in Australia (thereby balancing the loss of 10,000 Australian girls who married G.I.s and went off to the U.S.).
A trial batch of 848 young (15 to 35) men from the Baltic states and a promise by Calwell that half of all immigrants would be British broke down Australia's last prejudices against immigrants. Says Calwell today: "We couldn't have cared less about keeping our population predominantly British. What we want are Australians!"
With tickets partly paid for by the government, and traveling on passenger liners, cargo ships and borrowed U.S. ex-Army transports, immigrants soon began arriving in Australia in such numbers that| the problem was how to make them into Australians. British immigrants and all children under 15 automatically receive Australian nationality. The others (one in five) must wait five years. On board ship, foreign immigrants start learning English, continue in government classes in the nationwide network of hostels and reception camps where immigrants live at government expense (average stay: six months) until jobs are found for them.
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