Difference between revisions of "Exile" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{dablink|For other senses of this word, see [[exile (disambiguation)]].}}
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'''Exile''' is a form of [[punishment]] in which one has to leave one's home (whether that be on the level of [[city]], region, or [[nation-state]]) while either being explicitly refused permission and/or being threatened by [[prison]] or [[death penalty|death]] upon return. It is common to distinguish between '''internal exile,''' forced resettlement within the country of residence, and '''external exile,''' [[deportation]] outside the country of residence.  
  
'''Exile''' can be a form of [[punishment]]. It means to be away from one's home (i.e. [[city]], [[state]] or [[country]]) while either being explicitly refused permission to return and/or being threatened by [[prison]] or [[death penalty|death]] upon return.  
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When an entire people or ethnic population is forced or induced to leave their traditional homelands, it is called a '''diaspora.''' Throughout history, numerous nations have been forced into diasporas. For the Jews, whose diaspora lasted more than two thousand years, until the founding of the modern State of [[Israel]] in 1948, theological reflection on the meaning of exile has led to the insight that [[God]], who dwells amongst his people, also lives and suffers in exile.
  
It is common to distinguish between '''internal exile''', i.e., forced [[resettle]]ment within the [[country]] of [[residence]], and '''external exile''', [[deportation]] outside the country of residence.
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Exile can also be a self-imposed departure from one's homeland. Self-exile is often practiced as form of protest or to avoid persecution or prosecution for [[crime|criminal]] activity.
 
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{{toc}}
Exile can also be a self-imposed departure from one's homeland. Self-exile is often practiced as form of protest or to avoid persecution.
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Whatever the cause or circumstances, exile necessarily causes [[emotion]]al pain to all involved. Leaving one's homeland means breaking the first and most essential bonds developed to one's [[family]], [[community]], and the natural environment. Prevented from reuniting with those people and places cherished from youth, human hearts can never be whole.
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Exile has a long tradition as a form of punishment. It has been known in [[ancient Rome]], where the [[Roman Senate]] had the power to exile individuals, entire families or countries (which amounted to a [[declaration of war]]).
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'''Exile,''' also called '''banishment,''' has a long tradition as a form of [[punishment]]. It was known in [[ancient Rome]], where the Senate had the power to exile individuals, entire [[family|families]], or countries (which amounted to a declaration of [[war]]).
 
 
The towns of [[ancient Greece]], as well used exile both as a legal punishment and in [[Athens]] as a social punishment. In Athens during the time of [[democracy]], the process of [[ostracism]] was devised in which one man who had basically made a nuisance of himself was banished from the city without prejudice for ten years, after which he was allowed to return. Among the more famous recipients of this punishment were [[Themistocles]], [[Cimon]] and [[Aristides the Just]]. Further, [[Solon]] the lawgiver voluntarily exiled himself from Athens after drafting the city's constitution, to prevent being pressed to change it.
 
  
In the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]] a court of law could sentence a noble to exile (''banicja''). As long as the exile (''banita'') remained in the Commonwealth he had a price on his head and lost the priviliges and protection granted to him as a noble. Even killing a ''banita'' was not considered a crime although there was no reward for his death. Special forms of exile were accompanied by ''wyświecenie'' (a declaration of the sentence in churches) or by issuance of a separate declaration to [[townfolk]] and [[peasant]]ry (all of them increased the knowledge of the exile and thus made his capture more likely).  
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The towns of [[ancient Greece]] also used exile both as a legal punishment and, in [[Athens]], as a social punishment. In Athens during the time of [[democracy]], the process of "ostracism" was devised in which one man who was a threat to the stability of the society was banished from the city without prejudice for ten years, after which he was allowed to return. Among the more famous recipients of this punishment were [[Themistocles]], [[Cimon]], and [[Aristides the Just]]. Further, [[Solon]] the lawgiver voluntarily exiled himself from Athens after drafting the city's [[constitution]], to prevent being pressed to change it.
  
A more severe penalty than exile was [[infamy]] (''infamia'') - 'a loss of honor and respect' (''utrata czci i wiary''). A noble who has been infamed not only suffered from the same penalties as an exiled one, but in addition, an exiled noble (''banita'') who killed an infamed one (''infamis'') could expect his exile sentence to be revoked. In addition anybody killing an infamed noble could expect a monetary reward from the state (usually a [[starosta]] of given region), and sheltering or supporting an infamed noble were also punishable offences. Both exile and infamy could be revoked if the person had done a great service to the state. As the law system in the Commonwealth was fairly inefficient, many exiles actually stayed within the country, often employed and protected by some [[magnate]]s. One of the most famous exiles of the Commonwealth was [[Samuel Łaszcz]].
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In the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], a court of law could sentence a noble to exile ''(banicja)''. As long as the exile ''(banita)'' remained in the Commonwealth, he had a price on his head and lost the privileges and protection granted to him as a noble. Even killing a ''banita'' was not considered a crime, although there was no reward for his death. Special forms of exile were accompanied by ''wyświecenie'' (a declaration of the sentence in churches) or by issuance of a separate declaration to townfolk and [[peasant]]ry, all of them increased the knowledge of the exile and thus made his capture more likely. A more severe penalty than exile was "infamy" ''(infamia)'': A loss of honor and respect ''(utrata czci i wiary)'' in addition to exile.  
  
On [[October 23]], [[2006]], for the first time in [[United States]] history, a judge in the United States imposed exile from the US on a US citizen for crimes committed in the US. The case concerned [[Malcolm Watson]], a citizen of the United States and a permanent resident of [[Canada]] who resided in [[St. Catharines]], [[Ontario]], Canada, near [[Buffalo, New York]] on the other side of the border. Watson, a teacher at [[Buffalo Seminary]] and a cross-border commuter, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor sex crimes against a 15-year-old former student in [[Cheektowaga]] Town Court. The [[district attorney]], [[Frank J. Clark]] wanted to impose probation but Watson wanted to serve his probation in Canada where he, his wife, and their children lived. The DA agreed, but subject to the condition that since his probation officer could not directly monitor his residence in Canada, Watson had to remain out of the US except for meetings with his probation officer—thereby, once the judge approved the sentence, effectively exiling Watson for three years. The sentence may not stand, however.  Canada arrested Watson upon his re-entry to Canada and Watson faces a hearing on possible revocation of his permanent residence status in Canada.  Furthermore the DA has pledged to appeal the sentence, despite previously approving it, citing the huge and unforeseen public outcry that the case has received in Canada.
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On October 23, 2006, for the first time in [[United States]] history, a judge in the United States imposed exile on a U.S. citizen for crimes committed in the U.S. The case concerned [[Malcolm Watson]], a citizen of the United States and a permanent resident of [[Canada]], who resided in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, across the border from Buffalo, New York. Watson, a teacher at Buffalo Seminary and a cross-border commuter, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor [[sexual abuse|sex crimes]] against a 15 year old former student. Watson received a sentence of three years of [[probation]], but wanted to serve this time in Canada where he, his wife, and their children lived. This was approved subject to the condition that Watson had to remain out of the U.S. except for meetings with his probation officer, effectively exiling Watson for three years. Watson, however, was arrested upon his re-entry to Canada amid public outcry, and faced possible [[deportation]] to the U.S.<ref>www.canada.com, [http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=2aec04a3-2f0e-45e7-afa2-d7de284c61eb&k=24628 U.S. sex offender serving probation in Canada was not "exiled," says N.Y. judge.] Retrieved December 6, 2006.</ref>
After a hearing in Canada, Malcolm Watson was deemed to be not a threat and released.
 
