New US Immigrants Creating Different Assimilation
Patterns
Each new group of immigrants to
the United States has faced its own challenges as it has assimilated into
American society. And each group has added its own customs and traditions to
the ethnic mosaic of American culture: from Italian pizza to Latin American
salsa music to Gaelic tap dancing.
VOA correspondent Barbara
Schoetzau recently spoke with experts and immigrants about how new Americans
assimilate into U.S. culture and change the United States.
Demographers and sociologists say
it is difficult to analyze recent assimilation patterns in the United States
because of immigration laws that took effect in 1968.
Anthony Orum, a specialist in
immigration issues and trends at the University of Illinois, says the laws
created a much more diverse immigrant population than in the past.
"Rather than getting large
numbers of immigrants from Eastern and Western Europe, now we get many
immigrants from Asia, Africa, Latin America and Mexico," he says.
"Their stories tend to be different from the stories of earlier
generations."
Their stories are as different as
those of Tony Hanna, Oscar Carreno and Osmond Aznan. Tony came from Belfast,
Northern Ireland for a two week vacation in 1975.
"I met up with a couple of
Irish fellows and I got a job washing dishes in a restaurant in Times Square. I
took my breaks at night and I walked around 42nd Street and I fell in love with
New York," he says. "I decided to stay, not to go back."
Oscar was 19 years old when he
and his brother left Colombia in 1980. "We came here because of
necessity," he says. "We had to help our families there. There were
no opportunities there. I always sent back money. Since the first time I
started working here, never a month went by that I did not send money to my
mother."
Osmond Aznan, a Kurd from Turkey,
came to the United States in 1989. Three years ago, he and a Turkish friend
opened the Istanbul Grill, a 24-hour-a-day restaurant they have recently
expanded. Osmond says it is a struggle, but business is good.
"It is really tough. I
didn't know it until I got into the business. It is very tough," he says.
"We are okay. We are good. Every year we are almost double. Everything is
fresh and made daily because we have no storage to keep it."
Professor Orum, says studies show
some noticeable differences in recent patterns of assimilation. Most
strikingly, unlike earlier groups, many recent immigrants are abandoning inner
cites and resettling in ethnic enclaves in the suburbs, where they can survive
without learning English well.
According to Oscar Carreno,
learning English is not easy. But listening to radio and television helps.
"In Colombia, I used to listen to a lot of rock music when I was a
teenager, a lot of these heavy metal groups," he says. "I liked the
music so much that at the same time you want to understand what they are saying
so you kind of educate your ear and then you want to know what his word means
and everything."
Sociologist Anthony Orum says
many of his colleagues believe the current generation of immigrants are
assimilating in the same way as previous generations. But he is not convinced.
"My own opinion from close
observation over the past several years is that the ethnic community, whether
you are Mexican, Indian, Nigerian, Polish, Bosnian, that the ethnic community
remains very important to the groups of new immigrants," he says. "So
that some may come in here and go ahead and move through the educational
system, get great jobs, but they do not completely abandon the idea of their
ethnicity or nationality."
Oscar has pursued the so-called
American dream ever since he arrived in the United States, working two
full-time jobs as a doorman to buy his own home and put his two daughters
through school. But he also feels a deep attachment to his roots.
"It is within you. It is a
blessing," he says. "It makes you a richer person a better person
knowing that you can understand the American culture and at the same time you
keep your culture. I have not lost my culture at all."
Professor Orum says studies show
that many current immigrants, especially those from Latin America, move back
and forth between the two cultures with ease.
"One of my arguments about
the assimilation of previous generations, Irish and Italians, Polish, is that
many of them were forced to abandon their national culture, their ethnicity by
virtue of world wars and by virtue of the fact that many could not
return," he says. "So they were here more or less permanently.
Nowadays people can move back and forth easily between their home cultures and
between the United States."
That ability is very important to
Oscar Carreno who visits his family in Colombia and his wife's family in the
Dominican Republic with his daughters every few years.
"You have to make them aware
of where they come from and they are very proud of their cultures, Dominican
and Columbian," he says. "At the same time, they are American
citizens."
But Tony Hanna, a maintenance
technician, did not go home for 22 years after arriving in the United States.
"Nothing was changed in the neighborhood in Belfast that I am from,"
he says. "They had built new houses, but the people and everything else
was pretty much the same. I was home three days when I called my sister and
told her to change my ticket. I wanted to come back. I felt out of place. I
felt like a tourist."
Still, Tony has made sure his
children are aware of Irish traditions. "I think it is important for the
kids," he says. "The kids went to Irish step dancing classes. My
daughter took Gaelic-Irish language classes. Stuff like that. I think it is
important to remember where you came from, but I also think it is very
important that they are Americans first."
Despite concern about immigrants
triggered by the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, sociologists say there
is little real tension between today's immigrants and the rest of American
society.
- This article is talking about the immigrant who sad of the assimilation that hapenned to the other immigrants that forget who they are, where they come from, they were complacent by the pleasure that they get in USA and they forget their culture in their motherland. They shouldn't forget their culture even though they are living in the other country. The conclusion is the assimilation raises the good and the bad effects.
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