Yes. During World War II, there were many Germans that went to other countries for their own safety.
Theodor Schieder has written: 'The expulsion of the German population from the territories east of the Oder-Neisse-line' -- subject(s): German Refugees, Refugees, German
Liberal German refugees who fled failed democratic revolutions and came to America were called 48ers.
ummm... i think its German 48ers
Bob Moore has written: 'Refugees from Nazi Germany in the Netherlands, 1933-1940' -- subject(s): Ethnic relations, German Jews, Jews, German, Political refugees
Tony Wohlmuth has written: 'La Partida' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Immigrants, Jewish Refugees, Jews, Jews, German, Persecutions, Refugees, Jewish
They fled from our troops but we eventually caught them.
Herbert L. Schrader has written: 'No other way' -- subject(s): Medicine, German Refugees, Personal narratives, Refugees
Refugees can come from any part of the world, so there have been some refugees from European countries at different times.
Barbara Wolfenden has written: 'Little Holocaust survivors' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Holocaust survivors, Jewish Refugees, Jews, Jews, German, Refugees, Jewish, Stoatley Rough School (Surrey, England)
Some do. There are, for example, a handful of German Jews who returned to Germany.
forty-eighters
Eugene R Sheppard has written: 'Leo Strauss and the politics of exile' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Jewish Refugees, Jewish philosophers, Jews, Jews, German, Philosophy, Political science, Refugees, Jewish