- Thread Starter
- #61
This is a truly pertinent point you have raised. And I understand this situation entirely and it concludes exactly that in many cases where immigrants are marginalised, the only society to them is to be found from creating a resurgence in their former society only within new borders.http://books.google.com/books?id=ax4_AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA23&dq=refuse+to+assimilate+china&hl=en&ei=_ARoTpCTBIn10gGkq6n4Cw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=refuse to assimilate china&f=false
"The Chinaman in America," from "The Critic," December 1881.
What was true then has been true in the history of America for all sorts of immigrants, right up to the present day. Oh, we don't murder them anymore (thankfully), but there is no doubt that recent immigrants are shunned and shifted to one side in our society (perhaps in any society). Look at American ex-pats living and working in other nations, especially those that are not English-speaking nations. They tend to live with or near each other, and to hang out with each other, and although they have to learn to function in their new society, they also cling to their American friends and traditions and speak English with each other, etc. It's human nature.
The less a given immigrant group looked or spoke like the typical Anglo-Saxon Protestant American, the more they tended to group together in ghettos and keep their own language and tradition. Why did they not just accept that they lived in a new country and reject their old ways? In many cases because they were not ALLOWED to, even while being criticized for not doing so. Even Irish Catholics, who looked like and spoke like Anglo-Saxon Protestants, were denied work, housing, and public office at certain times in our US history - how could you ask them to 'join in' a society that hated them and tried to kill them?
Nevertheless, personally, I would not ask that they (and I count myself as immigrant being mere 3rd gen to the UK) "join in", rather I would question why, having chosen to emigrate do they subsequently refuse to fully take on a task (immigration) what they themselves have begun.
This is just an honest question. I do not mean to be antagonistic. I am sorry if it comes over that way to anyone.