List of refugees

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This is a list of prominent people who fled their native country, went into exile and found refuge in another country. The list follows the current legal concept of refugee only loosely. It also includes children of people who have fled. The people are ordered according to the field in which they made their names.

Advertising

  • Lord
    Maurice Saatchi and Charles Saatchi – British citizens and founders of Saatchi & Saatchi advertising agency. Their family fled persecution in Iraq for Britain in 1947.[1]

Architecture

Art

Marc Chagall

Business

Michael Marks

Fashion and design

Alek Wek

Manufacturing

Music and dance

Politics, economics, and political economy

Henry Kissinger
  • Madeleine Albright – Former U.S. Secretary of State. She and her family fled Czechoslovakia in 1948 and came to the US as refugees.[50]
  • Hannah Arendt – Jewish-American author and political theorist. Born in Germany, in 1933 she fled persecution by the Nazis for Czechoslovakia and then Geneva, eventually becoming a naturalized citizen of the US in 1950.[51][52]
  • Adrienne Clarkson – Canadian journalist and 26th Governor General of Canada. Her parents fled Hong Kong with her in 1941 and found refuge in Canada.[53]
  • Alexander Gerschenkron – Russian-born American economist. Fled Russia during Russian civil war and settled in Austria, fleeing again to the United States after the rise of fascism. He is best known for his book of essay, Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective, which became one of the foundational texts of development economics.
  • Albert O. Hirschman – German development economist and political economist. He was an active resistance fighter during the Second War World and Spanish Civil War, helping to rescue many of Europe's leading artists and intellectuals. He is best known for his work on unbalanced development and his book in political science: Exit, Voice and Loyalty.
  • Michaëlle Jean – Canadian journalist and 27th Governor General of Canada. Her father fled Haiti's Duvalier regime in 1967, she and the rest of their family arrived in Canada in 1968.[54]
  • Henry Kissinger – American diplomat and political scientist who fled Germany with his family in 1938.[55]
  • Karl Marx – German philosopher, writer and journalist best known for "inventing" the political concept of Communism. He spent much of his adult life in exile as a result of his political views, but became truly stateless in 1848 when he gave up his Prussian citizenship, and was expelled from France. He remained stateless till the end of his life.[56]
  • Thandika Mkandawire – Malawian-Swedish economist, best known for his work on 'transformative social policy'. He was targeted by the regime of Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda and found asylum in Sweden.[57]
  • Maryam Monsef – Canadian politician. In 2015 she became Minister For Democratic Institutions. She and her family fled the Afghan Civil War in 1996, resettling in Canada.[58]
  • Ilhan Omar – Somali-American politician. Born in Somalia, her family fled the civil war there, and spent four years in a refugee camp. They immigrated to the United States. She was elected to the U.S. House of Representative in 2018.
  • Karl Polanyi – Hungarian economic historian and political economist and a refugee from fascist persecution in the Vienna of 1934. He is known for his book The Great Transformation, which argued that the emergence of market-based societies in modern Europe was not inevitable but historically contingent.[59]
  • Edward Snowden – American computer security specialist, leaked information about U.S. National Security data collection, fled U.S. and received asylum in Russia.
  • Tȟatȟáŋka Íyotake (Sitting Bull) – Hunkpapa Lakota holy man who led his people as a tribal chief during years of resistance to United States government policies. Took refuge with his followers in Canada in 1877 for four years, where they petitioned the Canadian government for land and food. The Canadian government refused their request, and ultimately Sitting Bull and his people were forced to return to the United States.[60]
  • Deborah Carlos Valencia Filipino refugee who founded four migrant-support organisations in Greece.[61]
  • Clara Zetkin – key leader in German Communist movement, chiefly remembered for establishing March 8 as International Women's Day; fled Nazi Germany in 1932 and took refuge in the Soviet Union.[48]