  
 
== Personal exile ==
 
== Personal exile ==
Exile was used particularly for political opponents of those in power. The use of exile for political purposes can sometimes be useful for the government because it prevents the exilee from organizing in their native land or from becoming a [[martyr]].
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Exile has been used particularly for political opponents of those in power. The use of exile for political purposes serves the government by preventing their exiled opponent from organizing in their native land or from becoming a [[martyr]].
  
Exile represented a severe punishment, particularly for those, like [[Ovid]] or [[Du Fu]], exiled to strange or backward regions, cut off from all of the possibilities of life as well as their families and associates. [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]] describes the pain of exile in ''[[The Divine Comedy]]'':
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Exile represented an especially severe punishment in times past, particularly for those, like [[Ovid]] or [[Du Fu]], who were exiled to strange or backward regions, cut off from all of the possibilities of their accustomed lifestyle as well as from their families and associates. [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]] described the pain of exile in ''[[The Divine Comedy]]:''
  
:«. . . Tu lascerai ogne cosa diletta
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:«… Tu lascerai ogne cosa diletta
 
:più caramente; e questo è quello strale
 
:più caramente; e questo è quello strale
 
:che l'arco de lo essilio pria saetta.
 
:che l'arco de lo essilio pria saetta.
 
:Tu proverai sì come sa di sale
 
:Tu proverai sì come sa di sale
 
:lo pane altrui, e come è duro calle
 
:lo pane altrui, e come è duro calle
:lo scendere e 'l salir per l'altrui scale . . .»
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:lo scendere e 'l salir per l'altrui scale …»
  
:". . . You will leave everything you love most:  
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:You will leave everything you love most:  
 
:this is the arrow that the bow of exile
 
:this is the arrow that the bow of exile
 
:shoots first. You will know how salty
 
:shoots first. You will know how salty
 
:another's bread tastes and how hard it
 
:another's bread tastes and how hard it
 
:is to ascend and descend  
 
:is to ascend and descend  
:another's stairs . . ."
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:another's stairs …"
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:Paradiso XVII: 55-60<ref>Read Easily, [http://www.readeasily.com/dante-alighieri/index.php Dante Alighieri]. Retrieved December 6, 2006.</ref>
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Exile has been softened, to some extent, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as exiles have been welcomed in other countries. There, they have been able to create new communities in those countries or, less frequently, returned to their homelands following the demise of the regime that exiled them.
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[[Deportation]] serves as a modern form of exile. This involves either the expulsion of persons of foreign citizenship from a country (usually back to that person's country of origin) or forcible relocation within a nation. Deportation is imposed either as the result of a criminal activity, including [[illegal immigration]], or based on the needs and policies of a government.
  
:Paradiso XVII: 55-60
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The [[Great Britain|British]] and [[France|French]] governments often deported people to [[penal colony|penal colonies]], such as [[Australia]] or Georgia. These colonies were usually underdeveloped pieces of land owned by that government in which conditions were harsh enough to serve as punishment.<ref>Public Book Shelf, [http://www.publicbookshelf.com/public_html/Our_Country_Vol_1/historyco_fj.html History of Colonial Georgia]. Retrieved December 12, 2006.</ref>
  
Exile has been softened, to some extent, in the [[19th century|nineteenth]] and [[20th century|twentieth]] centuries, as exiles have received welcome in other countries and have either created new communities within those countries or, less frequently, returned to their [[homeland]]s following the demise of the regime that exiled them.
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=== Famous people who have been in exile ===
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*[[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon I]] exiled from [[France]] to [[Elba]] and, later, [[St Helena]]
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*[[Idi Amin]], exiled to [[Libya]], and [[Saudi Arabia]] until his death.
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*[[Bertolt Brecht]]
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*[[Joseph Brodsky]], exiled from [[Soviet Union]] to [[United States]]
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*[[John Calvin]], exiled from [[Switzerland]] to France, but later let back into Switzerland, due to change in government
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*[[Frédéric Chopin]], exiled from [[Poland]] to France
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*[[El Cid]], banned from [[Castile]], served other Iberian kings ending with the conquest of [[Valencia]]
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*[[Dante Alighieri]], Medieval Italian poet and author of the ''[[Divine Comedy]],'' sentenced to two years of exile and forced to pay a fine when the Black Guelfs took control of Florence. However, Dante could not pay his fine because he was staying at Rome at the request of [[Pope Boniface VIII]] and was considered to be an absconder and sentenced to permanent exile.
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*[[Albert Einstein]] self-exiled from [[Germany]] to the United States
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*[[Sigmund Freud]] self-exiled from [[Austria]] to [[United Kingdom]]
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*[[Heinrich Heine]]
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*[[Victor Hugo]] exiled from France to the [[Channel Islands]]
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*[[Arthur Koestler]]
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*[[Comenius|Jan Amos Komenský]]
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*[[Lenin]] self-exiled to Switzerland
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*[[Thomas Mann]] self-exile to Switzerland and to the United States, moved back to Switzerland
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*[[Karl Marx]] self-exiled from Germany to United Kingdom
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*[[Adam Mickiewicz]]
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*[[Ovid]]
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*Emperor [[Haile Selassie]] of Ethiopia
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*[[Alexander Solzhenitsyn]] exiled from the Soviet Union, returned after the fall of [[Communism]]
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*[[Leon Trotsky]] exiled to [[Turkey]], France, [[Norway]], and [[Mexico]]
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*[[Miguel de Unamuno]] confined to [[Fuerteventura]], fled to France
  
 
== Government in exile ==
 
== Government in exile ==
{{main|Government in exile}}
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A "government in exile" is a political group that claims to be a country's legitimate government, but for various reasons is unable to exercise its legal power, and instead resides in a foreign country. Governments in exile usually operate under the assumption that they will one day return to their native country and regain power.
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Governments in exile frequently come into existence during [[war]]time occupation. For example, during the German expansion of the [[Second World War]], numerous [[Europe]]an governments and [[monarch]]s were forced to seek refuge in the [[United Kingdom]], rather than face certain destruction at the hands of the [[Nazism|Nazis]]. As well as during a foreign occupation, after an internal [[coup d'etat]], a government in exile may be established abroad.
  
