A refugee takes a selfie with German President Joachim Gauck (2ndR) as he and his partner Daniela Schadt (L) visit an asylum seekers accommodation facility in Berlin, Germany, August 26, 2015. Reuters/Stefanie Loos How can Germans be so generous vis a vis taking refugees in Europe? Germany will probably take around a million refugees, especially Syrians. Syrians, people who mostly speak no German, and whose culture is so different.

People who have never lived in a democracy and who are absolutely destitute and desperate. Taking one million refugees is like taking one million unemployed people who are not educated in your country and whose skills most likely do not match those of your labor market.

So what could make Germans want to take these refugees? Because from what I have seen it is not that anyone is putting tremendous pressure on them to take them. It is actually a popular measure in Germany to accept Syrian refugees. This while British and others are chasing them away and other than the Swedes, nobody else wants them. And this while in the US the leading Republican candidate is running on an anti immigrant platform and quite a few European countries have anti immigrant parties. So here’s my theory.

I am not German but my qualifications are having a German wife, a German family, many close German friends and being on two German company boards, Axel Springer and Arago.

The Holocaust is a horrible trauma for the current generation of German leaders. Just like the current leadership of Israel is horrified by the fact that Jews did not violently fight their way out of the Holocaust, and as a result, are unreasonably violent as soon as they are attacked by Hamas or Hezbollah, the German leadership is also inspired by the Holocaust, but in the exact opposite way.

Migrants rest in front of the State Office for Health and Social Affairs as they wait to apply for asylum in Berlin, Germany August 11, 2015. REUTERS/Stefanie Loos Germans react with extraordinary kindness. How could our parents and grandparents massively kill innocent people, mostly Jews, by the millions, they wonder. It is not only Jews, the victims, who are traumatized by the Holocaust, Germans are as well! For Germans today it is impossible to understand how their ancestors could have perpetrated the Holocaust.

Given this situation, I think that in the German psyche, when they read about IS and their behavior they immediately relate IS to the Nazi party. And this is not far fetched, IS is so brutal, dictatorial, that it is like a Nazi version of Islam.

So paradoxically for them, and forgetting how many Syrians feel about Jews, (I know, I went to Syria and was arrested on suspicion of being Jewish and being Jewish myself, had to lie my way out of detention), for many in Germany, the Syrians are the “new Jews”. And they have more sympathy for their plight than other European nations. This time they will save them from their own Holocaust.

Migrants rest in the shadow near a fence between a migrants camp and a former casern during a visit of German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen in Sonthofen, southern Germany, August 13 2015. REUTERS/Michaela Rehle The current generation of Germans grew up sympathizing with victims, so with the horrors of the Syrian civil war they are given the redeeming opportunity to stop the massive killing of innocents. And while this decision will undoubtedly cause problems, because Germans are true romantics (I know I am married to one), they are going for this without thinking much about the pros and cons.

They are driven by emotions more than by reason. Similar to how they took East Germany and gave them a 1 to 1 mark conversion, a move that depressed the German economy for a decade, and yet nobody regretted. Now paradoxically, the East Germans, who have benefited from West German generosity themselves, are the ones who are rejecting the refugees. It’s the “I am in, now close the door syndrome.”

But some East Germans aside, I like to see a powerful nation that is sensitive to the sorrows of others. And while from a policy point of view it’s an invitation to tension, I still admire Germany for taking those refugees. And what’s more, I think that in the end, kindness will work.

Germany has very low unemployment and an incredibly low birth rate. Education is free in Germany and young people can learn. Syrians are known for being entrepreneurial. I am optimistic that Germany will both, help prevent another Holocaust and will prosper as a result of their decision.

Martin Varsavsky is an Argentine/Spanish entrepreneur and the founder of seven companies over the course of his career.