Citizens of Everywhere: Searching for Identity in the Age of Brexit
By Peter Gumbel
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About this ebook
Drawing on one family’s migration stories, Citizens of Everywhere explores the nature of belonging amid cycles of pluralism and nationalism. In an increasingly global world, nativist and diasporic impulses pull many people in contradictory directions that can be difficult to even understand. In Citizens of Everywhere, Gumbel grapples with this complexity through his own family history, revealing the personal costs of Britain’s recent isolationist retreat. Along the way, he laments the decline of British pluralism at the worst possible moment—as it rejects the European project and engages in an ill-fated struggle against an ever more interconnected world.
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Citizens of Everywhere - Peter Gumbel
memory.
Prologue: Mobility and National
Identity in a Time of Plague
On a sunny Tuesday morning in September 2019, my elder daughter and I walked into the German consulate in Paris with our British passports and re-emerged fifteen minutes later as German citizens. History had come full circle: eighty years and six months earlier, in March 1939, my maternal grandparents fled Nazi Germany after months of increasingly desperate efforts to leave the country. They got out just before the borders closed and went to England, which they viewed as a bastion of freedom and safety. Stripped of their German nationality, they remained stateless until 1946, when they became naturalised British citizens.
Compared with their history, obtaining our German naturalisation certificates was a formality devoid of all drama. It took just a signature, a photocopy, and a handshake – but it felt momentous nonetheless. If anybody had told me even a few years previously that I would apply to become German, I would have been incredulous. But times change, and circumstances change with them. After the 2016 Brexit referendum, several members of my family (all of whom were born in Great Britain) chose to apply for German citizenship as an insurance policy in the event that Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union should turn out badly. It’s an irony of history that a Nazi decree from November 1941 revoking the citizenship of German Jews who had left the country gave us the opening we needed: an article of the postwar German constitution stipulates that descendants of Germans who were deprived of their citizenship on political, racial, or religious grounds shall on application have their citizenship restored
.¹ So we applied.
We are not alone. After the referendum, several thousand British families with German–Jewish backgrounds did the same. I risked having to contend with a welter of bureaucracy to continue living and working in Paris as a British citizen post-Brexit. Connecting with my historic roots in this way was more than just pragmatism, though. Brexit challenged the essence of my identity, and so I made a conscious choice to become German. British by birth, I am European by conviction and heritage, and now I have an unambiguous European nationality to prove