During a foreign [[Military occupation|occupation]] or after a [[coup d'etat]], a ''government in exile'' of a such afflicted country may be established abroad.
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===Actions of governments in exile===
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[[International law]] recognizes that governments in exile may undertake many types of actions in the conduct of their daily affairs. These actions include:
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* Becoming a party to a bilateral or international [[treaty]]
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* Amending or revising its own [[constitution]]
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* Maintaining military forces
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* Retaining (or "newly obtaining") diplomatic recognition by sovereign states
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* Issuing identity cards
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* Allowing the formation of new [[political party|political parties]]
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* Instituting democratic reforms
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* Holding [[election]]s
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* Allowing for direct (or more broadly-based) elections of its government officers
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However, none of these actions can serve to legitimatize a government in exile to become the internationally recognized legal government of its current locality. By definition, a government in exile is spoken of in terms of its native country; hence it must return to its native country and regain power there in order to obtain legitimacy as the legal government of that geographic area.
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===Past governments in exile===
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* Provisional Government of the Republic of [[Korea]]
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* Crown Council of [[Ethiopia]], led by H.I.M Prince [[Ermias Sahle Selassie]] and based in the [[Washington D.C.]] area, claimed that the Emperor was still the legal head of Ethiopia
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* The government in exile of the Free City of Danzig
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* [[Spain|Spanish Republican government]] in exile after [[Franco]]'s [[coup d'état]]. Based in Mexico City from 1939 to 1946, when it was moved to [[Paris]], where it lasted until Franco's death
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* The Provisional Government of Free [[India]] was established by Indian nationalists in exile during the war
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* Other exiled leaders in [[England]] included King Zog of [[Albania]] and Emperor [[Haile Selassie]] of [[Ethiopia]]
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Many countries established a government in exile after loss of [[sovereignty]] in connection with [[World War II]]:
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* [[Belgium]] (invaded May 10, 1940)
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* [[Czechoslovakia]] (established in 1940 by [[Edvard Beneš|Beneš]] and recognized by the British government)
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* Free [[France]] (after 1940)
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* [[Greece]] (invaded October 28, 1940)
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* [[Luxembourg]] (invaded May 10, 1940)
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* [[Netherlands]]  (invaded May 10, 1940)
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* [[Norway]] (invaded April 9, 1940)
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* [[Poland]] (from September 1939)
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* [[Yugoslavia]] (invaded April 6, 1941)
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* Commonwealth of the [[Philippines]] (invaded December 8, 1941)
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* [[Denmark]]'s occupation (April 9, 1940) was administered by the German Foreign Office, contrary to other occupied lands that were under military administration. Denmark did not establish a government in exile, although there was an Association of Free Danes established in [[London]]. The King and his government remained in Denmark, and functioned comparatively independently for the first three years of German occupation. Meanwhile, [[Iceland]] and the [[Faroe Islands]] were occupied by the Allies, and effectively separated from the Danish crown.
  
 
== Nation in exile ==
 
== Nation in exile ==
{{main|Diaspora|Refugee}}
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When large groups, or occasionally a whole people or nation is exiled, it can be said that this nation is in "exile," or '''diaspora.''' The term [[diaspora]] (in [[Ancient Greek]], '''διασπορά'''—"a scattering or sowing of seeds") refers to any people or [[ethnicity|ethnic]] population who are forced or induced to leave their traditional [[homeland]]s, the dispersal of such people, and the ensuing developments in their culture.
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Nations that have been in exile for substantial periods include the [[Judaism|Jew]]s, who were deported by [[Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon]] in 597 B.C.E., and again in the years following the destruction of the second temple in [[Jerusalem]] in the year 70 C.E. The Jewish diaspora has lasted more than two thousand years, until the founding of the modern State of [[Israel]] in 1948, which finally opened the possibility of returning to the ancestral homeland. The Jewish diaspora brought on many distinctive cultural developments within the exiled communities. Theological reflection on the meaning of exile has led to the insight that [[God]], who dwells amongst his people, also lives and suffers in exile. The Hasidic master [[Israel Baal Shem Tov]] said, "Pray continually for God’s glory, that it may be redeemed from its exile."<ref>Martin Buber, ''Hasidism and Modern Man'' (New York: Harper & Row, 1958).</ref> In modern Israel, there is a Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, and Jews from around the world are encouraged to make ''aliyah'' (ascend)—to end their exile by emigrating to Israel.
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History contains numerous diaspora-like events. The [[Migration Period]] relocations, which included several phases, are just one set of many. The first phase Migration Period displacement from between 300 and 500 C.E. included relocation of the [[Goths]], ([[Ostrogoths]], [[Visigoths]]), [[Vandals]], [[Franks]], various other [[Germanic tribes]] ([[Burgundians]], [[Langobards]], [[Angles]], [[Saxons]], [[Jutes]], [[Suebi]], [[Alamanni]], [[Varangian]]s), [[Alans]], and numerous [[Slavic peoples|Slavic tribes]]. The second phase, between 500 and 900 C.E., saw Slavic, [[Turkic people|Turkic]], and other tribes on the move, re-settling in [[Eastern Europe]] and gradually making it predominantly Slavic, and affecting [[Anatolia]] and the [[Caucasus]] as the first Turkic peoples ([[Eurasian Avars|Avars]], [[Bulgars]], [[Huns]], [[Khazars]], [[Pechenegs]]) arrived. The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the [[Magyars]] and the [[Vikings|Viking]] expansion out of [[Scandinavia]].
  
When large groups, or occasionally a whole people or nation is exiled, it can be said that this nation is in ''exile'', or '''[[Diaspora]]'''. Nations that have been in exile for substantial periods include the [[Jew]]s, who were deported by [[Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon]] in [[597 B.C.E.]] and again in the years following the destruction of the second [[Temple in Jerusalem]] in the year AD [[70]].
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Here is a partial list of forced exiles in recent times:
  
After the [[partitions of Poland]] in the late 18th century, and following the [[uprising]]s (like [[Kosciuszko Uprising]], [[November Uprising]] and [[January Uprising]]) against the partitioning powers ([[Russian Empire]], [[Prussia]] and [[Austro-Hungary]]), many Poles have chosen - or been forced - into exile, forming large diasporas (known as [[Polonia]]), especially in France and the United States.
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*After the partitions of [[Poland]] in the late eighteenth century, and following the uprisings (Kosciuszko Uprising, November Uprising, and January Uprising) against the partitioning powers ([[Russian Empire]], [[Prussia]] and [[Austro-Hungary]]), many Poles chose, or were forced, into exile, forming large diasporas (known as "Polonia"), especially in [[France]] and the [[United States]].
  
The entire population of [[Crimean Tatars]] (200,000) that remained in their homeland [[Crimea]] was exiled on [[18 May]] [[1944]] to [[Central Asia]] as a form of [[ethnic cleansing]] and [[collective punishment]] on false accusations.
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*The [[Acadian]] diaspora—the [[Great Expulsion]] ''(Grand Dérangement)'' occurred when the British expelled about 10,000 Acadians  (over three-fourths of the Acadian population of [[Nova Scotia]]) between 1755 and 1764. The British split the Acadians between different colonies to impose [[cultural assimilation|assimilation]].
  
