The mysterious wormhole to the other side of the galaxy opens. Anything could emerge but of course it's more humanoids because it's Star Trek. The second season episode of Deep Space Nine, "Sanctuary", shows what happens when millions of refugees decide to take up residence on the nearby planet of Bajor. It's not really about aliens but it's a nice thought experiment about human cultural interaction.
The refugee aliens are the Skrreeans. Their homeworld had been decimated by the Dominion, an ongoing antagonist for Deep Space Nine. According to their religious beliefs, they are to settle on a "planet of sorrow" which their leaders decide is Bajor. One interesting parallel that isn't brought up in the episode is that the Bajorans themselves attach religious significance to the wormhole. A lot of the drama in other episodes revolves around the Bajorans allowing religious considerations to have more influence over policy decisions than practical ones but, when the shoe's on the other foot, they're less amenable to allowing millions of strangers settle on their homeworld.
The practical reality is that Bajor just doesn't have the resources to absorb so many people despite the insistence by the Skrreeans that they can make famine stricken land fertile and thus be a boon to the Bajorans. That's faith the Bajorans don't just share in.
This episode comes from 1993, long before the refugee crisis in Europe and it's different enough from the Palastine/Israel conflict to not come off as an allegory for it. Without the imposition of real world factions, it holds up as a pure contemplation of some of the ways culture can potentially hinder or facilitate integration.
Deep Space Nine is available on Netflix.
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