Losing Out For No Fair Reason

Jane, a 24-year-old girl who moved to America from Canada 2 years ago, talks about the frustrations of getting a green card:

The process of getting a green card just takes so long, the job wasn’t willing to wait to find out if I was approved. They were like, listen, you’re a great candidate for the job and your exactly what were looking for, were so sorry, try again next year. I ended up getting a different job, but its not as good, I get paid less and I have worse hours. So I didn’t get the job I really wanted because of the green card process.

 

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What’s the Point of U.S. Citizenship?

Jane, a 24-year-old woman who moved to America from Canada 2 years ago, emphasizes her strong sense of being a Canadian:

I definitely consider myself a Canadian citizen. I’m very proud to be a Canadian. It’s a great country and its fun to be different. (smiles) Everyone around me is American, but I’m a Canadian. I just happen to live here. I don’t associate myself as an American.

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Proud to be an American

Miriam, an immigrant from Russia with vast experiences traveling all over Europe, comments on her pride for America:

Oh, I’m an American. A 110 percent. Let me tell you something – we live in one of the greatest countries in the world. One of the greatest – not the greatest. There are a lot of countries that do things better than we do, but a lot of people refuse to acknowledge that, but it is one the greatest countries in the world. And I’m very proud to be an American. And that’s the only thing I ever felt. As soon as I came to this country, I felt this was home

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A New Lifestyle in America

Miriam, an immigrant from Russia, decides to break her parents’ old-world tradition and goes to college against their wishes:

No, my parents did not want me to go to college at all. They felt that college was not necessary for a girl at all. A girl was going to get married and have kids, and so on, and if I hadn’t lived in New York City, and been able to go to a City University, I would never have been able to go to college, because they didn’t have the money, and even if they had, they wouldn’t have spent it. They wouldn’t have thought it was important.

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Making a Living as Skilled Shoemaker

Miriam talk about her father, a man with modest human capital, who made a living as a shoemaker:

My father was a shoemaker. He was in an old-fashioned European intern…no not an intern…he was an apprentice when he was 11 to a master shoemaker, and he learned his trade from them, you know. And he was the kind of shoemaker that…he could make a shoe and just say, ‘put your foot on a piece of paper,’ he’d draw it, and the next thing you know, you had shoes. I mean, he could make a shoe from beginning to end. And when we came here, there weren’t too many jobs in shoemakers, so he worked as a leather cutter in the pocketbook industry. In the expense of pocketbooks, you have to know how to cut the leather properly so that it fits together and looks right, and there are no damages and so on, so of course he was very knowledgeable about leather, so that’s what he did.

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Why I Don’t Vote

Sarah, an elderly immigrant from Tel Aviv, discusses her relationship to American politics:

Yes! Yes, I follow [political events in the U.S.]. The election, Obama and everything. And the news—its very interesting. I don’t go feel myself to vote though….I don’t have an influence; it’s not my country.

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Sarah’s Linguistic Learning Process

Sarah, a woman in her mid-seventies from Tel Aviv, immigrated to Brooklyn 21 years ago. Here, she discusses her struggle with the English language:

It’s very hard for me; very hard for me to read. Slowly… and I read mostly Hebrew. All my books… and also speaking.. Because most of the people are Israeli because I have to speak only English on the phone. And when I call the parents… I don’t speak enough English. All my friends are Israeli—I only speak Hebrew.

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