At [[Diego Garcia]], between [[1967]] and [[1973]] the [[British Government]] forcibly removed some 2,000 [[Ilois]] resident islanders to make way for a [[military base]] today jointly operated by the [[United States|US]] and [[United Kingdom|UK]].
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*[[Armenian diaspora]]—[[Armenians]] living in their ancient homeland, which had been controlled by the [[Ottoman Empire]] for centuries, fled persecution and massacres during several periods of forced emigration, from the 1880s to the 1910s. Many Armenians settled in the [[United States]] (a majority of whom live in the state of [[California]]), [[France]], [[India]], [[Iran]], [[Lebanon]], [[Russia]] and [[Syria]].  
  
== Tax exile ==
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*[[Circassians]]—fled [[Circassia]]—Kabardey, Cherkes, Adigey Republics and Shapsug Area in 1864. Exiled 90 percent of Circassians are by Russian colonialists to [[Ottoman Empire]] or imperial [[Turkey]]. The Circassian Diaspora is over four million worldwide, with large Circassian communities in [[Bulgaria]], [[Cyprus]], [[Egypt]], [[Greece]], [[Israel]], [[Jordan]], [[Lebanon]], [[Romania]], [[Syria]], [[Russia]] as well the former [[USSR]], and 100,000 Circassians in North America (the United States and Canada), as well over 10,000 Circassians in [[Australia]].
{{main|tax haven}}
 
A wealthy citizen who departs from a former abode for a lower tax jurisdiction in order to reduce his/her [[taxation|tax burden]] is termed a ''tax exile''.
 
  
== Famous people who have been in exile ==
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*The entire population of [[Crimean Tatars]] (200,000) that remained in their homeland [[Crimea]] was exiled on May 18, 1944, to [[Central Asia]] as a form of "ethnic cleansing" and collective punishment on false accusations.
*[[Manuel Altolaguirre]], exiled from [[Spain]], to [[Cuba]] and [[Mexico]].
 
*[[Michel Aoun]], exiled from [[Lebanon]], to [[France]]
 
*[[Reinaldo Arenas]] exiled from [[Cuba]], to [[United States]]
 
*[[Nawaz Sharif]] exiled from [[Pakistan]], to [[Saudi Arabia]] and then moved to [[England]] and some other countries.
 
*[[Shahbaz Sharif]] exiled from [[Pakistan]], to [[Saudi Arabia]].
 
*[[Jean-Bertrand Aristide]], exiled from [[Haiti]], to [[Venezuela]] and [[United States]] (1990-1994), and then to [[Central African Republic]] and [[South Africa]] (2004-present)
 
*[[Miguel Ángel Asturias]] exiled from [[Guatemala]] to [[France]]
 
*[[Francisco Ayala]], exiled from [[Spain]] to [[Argentina]]
 
*[[Michel Bakunin]], fled from [[Russia]]
 
*Emperor [[Bao Dai]] of Vietnam
 
*Crown Prince [[Bao Long]] of Vietnam
 
*Saint [[Thomas à Becket]], fled to France
 
*[[Gioconda Belli]], exiled from [[Nicaragua]], to [[Mexico]]
 
*[[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon I]] exiled from [[France]] to [[Elba]] and, later, [[St Helena]]
 
*[[Napoleon III]] went into exile in England.
 
*[[King Kigeli V of Rwanda]] exiled from [[Rwanda]] to [[Uganda]] and, later, received political asylum to live in the [[United States|U.S.]]
 
*[[Willy Brandt]] exiled to [[Norway]] and [[Sweden]], during the Nazi era
 
*[[Bertolt Brecht]]
 
*[[Breyten Breytenbach]]
 
*[[Joseph Brodsky]], exiled from [[Soviet Union]] to [[United States]]
 
*[[George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron|Lord Byron]], exiled from [[United Kingdom]], to [[Italy]] and [[Ottoman Empire]]
 
*[[Pablo Casals]], self-exiled during the [[Spanish Civil War]], vowing not to return before democracy was restored in Spain. He died in exile, in 1973. [[Francisco Franco]] died in 1975, restoring the monarchy, which became constitutional by degrees.
 
*[[Alejo Carpentier]], exiled from [[Cuba]] to [[Haiti]] and [[Venezuela]]
 
*[[Frédéric Chopin]], exiled from [[Poland]] to [[France]]
 
*[[Marcus Tullius Cicero]], exiled in 58 B.C.E. in a political controversy that involved his [[Marcus Tullius Cicero#Exile and Return|execution]] of six members of a conspiracy to overthrow the [[Roman Republic]]. He was recalled a year later to cheering crowds.
 
*[[El Cid]], banned from [[Kingdom of Castile|Castile]], served other Iberian kings ending with the conquest of [[Kingdom of Valencia|Valencia]]
 
* [[Dante Alighieri]], Medieval Itialian poet and author of the [[Divine Comedy]], Sentenced to two years of Exile and forced to pay a fine when the Black Guelfs took control of Florence. However Dante could not pay his fine because he was staying at Rome at the request of [[Pope Boniface VIII]] and was considered to be an absconder and sentenced to permanent exile.
 
*[[Nadia Comaneci]], famous Romanian gymnast, self-exiled to [[United States]]
 
*[[Celia Cruz]], exiled from [[Cuba]] to [[United States]]
 
*[[Humberto Delgado]], exiled from [[Portugal]] to [[Brazil]] and [[Algeria]]
 
*[[Porfirio Díaz]], exiled from [[Mexico]] to [[France]]
 
*[[Ariel Dorfman]], exiled from [[Chile]], to [[United States]]
 
*[[Du Fu]]
 
*[[Jean-Claude Duvalier]], exiled form [[Haiti]] to [[France]]
 
*[[Albert Einstein]] self-exiled from Germany to the [[United States]]
 
*[[Lion Feuchtwanger]],
 
*[[Sigmund Freud]] self exiled from [[Austria]] to [[United Kingdom]]
 
*[[Alberto Fujimori]], exiled from [[Peru]] to [[Japan]]
 
*[[Eduardo Galeano]], exiled from [[Uruguay]] to [[Argentine]] and [[Spain]]
 
*[[Giuseppe Garibaldi|Garibaldi]] exiled to [[South America]]
 
*[[Francisco de Goya]] exiled to [[Bordeaux]] as ''[[afrancesado]]''
 
*[[Jorge Guillén]]
 
*[[Tenzin Gyatso]], 14th [[Dalai Lama]], exiled from [[Tibet]] to [[India]]
 
*[[Heinrich Heine]]
 
*[[Victor Hugo]] exiled from [[France]] to the [[Channel Islands]]
 
*[[Juan Ramón Jiménez]], fled to [[United States]], [[Cuba]], and finally to [[Puerto Rico]]
 
*[[Arthur Koestler]]
 
*[[Kim Dae-jung]]
 
*[[Idi Amin]], exiled to [[Libya]], and [[Saudi Arabia]] until his death.
 
