This essay examines the life of Emi Calderon Chu who was born in Cuba and was the youngest of three children. Emi resided in an assisted living facility until she passed away Emi migrated to the United States at the ages of 24 in pursuit of better economic opportunities. The catalyst to her migration from Cuba was a result of political turmoil and economic hardship. Upon moving to American Emi resided in a close-knitted ethnic enclave. Emi’s primary language was Spanish and her education profile included an 8th grade education. She had an employment history as a textile factory worker. Her current family composition includes two grandchildren and three adult children two of who she did not have a close relationship with. As a young adult and into middle adulthood she had an excellent family support system until her parents, husband, sister all passed away. She had a history of mental illness including …show more content…
Also, discussed is the relevant of Life Course Perspective which examines individual life histories in order to understand how prior events, social and economic conditions, and individual characteristics influence decisions and events over time. Also, discussed are the roles of risk and protective factors that threaten or promoted Emi’s well-being. Due to the interplay of social, economic, and political forces which are parts of the macro system Emi’s parents insisted she leaves Cuba. In 1959, Fidel Castro took over the government of Cuba. Emi’s parents feared this would not be good because of the alignment with Communism. Castro placed businesses and land under government control and anyone who spoke out against the new laws were portrayed as enemies of the revolution. After the new laws were implemented Emi and her family experienced economic hardship and struggled to
Thirty-seven years to the date April 20th, 2017, Fidel Castro enacted the policy of the Mariel boatlift, in which he’d allow Cubans seeking to emigrate to the United States to do so by departing at Mariel. This number would eventually eclipse 125,000 people seeking asylum and refuge from Cuba, and the regime in which at one point they felt represented or directly opposed their own viewpoints. The first wave of Cuban exiles being the extremely wealthy, in direct opposition to Fidel Castro’s regime for a race-less society, and a single-class economy, government, and social order. The ultimatum being set at you’re with the revolution or you’re not, this encouraged former supporters of the now ousted Batista, to seek refuge in the United States.
In the story “Antojos’” by Julia Alvarez, the main character, a wealthy Dominican woman named Yolanda, travels to the Dominican Republic in order to search for her cultural and personal identity. Her difficulty interacting and relating to her old family members before she immigrated to America reflects the emotional hardship of immigration.
The choice made by the author and her family to leave Cuba stems from the many negative aspects of life due to the communist revolution. Many of the reasons for Mirta’s family to seek emigration arose from the harmful political impact that the rise of Fidel Castro created, which propagated to adversely affect their personal lives. Ojito mentions the opinion about island politics which her parents held as early as the prologue. Her parents never believed, even before Fidel’s rise, that “A thirty-three-year-old in dirty fatigues and a
Cristina Henriquez’, The Book of Unknown Americans, folows the story of a family of immigants adjusting to their new life in the United States of America. The Rivera family finds themselves living within a comunity of other immigrants from all over South America also hoping to find a better life in a new country. This book explores the hardships and injustices each character faces while in their home country as well as withina foreign one, the United States. Themes of community, identity, globalization, and migration are prevalent throughout the book, but one that stood out most was belonging. In each chacters viewpoint, Henriquez explores their feelings of the yearning they have to belong in a community so different than the one that they are used to.
Even though Cuba is a little under 100 miles away from the United States, the relationship between the two countries has created an atmosphere full of tension and perpetual mistrust. When Fidel Castro decided to align Cuba with the U.S.S.R. and become a communist country, the United States of America was stunned and highly insulted. Because of their relationship, both countries have played a back and forth game of trying to outdo the other. This game and state of affairs in Cuba has created a large influx of Cuban immigrants looking for better opportunities and trying to escape poverty and persecution. This paper will be focusing on Cuban immigrants and examining different Cuban immigration laws, which allowed them to easily become United States citizens, including; the Cuban Adjustment Act, The Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of 1976 and the Wet Foot, Dry Foot Policy. It will also discuss whether the Cuban immigration laws are unfair to other foreign immigrants and whether the laws are relevant today. Finally, we will be considering the future and try to predict how the laws will change with the changing diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States and the imminent removal of the Embargo Act.