Psychology and philosophy

Sigmund Freud
Dr. Ruth Westheimer
  • Michael Balint – British citizen, Jewish-Hungarian psychoanalyst, best known as a proponent of Object relations theory. Fled persecution by Nazis for the UK in 1939.[62]
  • Sigmund Freud – Jewish-Austrian neurologist, best known as the founder of psychoanalysis. Fled persecution by the Nazis in Austria in June 1938, took refuge in the UK.[63]
  • Anna Freud – daughter of Sigmund, also a psychoanalyst. Fled persecution by the Nazis in Austria in June 1938, took refuge in the UK.[63]
  • Ernest Gellner – British citizen, Czech-Jewish philosopher and social anthropologist. Came to England in 1939 after the German occupation of Prague.[64]
  • Stephan Korner – British citizen, Czech-Jewish philosopher. Came to England in 1939 after German occupation of Czechoslovakia.[65]
  • Vichy anti-semitic laws for his Jewish ancestry, Levi-Strauss took refuge in the United States until 1948, when he returned to France.[66]
  • Karl Popper – Austrian-Jewish philosopher; fled from rise of Nazism in Austria to New Zealand in 1937.[67]
  • Auschwitz.[68][69]

Religion

14th Dalai Lama

Science and technology

Albert Einstein
  • Sergey Brin – Co-founder of Google – Russian-Jewish refugee[74]
  • Gustav Victor Rudolf Born - pharmacologist - German-Jewish refugee
  • Max Born - Nobel Prize for physics - German-Jewish refugee
  • Edith Bulbring
    - pharmacologist - German-Jewish refugee
  • 1922 Great Fire of Smyrna, when he fled with books he had saved from the university's library to Athens.[75]
  • Carl Djerassi - the inventor of the first contraceptive pill. He was an Austrian refugee
  • Huguenot
    refugees
  • Albert Einstein – Nobel Prize-winning physicist (1921) for his theory of relativity; German-Jewish refugee who escaped Nazi Germany by taking a post at Princeton in 1938.[76]
  • Enrico Fermi – Nobel Prize-winning physicist (1938) for his work on nuclear reactions; member of the Manhattan Project; moved with his family to America in 1938 to escape Italy's anti-semitic laws.[77]
  • Robert Fano – physicist – Italian-Jewish refugee
  • Ugo Fano – physicist – Italian-Jewish refugee
  • Romanian American progenitor and paradigm founder in economics, whose work was seminal in establishing ecological economics – fled when the communists took power in Romania
    in 1948.
  • Alexander Grothendieck – mathematician – German-Jewish refugee
  • Erik Jorpes – Finnish biochemist who fled to Sweden after the Finnish Civil War.
  • Bernard Katz – Nobel Prize-winning biophysicist – German-Jewish refugee
  • Walter Kohn – theoretical physicist who won the Nobel Prize (1998) in Chemistry for Density-Functional Theory; left Austria for England via Kindertransport
  • Sir
    Hans Krebs
    – Nobel Prize-winning scientist – German-Jewish refugee
  • Sir
    John Krebs
    – zoologist – son of Sir Hans Krebs
  • Liviu Librescu, physicist; fled from Romania to Israel[78]
  • Lord (Claus) Moser
    – British professor of statistics and head of the Government Statistical Service – Austrian-Jewish refugee
  • Charles Proteus Steinmetz – mathematics and electrical engineering – German-Polish refugee. he identified and explained, through a mathematical equation that later became known as the Law of Hysterisis, or Steinmetz's Law, phenomena governing power losses, leading to breakthroughs in both alternating- and direct-current electrical systems.[79]
  • Dame Stephanie Shirley – British information technology pioneer and philanthropist, best known for founding Xansa. Arrived in the UK in 1938 as an unaccompanied child refugee from Germany as part of the Kindertransport.[26]

Sport

TV and film

Writing and publishing

Anne Frank
Ismail Kadare

Miscellaneous

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