This document helps to demonstrate the US Government’s and the US bishops’ efforts to define their policy on Displaced Persons (DPs) after the close of World War II. In his letter to Secretary of State James Byrnes introducing the memorandum, Patrick O’Boyle even presumes to push Byrnes a little for a concrete statement on the government’s position on DPs. O’Boyle wanted this information because the National Catholic Welfare Conference was trying to determine its position on DPs by March 31. Anticipating later Cold War rhetoric, the document speaks of “the totalitarian attitude”. This refers specifically to the efforts of the Russians at UN meetings to immediately cut off aid to refugees from Communist-held countries. More generally, the “totalitarian attitude” refers to the Americans’ perception that Communism was built on a mentality that gave little value to the individual person. Therefore, people like the DPs were in danger of becoming pawns in a larger political game, and of having their human rights abused if it furthered Soviet interests. If DPs from Eastern European countries such as Hungary, the Ukraine, Poland, and Lithuania suddenly ceased to receive aid from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), they would probably be forced to return to their homelands out of need and hunger. At that time, the UNRRA was seriously considering closing most of the refugee camps in Europe by the fall of that year, which, in the memorandum’s opinion, would spark a humanitarian crisis. To fail to care for these Eastern European refugees, the memorandum states, would be a betrayal of the basic ideals of freedom for which the Allies had fought during World War II.
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