*[[Konstantinos Karamanlis]]
 
*[[Ruhollah Khomeini]], exiled from Iran to France.
 
*[[Pavel Kohout]]
 
*[[Jan Amos Komenský]]
 
*[[Tadeusz Kościuszko]]
 
*[[Lajos Kossuth]]
 
*Prince [[Norodom Sihanouk]], exiled from [[Cambodia]] to [[China]] and [[North Korea]] twice.
 
*[[Peter Kropotkin]]
 
*[[Lenin]] self-exiled to [[Switzerland]]
 
*[[Lotte Lehmann]]
 
*[[Fernão Lopez]] self-exile to [[Saint Helena]]
 
*[[La Lupe]], to [[Puerto Rico]] and [[United States]]
 
*[[Heinrich Mann]] self-exile to [[Switzerland]] and to the [[United States]]
 
*[[Thomas Mann]] self-exile to [[Switzerland]] and to the [[United States]], moved back to Switzerland
 
*[[Ferdinand Marcos]] exiled from the [[Philippines]] to [[Hawaii]]
 
*[[Karl Marx]] self-exiled from [[Germany]] to [[Great Britain]]
 
*[[José Martí]]
 
*[[Giuseppe Mazzini]]
 
*[[Rigoberta Menchú]], exiled from [[Guatemala]], to [[Mexico]]
 
*[[Josef Mengele]], fled [[Nazi Germany]] after the war to [[South America]]
 
*[[Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov]]
 
*[[Ezekiel Mphahlele]], exiled from [[South Africa]] to [[Kenya]], [[Zambia]] and [[United States]]
 
*[[Adam Mickiewicz]]
 
*[[Mobutu Sese Seko]]
 
*[[Mireya Moscoso]], fled to [[Spain]]
 
*[[Kwame Nkrumah]] exiled from [[Ghana]] to [[Guinea]]
 
*[[Juan Carlos Onetti]] exiled from [[Uruguay]] to [[Spain]] until his death
 
*[[Ovid]]
 
*[[Víctor Paz Estenssoro]], exiled from [[Bolivia]] to [[Argentina]], [[Perú]]
 
*[[Carlos Andrés Pérez]], exiled from [[Venezuela]], to [[Colombia]], [[Costa Rica]], and [[United States]]
 
*[[Marcos Pérez Jiménez]], exiled from [[Venezuela]] to [[United States|U.S.]] and [[Spain]]
 
*[[Juan Perón]] exiled from [[Argentina]] to [[Paraguay]] and [[Spain]]
 
*[[Saint-John Perse]] exiled from [[Vichy France]] to [[United States]]
 
*[[Bob Powell]]
 
*[[Roman Polański]], fled the [[United States]] to [[France]] to avoid prison for [[child rape]]
 
*[[Ferenc Puskás]] from Hungary to Spain
 
*[[Victor Raúl Haya de la Torre]], fled to [[Mexico]]
 
*[[Romain Rolland]], fled to [[Switzerland]]
 
*[[Wilhelm Röpke]] fled Germany during Nazi rule
 
*Prince [[Sauryavong Savang]], lives in exile in [[Paris, France]]
 
*Crown Prince [[Soulivong Savang]], lives in exile in [[Paris, France]]
 
*[[Jorge Semprún]], exiled from [[Spain]], to [[France]]
 
*[[Costas Simitis]], exiled from [[Greece]], to [[Germany]]
 
*Prince [[Mangkra Souvannaphouma]], lives in exile in [[Paris, France]]
 
*Prince [[Nguyen Phuc Buu Chanh]] of [[Vietnam]], lives in exile in the [[United States]]
 
*Prince [[Hso Khan Pha ]] lives in exile in [[Canada]]
 
*[[Fernando Savater]]
 
*[[Benjamin Sehene]]
 
*Emperor [[Amha Selassie I]], lived in exile in [[Djibouti]],[[Israel]], [[Great Britain]], and [[United States]].
 
*Emperor [[Haile Selassie]] of Ethiopia
 
*[[Crown Prince Zera Yacob Amha Selassie]] lived in exile in [[Djibouti]], [[Israel]], [[Great Britain]], and [[United States]]
 
*[[Juliusz Slowacki]]
 
*[[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]] exiled from the [[Soviet Union]], returned after the fall of [[Communism]]
 
*[[Mario Soares]]
 
*[[Wole Soyinka]]
 
*[[Alfredo Stroessner]] exile from [[Paraguay]] to [[Brazil]]
 
*[[Sun Yat-sen]]
 
*[[Oliver Tambo]]
 
*[[Leon Trotsky]] exiled to [[Turkey]], [[France]], [[Norway]] and [[Mexico]]
 
*[[Xiao Qiang]], exiled from [[China]], to [[United States]]
 
*[[Miguel de Unamuno]] confined to [[Fuerteventura]], fled to France.
 
*[[Clement Vallandingham]], exiled to the [[Confederate States of America]], to [[Bermuda]], then [[Canada]]
 
*[[Mario Vargas Llosa]], exiled from [[Perú]], to [[France]], [[Spain]] and [[Great Britain]]
 
*[[Caetano Veloso]], exiled from [[Brazil]] to [[United Kingdom]]
 
*[[Bruno Walter]]
 
*[[Mohammad Zaher Shah]] exile from [[Afghanistan]] to [[Italy]]
 
*[[Nicholas I of Montenegro]]
 
*[[Raúl Salinas de Gortari]] self-exiled to [[Ireland]]
 
*[[Edward VIII of the United Kingdom|The Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor]], by virtue of his marriage to [[Wallis Simpson]] and his falling-out with the [[British Royal Family|Royal Family]] and his brother [[George VI of the United Kingdom|King George VI]], to [[France]]
 
*[[John Calvin]], exiled from [[Switzerland]] to [[France]], but later let back into Switzerland, due to change in government
 
*[[Hector Gramajo]], fled the [[United States]] to avoid facing charges filed under the [[Torture Victim Protection Act (1992)|Torture Victim Protection Act]]
 
  
== [[fictional character|Fictional people]] who have been in exile ==
+
The twentieth century saw huge population movements. Partly this was due to [[natural disasters]], as has happened throughout history, but it also involved large-scale transfers of people by government decree. Some diasporas occurred because the people went along with, or could not escape, the government's plan (such as [[Stalin]]'s desire to populate Eastern [[Russia]], [[Central Asia]], and [[Siberia]]; and the transfer of hundreds of thousands of people between [[India]] and [[Pakistan]] in the [[Partition of India|1947 Partition]]). Other diasporas occurred as people fled the decrees; for example, European Jews fleeing the [[Holocaust]] during [[World war II]]), and [[Hutu]] and [[Tutsi]] trying to escape the [[Rwandan Genocide]] in 1994.
*Romeo from [[Shakespeare|Shakespeare's]] play [[Romeo and Juliet]]
 
*Philip Nolan in [[Edward Everett Hale]]'s novel ''[[The Man Without a Country]]''
 
*The [[Jedi Exile]], banished by the [[Jedi Council]] after the events of the [[Mandalorian Wars]].
 