Cuba is merely one example of a society. Juan Cabrera is simply an ordinary example of an individual. What The Lonely Crossing of Juan Cabrera by J. Joaquin Fraxedas bring to light is the extraordinary effects of stepping outside the comfort zone of following the expectations of those that lead our governments. Although the situation was unlike our own it highlights what could very well could have
The effects of the Cuban Revolution on women’s lives and gender relations in Cuba from 1959 to 1990 include that some say women have not reached equality yet with men, women gained more opportunities for themselves, economy and politics, and also how women still had responsibility for children and home, not men.
Through interviewing my roommate Linda Wang, I have gotten the opportunity of hearing a first-hand account of what it is like being a young immigrant living in the United States. At the age of eight, Linda, along with her father, mother, and aunt, emigrated to America. Linda’s family currently resides in Bayside, Queens and she is a student-athlete on the St. John’s women’s golf team. Linda was kind enough to share her immigration story with me so that I may use it as a manifestation of what life as an immigrant, and the immigration process itself, entails.
Author, Pablo Medina, in his reflective memoir, “Arrival: 1960” illustrates his transition from Cuba to New York as a young boy. Medina describes how his first impressions differed from what he thought he would encounter. He faced new challenges, involving his race, that never occurred back in Cuba. By reflecting on this experience in a first person point of view, Medina depicts the disappointment that he and other immigrants face while adapting to their new world.
The Effects of the Cuban Revolution on Women’s lives and Gender relations in Cuba from 1959 to 1990
The readings for this week consisted of the second half of Conceiving Cuba by Elise Andaya (2014). This half of the book focused on abortion, gendered work and surviving through migration (Andaya, 2014). Overall, Andaya (2014) focuses less on reproductive health and women than one would expect, and instead provides more of a critique of the shortcomings of the socialist revolution in Cuba. These critiques get in the way of Andaya’s (2014) narrative and ultimately detract from the discussion of reproductive health in Cuba.
During Enrique’s home life he has dealt with many obstacles that shape his decision of setting forth into the United States. The average American will need to get an insight about the struggles and difficulties migrants like Enrique must face in their journeys north and what they endure in the United States after they arrive. Enrique’s hand of justice has been quite different than the average American because of the strong economic disadvantages, his childhood and family struggles, and his journey north to be reunited with his mom. In this essay I will begin to tell you about Enrique’s pre-birth/childhood, his neighborhood, and his journey in Honduras and the United States.
Julia Alvarez is the narrator and author of this book, in which it describes her and her families life adjusting their immigrant ways to their new life in the United States. Alvarez has grown up with her Dominican culture but throughout the book she tries her very best to fit into
Wendy Guerra’s Everyone Leaves is a story about the obstacles Nieve encountered growing up in Cuba with a broken family. Though one could argue life in Cuba did not hinder Nieve’s hinder Nieve’s chances of becoming successful, Cuba’s shortcomings are stated throughout Everyone Leaves. From the disconnect Cuba has with the rest of the world, to the restrictions that come with living in a communist society on an island nation, the negative effects Cuba has on Nieve is evident. Though there are many challenges Nieve faces on a micro level with her family and friends, the obstacles Nieve encountered on a macro level can be connected to the challenges of life in Cuba. The theme obstacles of life in Cuba was revealed by Wendy Guerra early on
To begin, Esmerelda Santiago and her family immigrated into the United States from Puerto Rico. Immigration means, the movement of persons into a non-native country. At this point in time the family only consisted of Esmerelda, her seven younger siblings, Mami, Tata, Tío Chico, and Don Julio. After moving around from apartment to apartment, they finally settled down in Brooklyn, New York. Esmerelda explains that they came to Brooklyn, “in search of medical care for my youngest brother, Raymond, whose toes were nearly severed by a bike chain” (Santiago 1998: 3). Mami hoped for better medical attention for her child than she would have received in Macún, Puerto Rico. Esmerelda also describes the apartment they currently lived in on McKibbin Street, in New York as, “more substantial that any of our houses in Puerto Rico” (Santiago 1998: 6). This shows her level of living back in Puerto Rico was a worse living