- The next Americans
- Immigrants don't destroy our national identity, they renew it.
- By Tomás R. Jiménez,
- Los Angeles Times/Opinion
- May 27, 2007
-
- BEHIND THE OUTCRY over the controversial immigration reform
legislation making its way through the Senate lies an unsettling question
for many Americans. Should the bill become a reality, an estimated 12
million unauthorized immigrants, the vast majority of whom are Latino,
would become eligible for citizenship immediately, and opportunities for
millions of others to follow them would be created. What effect will these
permanently settled immigrants have on American identity?
Some critics of the legislation are already arguing that inviting millions
of immigrants to stay permanently in the U.S. and become citizens will
hasten the fading of a cohesive nation. They say that immigrants may
become more interwoven into the fabric of the United States, but the
ethnic patches to which they bind their identities will remain all too
distinguishable from the rest of the American quilt.
How immigrants and their descendants see themselves will change over time,
and they will simultaneously transform many aspects of what it means to be
an American. This is undoubtedly an uncomfortable process, fraught with
tension between newcomers and established Americans that can occasionally
become explosive. But the real issue is whether the United States can
provide opportunities for upward mobility so that immigrants can, in turn,
fortify what is most essential to our nation's identity.
History is instructive on whether immigrants will create a messy patchwork
of ethnicities in the U.S. About a century ago, a tide of Southern and
Eastern European immigrants arriving on our shores raised fears similar to
those we hear today. Then, as now, Americans worried that the newcomers
were destroying American identity. Many were certain that Catholic
immigrants would help the pope rule the United States from Rome, and that
immigrant anarchists would destroy American democracy. Some eugenicists
thought that the dark-skinned immigrants from Southern Europe would
contaminate the American gene pool.
None of this came to pass, of course. The pope has no political say in
American affairs, the United States is still a capitalist democracy, and
there is nothing wrong with the American gene pool. The fact that these
fears never materialized is often cited as proof that European-origin
immigrants and their descendants successfully assimilated into an American
societal monolith.
However, as sociologists Richard Alba and Victor Nee point out, much of
the American identity as we know it today was shaped by previous waves of
immigrants. For instance, they note that the Christian tradition of the
Christmas tree and the leisure Sunday made their way into the American
mainstream because German immigrants and their descendants brought these
traditions with them. Where religion was concerned, Protestantism was the
clear marker of the nonsecular mainstream. But because of the assimilation
of millions of Jews and Catholics, we today commonly refer to an American
"Judeo-Christian tradition," a far more encompassing notion of American
religious identity than the one envisioned in the past.
Immigrants are also redefining American identity today, though there
are differences. For one, assimilation no longer exclusively means
shedding all remnants of ethnicity and adopting a way of life largely
identified with Anglo Protestants. For instance, it was not at all
uncommon in the early 20th century for teachers to give young immigrant
pupils a stern rap across their knuckles for speaking their parents'
mother tongue in school. By contrast, multiculturalism and the value of
diversity are now widely adopted.
Although some see this as undercutting a cohesive U.S., we nonetheless
regularly celebrate, even if sometimes superficially, the various ethnic
strands in our multicultural nation. Education, business and political
leaders tout the virtues of diversity, and the world of commerce affirms
ethnic identity through ethnically oriented marketing aimed at selling
everything from laundry detergent to quinceañera celebration
packages at Disneyland.
These differences from the past have not — and are not — reversing the
course of assimilation, even if they have given it a new tone. There are
notable signs that immigrants and their children are already adopting
features of American identity as their own. Consider, for instance,
language, a central front in debates over assimilation. The growth of
non-English-speaking immigrant populations, particularly those that speak
Spanish, and the explosive rise in commercial services and media that
cater to them have led commentators such as Pat Buchanan to pronounce the
coming of a polyglot society. But nothing appears to be further from the
truth.
Even in Los Angeles County, where 36% of the population is foreign-born
and more than half speak a language other than English at home, English is
not losing out in the long run. According to a recent study by social
scientists Rubén Rumbaut, Douglas Massey and Frank Bean, published in the
Population and Development Review, the use of non-English languages
virtually disappears among nearly all U.S.-born children of immigrants in
the county. Spanish shows more staying power among the U.S.-born children
and grandchildren of Mexican immigrants, which is not surprising given
that the size of the Spanish-speaking population provides near-ubiquitous
access to the language. But the survival of Spanish among U.S.-born
descendants of Mexican immigrants does not come at the expense of their
ability to speak English and, more strikingly, English overwhelms
Spanish-language use among the grandchildren of these immigrants.
An equally telling sign of how much immigrants and their children are
becoming "American" is how different they have become from those in their
ethnic homelands. Virtually all of today's immigrants stay connected to
their countries of origin. They send money to family members who remain
behind. Relatively inexpensive air, rail and bus travel and the
availability of cheap telecommunication and e-mail enable them stay in
constant contact, and dual citizenship allows their political voices to be
heard from abroad. These enduring ties might lead to the conclusion that
continuity between here and there threatens loyalty to the Stars and
Stripes.
But ask any immigrant or their children about a recent visit to their
country of origin, and they are likely to tell you how American they felt.
The family and friends they visit quickly recognize the prodigal
children's tastes for American styles, their American accents and their
declining cultural familiarity with life in the ethnic homeland — all
telltale signs that they've Americanized. As sociologist David Fitzgerald
puts it, their assimilation into American society entails a good deal of
"dissimilation" from the countries the immigrants left behind.
American identity is absorbing something quite significant from immigrants
and being changed by them. Language, food, entertainment and holiday
traditions are palpable aspects of American culture on which immigrants
today, as in the past, are leaving their mark. Our everyday lexicon is
sprinkled with Spanish words. We are now just as likely to grab a burrito
as a burger. Hip-hop is tinged with South Asian rhythms. And Chinese New
Year and Cinco de Mayo are taking their places alongside St. Patrick's Day
as widely celebrated American ethnic holidays.
But these are not the changes to American identity that matter most. At
its core, American identity is a shared belief in the United States as a
land of opportunity — a place where those who work hard and display
individual effort realize their ambitions. Today's immigrants, including
the estimated 12 million that may soon become authorized, have the
potential to fortify the idea of the United States as a land of
opportunity. Their willingness to risk their lives to come here and the
backbreaking work many of them do attest to their ambition.
But their capacity to refresh what is essential to American identity
depends a great deal on our ability to stay true to its essence — to be a
land of opportunity. This means that we should be, above all, concerned
that the rungs on the ladder of economic mobility are sturdy and closely
spaced.
If we are going to take on the formidable challenge of further integrating
12 million mostly poor immigrants, we have to provide better public
schools, a more affordable college education, healthcare and jobs that
offer a decent wage and benefits so that they and their children are able
to rejuvenate the American dream. The real threat is not that immigrants
will fail to buy into what's essential to American identity, but that we
will fall short in providing them the tools to do so.
- _____________________________________________________
- TOMáS R. JIMéNEZ is an assistant professor of sociology and a visiting
research fellow at the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC
San Diego. His research focuses on immigration,
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-op-jiminez27may27,0,4493366.story?coll=la-tot-opinion&track=ntottext
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