*[[Zaalbar]], exiled from [[Kashyyyk]] to [[Taris]] for madclawing his brother Chuundar.
 
*[[Obi-Wan Kenobi]], after the [[Great Jedi Purge]], going into hiding on [[Tatooine]] to watch over [[Luke Skywalker]]
 
*[[Yoda]], self-exile to [[Dagobah]] after the [[Great Jedi Purge]]
 
*[[Oedipus|Oedipus the King]] in the self-titled [[Sophocles]] [[Oedipus the King|play]]
 
*[[Hippolytus (mythology)|Hippolytus]] in the self-titled [[Hippolytus (play)|play]] by [[Euripides]]
 
*[[Blackthorne (Ultima)|Blackthorne]] from the [[Ultima]] series of computer games
 
*[[Aragorn]] from [[The Lord of the Rings]] spent years of his youth in exile, not knowing of his ancestry and that he was Heir of [[Elendil]]
 
*[[Zuko|Prince Zuko]] from [[Avatar: The Last Airbender]] was exiled for challenging his father.
 
  
== Banishment laws ==
+
During the [[Cold War]] era, huge populations of refugees continued to form from areas of war, especially from [[Third World]] nations; all over [[Africa]] (for example, over 50,000 [[South Asians]] expelled from [[Uganda]] by [[Idi Amin]] in 1975), [[South America]] (for example, thousands of [[Uruguay]]an refugees fled to [[Europe]] during [[junta|military rule]] in the 1970s and 80s) and [[Central America]] (for example, [[Nicaraguan Diaspora|Nicaraguans]], [[El Salvador|Salvadorians]], [[Guatemala]]ns, [[Honduras|Hondurans]], [[Costa Rica]]ns and [[Panama]]nians), the [[Middle East]] (the [[Iranian people|Iranians]] who fled the 1978 Islamic revolution), the [[Indian subcontinent]] (thousands of former subjects of the [[British Raj]] went to the [[UK]] after [[India]] and [[Pakistan]] became independent in 1947), and [[Southeast Asia]] (for example, the displaced 30,000 [[French people|French]] ''colons'' from [[Cambodia]] expelled by the [[Khmer Rouge]] regime under [[Pol Pot]]). The issue of untold millions of Third World refugees created more diasporas than ever in human history.
* [[Five Mile Act 1665]] ([[England]])
 
* [[101st kilometre]] ([[Soviet Union]])
 
  
== See also ==
+
== Tax exile ==
* [[Ban (law)|Ban]]
+
A wealthy citizen who departs from a former abode for a lower tax [[jurisdiction]] in order to reduce his/her [[taxation|tax burden]] is termed a "tax exile." These are people who choose to leave their native country for a foreign nation or jurisdiction, where taxes on their personal income are appreciably lower, or even nothing. Going into tax exile is a means of tax mitigation or avoidance.
* [[Ostracism]]
 
* [[Penal transportation]]
 
* [[Refugee]]
 
*[[Right of asylum]] (political asylum)
 
  
==References==
+
Under [[United Kingdom|UK]] law, a person is "tax resident" if they visit the country for 183 days or more in the tax year or for 91 days or more on average in any four consecutive tax years.<ref>www.hmrc.gov.uk,[http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/pdfs/ir20.htm Taxable UK Residents]. Retrieved December 6, 2006.</ref>
<!-- Tips for referencing:
 
  
For websites, use the formatting below (date/year are when you accessed the web page):
+
===Tax haven===
{{Web reference | title=Title of page | work=Title of Complete Work | url=http://www.example.com | date=Month Day | year=Year}}
+
A '''tax haven''' is a place where certain [[tax]]es are levied at a low rate or not at all. This encourages wealthy individuals and/or [[business]]es to establish themselves in areas that would otherwise be overlooked. Different jurisdictions tend to be havens for different types of taxes, and for different categories of people and/or companies.
  
For Books, use:
+
Often described in different ways, it is difficult to find a satisfactory or generally accepted definition for what constitutes a tax haven. ''The Economist'' tentatively adopted the description by Colin Powell (former Economic Adviser to [[Jersey]]): "What … identifies an area as a tax haven is the existence of a composite tax structure established deliberately to take advantage of, and exploit, a worldwide demand for opportunities to engage in tax avoidance." ''The Economist'' pointed out, however, that this definition would still exclude a number of jurisdictions traditionally thought of as tax havens.<ref>Caroline Doggart, ''Tax Havens and Their Uses'' (Economist Intelligence Unit, 2002, ISBN 0862181631).</ref>
{{Book reference | Author=Lincoln, Abraham; Grant, U. S.; & Davis, Jefferson | Title=Resolving Family Differences Peacefully | Publisher=Gettysburg: Printing Press | Year=1861 | Editor=Stephen A. Douglas | ID=ISBN 0-12-345678-9}}
 
  
For other sources, see: [[WP:CITET]]
+
One way a person or company takes advantage of tax havens is by moving to, and becoming resident for tax purposes in, a particular country. Another way for an individual or a company to take advantage of a tax haven is to establish a separate legal entity (an "offshore company," "offshore [[trust]]," or [[foundation (charity)|foundation]]), subsidiary or holding company there. Assets are transferred to the new company or trust so that gains may be realized, or income earned, within this legal entity rather than earned by the beneficial owner.
—>
 
{{unreferenced}}
 
  
{{wiktionary|exile}}
+
The [[United States]] is unlike most other countries in that its citizens are subject to U.S. [[income tax|tax]] on their worldwide income no matter where in the world they reside. U.S. citizens therefore cannot avoid U.S. taxes either by emigrating or by transferring assets abroad.
  
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
+
{{Credit4|Exile|86403880|Government_in_exile|92463147|Tax_exile|91619191|Tax_haven|94399467|Diaspora|144611172}}
{{Credit1|Exile|86403880|}}
 

Latest revision as of 17:59, 9 August 2017


Exile is a form of punishment in which one has to leave one's home (whether that be on the level of city, region, or nation-state) while either being explicitly refused permission and/or being threatened by prison or death upon return. It is common to distinguish between internal exile, forced resettlement within the country of residence, and external exile, deportation outside the country of residence.

When an entire people or ethnic population is forced or induced to leave their traditional homelands, it is called a diaspora. Throughout history, numerous nations have been forced into diasporas. For the Jews, whose diaspora lasted more than two thousand years, until the founding of the modern State of Israel in 1948, theological reflection on the meaning of exile has led to the insight that God, who dwells amongst his people, also lives and suffers in exile.

