Stranger From A Different Shore
Strangers From A Different Shore by author/professor Ronald Takaki has brought a new perspective of my growing knowledge of the hardships and endless obstacles that Asian-Americans have struggled with through their immigration experience. Immigrants of Asia represent many countries and many different situations that have brought them to this "better" country with hopes for "more opportunities" to succeed. Asian-Americans are those whose roots are from Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Philippines, Japan, China, Cambodia, Korea, and Hmong to name the most common. Asian-Americans have overcome drastic situations to carry the status that they do today. Currently Asian-Americans represent the fastest growing minority group in the United States. Half of all immigrants that enter the U.S. annually are Asian. Asian-Americans come from the same part of the world, the same continent, yet their struggles have left them in different situations. Although the commonalities of hardships that exist between the Asian ethnic groups are greatly the same that can also be separated from likeness just as easy. A common ground brings these people together but their separate countries and even within a country different regions w
Unlike other Asian immigrants, many Koreans didn't leave home because of economic hardships. Many Filipinos replaced the Japanese as laborers in Hawaii and on the mainland, especially after the 1924 Immigration Act. Some women came with their husbands; others arrived as "picture brides," met by unknown future husbands in America. After America liberated the Philippines in 1944, Americans attitudes toward Filipinos improved. In 1941, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in Hawaii and introducing war, which led to the signing of "Executive Order 9066. The same harsh discrimination and the same treatment that they were less than an Anglo have resurfaced. Many rice farmers in southwestern Japan were heavily taxed and hoped to make their fortunes in America. As with the Chinese, World War II improved the condition of Filipino-Americans. They worked in fields doing seasonal work and migrated throughout the west following the crops. Many escaped through jungles and drifted at sea in tiny boats. 's brought home brides and professionals arrived. When the Vietnam War ended in 1975, hard times did not end for the people of Southeast Asia. Takaki has shown me that Asian-Americans have the same racial discrimination problems that African-Americans have had to endure. " This gave the Issei and Nisei 10 days to sell everything they had.
Common topics in this essay:
Ethnic Studies,
Unlike Asian,
Exclusion Act,
Vietnam War,
Lao Laos,
Asian Asian-Americans,
Act American,
Whereas African-Americans,
Chinese Japanese,
Issei Nisei,
chinese exclusion,
chinese exclusion act,
exclusion act,
world war ii,
unlike asian immigrants,
japanese immigration,
immigration restrictions,
unlike asian,
america koreans,
brought home,
war ii,
gi's brought home,
world war,
los angeles,
1924 immigration act,
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