Coming to America

In an interview with a 30-year-old male immigrant, Johnny, we discussed when and why his family moved.  He was born in Venezuela, brought up in Colombia, and then moved to New York City at the age of 11 and back again at 18:

We were in Medellin, well, I was in Medellin until the age of 11.  My parents immigrated first, to the U.S., and I was left with my grandparents.  They watched over me during the time they were in the U.S.  […]  They came here to work, for a better life, as most Latin American families do when they come to the US.”

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Americanized

Johnny was born in Venezuela, grew up in Colombia, and moved to Queens, NY, for the first time at the age of 11.   After some back and forth, he permanently settled in the United States at the age of 18 and now is 30 years old.  When we talked about identity and notions of belonging, Johnny commented that his identity was heavily influenced by his experience with learning the English language:

Nowadays, well, if by American you mean a U.S. citizen, nowadays, yes.  I speak in English now.  Even though it is not my first language.  […]  I use it most of the time.  So, I would say it occupies my thoughts, the way I communicate with people, the way I want to communicate with people, the way I actually plan my life.  So, that makes me very much American.  The industrialized way that I have been raised, here, to learn to do things on the snap, you know, go get this go pay for that, this is how you establish certain procedures and certain factors in your life – paying bills, going to school, it is pretty much at a pace where it matches an industrialized nation such as this, yeah I am very American.  If I go back home, if I ask the time I expect the time.  If I say I am going to be somewhere at 1 p.m.  I will be at that place and do what I am supposed to do at 1 p.m. It’s not like that in Columbia.  People basically chill.  It’s not such a priority.”

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Juggling Triple Citizenship

Johnny, 30, was born in Venezuela, grew up in Colombia, and moved to Queens for the first time at the age of 11.  After some back and forth, he settled in the United States at the age of 18.  He talks about the challenges of being a citizen of more than one country:

I focus a lot of my attention where I live, so I am more involved here.  I am actually concerned with what happens here because I am here.  But I am also very close, I am more close to Columbia, or my citizenship of Columbia, because that is where most of my family is from.  Ever since I was little, I was always a foreigner.  Even in Columbia, I was a foreigner.  In Venezuela, it wasn’t really that I was a foreigner, but I really wasn’t raised there, I don’t speak their accent.  Venezuelans, they view me a as foreigner.  […]  The view for me has been, even here, it’s not that different.  I always came from somewhere else.  But, I do live here and therefore I take more interest.”

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The United States: For Better and for Worse

Johnny was born in Venezuela, grew up in Colombia, and moved to Queens, NY, for the first time at the age of 11.   After some back and forth, he permanently settled in the United States at the age of 18 and now is 30 years old.  When asked what he liked better about the United States and what he like better about Colombia, he replied:

In some respects, it’s better here.  But in some respects, people are more…  I guess when you don’t have so much access to information and so much access to a computer and so much access to anything, people have more time to spend with people and socialize more.  I mean, humans need human contact.  But at the same time, when it comes to progress, people are slow to progress.  I mean, here, if I needed to know my report card or what is in my bank account to transfer or make a payment or whatever it is.”

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