Exile can also be a self-imposed departure from one's homeland. Self-exile is often practiced as form of protest or to avoid persecution or prosecution for criminal activity.

Whatever the cause or circumstances, exile necessarily causes emotional pain to all involved. Leaving one's homeland means breaking the first and most essential bonds developed to one's family, community, and the natural environment. Prevented from reuniting with those people and places cherished from youth, human hearts can never be whole.

History

Exile, also called banishment, has a long tradition as a form of punishment. It was known in ancient Rome, where the Senate had the power to exile individuals, entire families, or countries (which amounted to a declaration of war).

The towns of ancient Greece also used exile both as a legal punishment and, in Athens, as a social punishment. In Athens during the time of democracy, the process of "ostracism" was devised in which one man who was a threat to the stability of the society was banished from the city without prejudice for ten years, after which he was allowed to return. Among the more famous recipients of this punishment were Themistocles, Cimon, and Aristides the Just. Further, Solon the lawgiver voluntarily exiled himself from Athens after drafting the city's constitution, to prevent being pressed to change it.

In the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a court of law could sentence a noble to exile (banicja). As long as the exile (banita) remained in the Commonwealth, he had a price on his head and lost the privileges and protection granted to him as a noble. Even killing a banita was not considered a crime, although there was no reward for his death. Special forms of exile were accompanied by wyświecenie (a declaration of the sentence in churches) or by issuance of a separate declaration to townfolk and peasantry, all of them increased the knowledge of the exile and thus made his capture more likely. A more severe penalty than exile was "infamy" (infamia): A loss of honor and respect (utrata czci i wiary) in addition to exile.

On October 23, 2006, for the first time in United States history, a judge in the United States imposed exile on a U.S. citizen for crimes committed in the U.S. The case concerned Malcolm Watson, a citizen of the United States and a permanent resident of Canada, who resided in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, across the border from Buffalo, New York. Watson, a teacher at Buffalo Seminary and a cross-border commuter, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor sex crimes against a 15 year old former student. Watson received a sentence of three years of probation, but wanted to serve this time in Canada where he, his wife, and their children lived. This was approved subject to the condition that Watson had to remain out of the U.S. except for meetings with his probation officer, effectively exiling Watson for three years. Watson, however, was arrested upon his re-entry to Canada amid public outcry, and faced possible deportation to the U.S.[1]

Personal exile

Exile has been used particularly for political opponents of those in power. The use of exile for political purposes serves the government by preventing their exiled opponent from organizing in their native land or from becoming a martyr.

Exile represented an especially severe punishment in times past, particularly for those, like Ovid or Du Fu, who were exiled to strange or backward regions, cut off from all of the possibilities of their accustomed lifestyle as well as from their families and associates. Dante described the pain of exile in The Divine Comedy:

«… Tu lascerai ogne cosa diletta
più caramente; e questo è quello strale
che l'arco de lo essilio pria saetta.
Tu proverai sì come sa di sale
lo pane altrui, e come è duro calle
lo scendere e 'l salir per l'altrui scale …»
… You will leave everything you love most:
this is the arrow that the bow of exile
shoots first. You will know how salty
another's bread tastes and how hard it
is to ascend and descend
another's stairs …"
Paradiso XVII: 55-60[2]

Exile has been softened, to some extent, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as exiles have been welcomed in other countries. There, they have been able to create new communities in those countries or, less frequently, returned to their homelands following the demise of the regime that exiled them.

Deportation serves as a modern form of exile. This involves either the expulsion of persons of foreign citizenship from a country (usually back to that person's country of origin) or forcible relocation within a nation. Deportation is imposed either as the result of a criminal activity, including illegal immigration, or based on the needs and policies of a government.

The British and French governments often deported people to penal colonies, such as Australia or Georgia. These colonies were usually underdeveloped pieces of land owned by that government in which conditions were harsh enough to serve as punishment.[3]

Famous people who have been in exile

Government in exile

A "government in exile" is a political group that claims to be a country's legitimate government, but for various reasons is unable to exercise its legal power, and instead resides in a foreign country. Governments in exile usually operate under the assumption that they will one day return to their native country and regain power.

Governments in exile frequently come into existence during wartime occupation. For example, during the German expansion of the Second World War, numerous European governments and monarchs were forced to seek refuge in the United Kingdom, rather than face certain destruction at the hands of the Nazis. As well as during a foreign occupation, after an internal coup d'etat, a government in exile may be established abroad.

Actions of governments in exile

International law recognizes that governments in exile may undertake many types of actions in the conduct of their daily affairs. These actions include:

  • Becoming a party to a bilateral or international treaty
  • Amending or revising its own constitution
  • Maintaining military forces
  • Retaining (or "newly obtaining") diplomatic recognition by sovereign states
  • Issuing identity cards
  • Allowing the formation of new political parties
  • Instituting democratic reforms
  • Holding elections
  • Allowing for direct (or more broadly-based) elections of its government officers

However, none of these actions can serve to legitimatize a government in exile to become the internationally recognized legal government of its current locality. By definition, a government in exile is spoken of in terms of its native country; hence it must return to its native country and regain power there in order to obtain legitimacy as the legal government of that geographic area.

Past governments in exile

  • Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea
  • Crown Council of Ethiopia, led by H.I.M Prince Ermias Sahle Selassie and based in the Washington D.C. area, claimed that the Emperor was still the legal head of Ethiopia
  • The government in exile of the Free City of Danzig
  • Spanish Republican government in exile after Franco's coup d'état. Based in Mexico City from 1939 to 1946, when it was moved to Paris, where it lasted until Franco's death
  • The Provisional Government of Free India was established by Indian nationalists in exile during the war
  • Other exiled leaders in England included King Zog of Albania and Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia

Many countries established a government in exile after loss of sovereignty in connection with World War II:

  • Belgium (invaded May 10, 1940)
  • Czechoslovakia (established in 1940 by Beneš and recognized by the British government)
  • Free France (after 1940)
  • Greece (invaded October 28, 1940)
  • Luxembourg (invaded May 10, 1940)
  • Netherlands (invaded May 10, 1940)
  • Norway (invaded April 9, 1940)
  • Poland (from September 1939)
  • Yugoslavia (invaded April 6, 1941)
  • Commonwealth of the Philippines (invaded December 8, 1941)
  • Denmark's occupation (April 9, 1940) was administered by the German Foreign Office, contrary to other occupied lands that were under military administration. Denmark did not establish a government in exile, although there was an Association of Free Danes established in London. The King and his government remained in Denmark, and functioned comparatively independently for the first three years of German occupation. Meanwhile, Iceland and the Faroe Islands were occupied by the Allies, and effectively separated from the Danish crown.

Nation in exile

When large groups, or occasionally a whole people or nation is exiled, it can be said that this nation is in "exile," or diaspora. The term diaspora (in Ancient Greek, διασπορά—"a scattering or sowing of seeds") refers to any people or ethnic population who are forced or induced to leave their traditional homelands, the dispersal of such people, and the ensuing developments in their culture.

