Wednesday, January 31, 2018

My Grandma was an Illiterate "Chain" Immigrant

In a recent speech, Attorney General Jeff Sessions criticized “chain” migration saying, “It doesn’t favor education or skills. It just favors anybody who has a relative in America.” My Grandma was an illiterate “chain” immigrant, so I see things a bit differently.

My Grandma
We were never really sure how old Grandma Sarah was when she immigrated. Sometimes when she told the story she was nine years-old, sometimes she was twelve. It didn’t really matter. Her father took her by train to the Lithuanian city where she would board a boat for America by herself.

I’ve often wondered what that scene was like and how they felt. He must have been terribly conflicted. The pogroms were beginning, and he probably sensed the coming holocaust that would consume most of our European relatives. She must have been terrified at the prospect of leaving behind her family and the only life she had known to go to a strange land across the sea.

Sarah arrived in the US and went to live with relatives who were already working hard to make ends meet, making her a “chain” immigrant. She worked in a sweatshop. She learned to read and write English, but she was happiest when she could speak Yiddish. She loved to tell Yiddish jokes and stories. I vividly recall Grandma and my Dad laughing uproariously over some Yiddish joke which they would then try to translate into English for us. Usually, the joke ended with, “It’s a lot funnier in Yiddish.”

Buddy, Sarah & Bobby
Eventually Sarah met a nice young man, got married and further settled into life in her new country. My grandfather did not complete high-school, but he was bright, resourceful and worked hard to provide for his family. They had two boys. Buddy, my dad, did well in school, was popular and a star athlete in High School. Uncle Bobby was popular and smart enough to graduate from high school at the age of fifteen. Buddy and Bobby loved their country and valued freedom, so when the US entered World War Two, both young men served their country admirably.

Buddy returned from the war and, with help from the “GI Bill,” graduated from Duke University with a degree in engineering – the first college graduate in his family. Of course, this experience also turned him into a life-long basketball fanatic! Bobby didn’t finish college, but he went to work, learned the restaurant business and became the prosperous owner of several of his own. Buddy eventually started his own business and over time became a successful entrepreneur. They both believed strongly in Tzedakah, the Jewish concept that charitable giving and service to the community are acts of justice and righteousness and a moral obligation. They put that belief into practice by giving not just their money, but their time and leadership.

Bobby and Buddy were good family men. They each married the love of their life and sustained those marriages over many decades, eventually reaching the “until death” part. Between them they had seven children. Sarah’s grandchildren grew up in happy homes and graduated from college. Between them there are two doctors, one dentist, two businesswomen and a special education teacher. They all practice some form of Tzedakah. Sarah lived long enough to know some of the fourteen great-grandchildren that followed.

I don’t mean to give the impression that our family is perfect. Like all families, we have had ups and downs. There have been a few divorces. We’ve been touched by misfortune, disease, addiction and mental illness. We stick together and help each other as best we can and forgive each other when necessary. That’s how life is.

My wife and I were talking about this the other day. She is of Irish-Catholic descent. Her grandmother, another illiterate “chain” immigrant, left Ireland fleeing the potato famine. My wife’s mom and dad worked hard most of their lives and practiced the Catholic equivalent of Tzedakah. He served in World War Two. They had three kids: a doctor, an engineer and a businessman. Seven grandchildren.

Immigration is hard and can create a selection bias. You have to be pretty tough and determined to leave your native country and come to a strange land. Would you get on the boat like Sarah did? Or send your 12-year-old daughter half-way around the world by herself? Immigrants are more likely to succeed and value the freedom and opportunity that America provides.

This is the story of America across the generations. There are always immigrants seeking a better life and believe they can find it in America. There are always ignorant fools who see them not as individuals but as vermin, scum and undesirable. Jewish, Catholic, Muslim. Lithuanian, Irish, Polish, Italian, Mexican, African. It makes no difference. The same ignorance, bigotry and nativism appears in each generation and with each new wave of immigrants.

There’s a valid debate to be had about immigration. A country that doesn’t control its borders is not a country. The needs of current citizens should take priority and have to be balanced with the long-term value immigrants bring. We should do what we reasonably can to help when there is a true humanitarian crisis, but we can’t solve all of the world’s problems. Culture does matter. Assimilation is important: a common creed and shared language help bind us together. But assuming all people who share a skin color, country of origin or religion are all the same is racism and bigoted. It also points to a lack of knowledge (or honesty) about one’s own history: We are all immigrants.

So, the next time you hear someone say something like, “Why do we want all these people from s*hole countries?” or “We only want literate immigrants”, I hope you will remember my grandma Sarah. She made America a better place and stands as proof that “E Pluribus Unum” is not a slogan but part of the American creed.