USA Today (Op-Ed)
By Erika Lee
July 7, 2015
Once
singled out for exclusion by law from the United States, Chinese
immigrants now make up the largest single group of arrivals a year into
this country. The Census
Bureau says China replaced Mexico as the top country of origin for
immigrants to the U.S. in 2013.
Given
the history, this growth – and the fact that Chinese immigrants are
considered part of the Asian-American "model minority" – seems
improbable. But the story of Chinese
immigration, past and present reminds how fickle our attitudes about
immigrants can prove.
On the wrong side of history
Although
many of today's Chinese immigrants are students and investors, earlier
Chinese immigrants were considered the lowest of the low-skilled..
Chinese sailors were
among the crew on a ship that arrived in Baltimore in 1784. Chinese
immigrants were living in New York City in the 1830s. And Chinese were
among the thousands of gold seekers who rushed into California during
the Gold Rush in the mid-19th century. By 1870,
there were 64,000 Chinese in the United States, most of them in
California, and almost all of them from the Pearl River Delta outside
Guangzhou in southern China.
These
Chinese immigrants faced a tremendous hostility, despite amounting to
only a small fraction of the total foreign-born population in the United
States in the late
19th century. They were charged with taking away jobs, corrupting white
women, and threatening American civilization. In 1882, the U.S. passed
the Chinese Exclusion Act, which barred Chinese laborers, prohibited all
Chinese immigrants from becoming naturalized citizens, and allowed only select classes of Chinese to apply for
admission.
While
the act was in effect – from 1882 to 1943 – Chinese immigrants became
America's first "illegal" immigrants. Chinese immigration drastically
dropped, though it never
totally stopped. Many of those who came resorted to false papers (like
my own grandfather). Those who. arrived in San Francisco faced harsh
interrogations, humiliating medical examinations, and long detentions in
the unsanitary barracks on Angel Island in
San Francisco Bay.
An end to selective immigration
In
the past 50 years, Chinese immigration has undergone a dramatic
transformation. The 1965 immigration Act ended national origins quotas
favoring immigration from Europe
over other parts of the world; it also established preferences for
professional and skilled workers. At the same time, China's subsequent
economic modernization and global outlook revived and diversified the
flow of immigration from China.
In
1960, there were just under 100,000 Chinese-born immigrants in the
United States. In 2010, the Census reported over 3.3 million adult
Chinese-Americans. As of that
year,, Chinese Americans had higher median annual personal earnings
than the general U.S. population.
How far have we really come?
While
Chinese immigrants may not be scrutinized in the same way that
undocumented low-skilled Mexican immigrants are,, it would be wrong to
assume that America has fully
embraced Chinese and other Asian immigrants. Some Americans resent
having to go to a doctor who has a foreign accent, for example, or
having their kids compete with talented foreign-born (and second
generation Asian-American) students for college admissions
or jobs.
There
could be even more resentment if China's national wealth and strength
becomes more pronounced, and more explicitly opposed to American
interests. This country has
often treated immigrants unfairly based on the actions of their
countries of origin. In 1999, Chinese-American scientist Wen Ho Lee was
unfairly accused of spying for the People's Republic of China. Could
there be more episodes like this in the near future?
As
Chinese immigrants have gone from being the most excluded immigrants to
the most numerous, we should recognize what has changed and what has
not. Chinese immigrants
and Chinese-Americans are growing in number. They are often held up as
America's "good" immigrants. But they and other Asian-Americans remain
vulnerable to anxieties, economic shifts and political struggles. How
far have Chinese Americans really risen? And
during a time of increasing xenophobia and concern about a newly
powerful China worldwide, how easily might they fall?
Erika
Lee is a historian and writer and director of the Immigration History
Research Center at the University of Minnesota. Her most recent book,
The Making of Asian America:
A History will be published in September. She wrote this for What It
Means to Be American a national conversation hosted by the Smithsonian
and Zocalo Public Square.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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