Nations that have been in exile for substantial periods include the Jews, who were deported by Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon in 597 B.C.E., and again in the years following the destruction of the second temple in Jerusalem in the year 70 C.E. The Jewish diaspora has lasted more than two thousand years, until the founding of the modern State of Israel in 1948, which finally opened the possibility of returning to the ancestral homeland. The Jewish diaspora brought on many distinctive cultural developments within the exiled communities. Theological reflection on the meaning of exile has led to the insight that God, who dwells amongst his people, also lives and suffers in exile. The Hasidic master Israel Baal Shem Tov said, "Pray continually for God’s glory, that it may be redeemed from its exile."[4] In modern Israel, there is a Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, and Jews from around the world are encouraged to make aliyah (ascend)—to end their exile by emigrating to Israel.

History contains numerous diaspora-like events. The Migration Period relocations, which included several phases, are just one set of many. The first phase Migration Period displacement from between 300 and 500 C.E. included relocation of the Goths, (Ostrogoths, Visigoths), Vandals, Franks, various other Germanic tribes (Burgundians, Langobards, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, Alamanni, Varangians), Alans, and numerous Slavic tribes. The second phase, between 500 and 900 C.E., saw Slavic, Turkic, and other tribes on the move, re-settling in Eastern Europe and gradually making it predominantly Slavic, and affecting Anatolia and the Caucasus as the first Turkic peoples (Avars, Bulgars, Huns, Khazars, Pechenegs) arrived. The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the Magyars and the Viking expansion out of Scandinavia.

Here is a partial list of forced exiles in recent times:

  • After the partitions of Poland in the late eighteenth century, and following the uprisings (Kosciuszko Uprising, November Uprising, and January Uprising) against the partitioning powers (Russian Empire, Prussia and Austro-Hungary), many Poles chose, or were forced, into exile, forming large diasporas (known as "Polonia"), especially in France and the United States.
  • The Acadian diaspora—the Great Expulsion (Grand Dérangement) occurred when the British expelled about 10,000 Acadians (over three-fourths of the Acadian population of Nova Scotia) between 1755 and 1764. The British split the Acadians between different colonies to impose assimilation.
  • Armenian diaspora—Armenians living in their ancient homeland, which had been controlled by the Ottoman Empire for centuries, fled persecution and massacres during several periods of forced emigration, from the 1880s to the 1910s. Many Armenians settled in the United States (a majority of whom live in the state of California), France, India, Iran, Lebanon, Russia and Syria.
  • Circassians—fled Circassia—Kabardey, Cherkes, Adigey Republics and Shapsug Area in 1864. Exiled 90 percent of Circassians are by Russian colonialists to Ottoman Empire or imperial Turkey. The Circassian Diaspora is over four million worldwide, with large Circassian communities in Bulgaria, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Romania, Syria, Russia as well the former USSR, and 100,000 Circassians in North America (the United States and Canada), as well over 10,000 Circassians in Australia.
  • The entire population of Crimean Tatars (200,000) that remained in their homeland Crimea was exiled on May 18, 1944, to Central Asia as a form of "ethnic cleansing" and collective punishment on false accusations.

The twentieth century saw huge population movements. Partly this was due to natural disasters, as has happened throughout history, but it also involved large-scale transfers of people by government decree. Some diasporas occurred because the people went along with, or could not escape, the government's plan (such as Stalin's desire to populate Eastern Russia, Central Asia, and Siberia; and the transfer of hundreds of thousands of people between India and Pakistan in the 1947 Partition). Other diasporas occurred as people fled the decrees; for example, European Jews fleeing the Holocaust during World war II), and Hutu and Tutsi trying to escape the Rwandan Genocide in 1994.

During the Cold War era, huge populations of refugees continued to form from areas of war, especially from Third World nations; all over Africa (for example, over 50,000 South Asians expelled from Uganda by Idi Amin in 1975), South America (for example, thousands of Uruguayan refugees fled to Europe during military rule in the 1970s and 80s) and Central America (for example, Nicaraguans, Salvadorians, Guatemalans, Hondurans, Costa Ricans and Panamanians), the Middle East (the Iranians who fled the 1978 Islamic revolution), the Indian subcontinent (thousands of former subjects of the British Raj went to the UK after India and Pakistan became independent in 1947), and Southeast Asia (for example, the displaced 30,000 French colons from Cambodia expelled by the Khmer Rouge regime under Pol Pot). The issue of untold millions of Third World refugees created more diasporas than ever in human history.

Tax exile

A wealthy citizen who departs from a former abode for a lower tax jurisdiction in order to reduce his/her tax burden is termed a "tax exile." These are people who choose to leave their native country for a foreign nation or jurisdiction, where taxes on their personal income are appreciably lower, or even nothing. Going into tax exile is a means of tax mitigation or avoidance.

Under UK law, a person is "tax resident" if they visit the country for 183 days or more in the tax year or for 91 days or more on average in any four consecutive tax years.[5]

Tax haven

A tax haven is a place where certain taxes are levied at a low rate or not at all. This encourages wealthy individuals and/or businesses to establish themselves in areas that would otherwise be overlooked. Different jurisdictions tend to be havens for different types of taxes, and for different categories of people and/or companies.

Often described in different ways, it is difficult to find a satisfactory or generally accepted definition for what constitutes a tax haven. The Economist tentatively adopted the description by Colin Powell (former Economic Adviser to Jersey): "What … identifies an area as a tax haven is the existence of a composite tax structure established deliberately to take advantage of, and exploit, a worldwide demand for opportunities to engage in tax avoidance." The Economist pointed out, however, that this definition would still exclude a number of jurisdictions traditionally thought of as tax havens.[6]

One way a person or company takes advantage of tax havens is by moving to, and becoming resident for tax purposes in, a particular country. Another way for an individual or a company to take advantage of a tax haven is to establish a separate legal entity (an "offshore company," "offshore trust," or foundation), subsidiary or holding company there. Assets are transferred to the new company or trust so that gains may be realized, or income earned, within this legal entity rather than earned by the beneficial owner.

The United States is unlike most other countries in that its citizens are subject to U.S. tax on their worldwide income no matter where in the world they reside. U.S. citizens therefore cannot avoid U.S. taxes either by emigrating or by transferring assets abroad.

Notes

  1. www.canada.com, U.S. sex offender serving probation in Canada was not "exiled," says N.Y. judge. Retrieved December 6, 2006.
  2. Read Easily, Dante Alighieri. Retrieved December 6, 2006.
  3. Public Book Shelf, History of Colonial Georgia. Retrieved December 12, 2006.
  4. Martin Buber, Hasidism and Modern Man (New York: Harper & Row, 1958).
  5. www.hmrc.gov.uk,Taxable UK Residents. Retrieved December 6, 2006.
  6. Caroline Doggart, Tax Havens and Their Uses (Economist Intelligence Unit, 2002, ISBN 0862181631).

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