rediff.com
rediff.com
News Find/Feedback/Site Index
      HOME | NEWS | COLUMNS
August 3, 2000

Achievers
Books
Business
Calendar
Community
Controversy
Cuisine
Eateries
Education
Enterprise
Faith
Good Samaritans
Health
Infotech
Media
Memories
Movies
News Archives
Opinion
Specials
The Arts

Chithra Karunakaran

Born in the USA -- not!

E-Mail this column to a friend

Immigrants to New York City from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh more than doubled to 146,000 in the last 10 years, according to a survey conducted by the United States census bureau. The city is experiencing a surge of immigrants, at the rate of 100,000 new arrivals a year since 1990, hitting the one million mark in the new millennium. Like myself, more New Yorkers than ever before are not, as the old Bruce Springsteen song goes, 'Born in the USA.'

Indians in New York number 64,000 new residents, with Bangladesh and Pakistan together contributing 82,000, according to the survey which sampled 16,000-plus households in Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Staten Island.

The size of the sample as well as the fact that the Census Bureau has conducted the survey make the data appear reliable. The New York City Housing and Vacancy Survey, as it is called is undertaken every three years for the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, a city agency. In this survey, for the first time, Indians and Mexican foreign-born are being counted separately from their respective regional counterparts. The next such survey will be conducted in 2002 using a new sample drawn from households responding to the 2000 Census.

Indian immigrants are by no means the largest number of new arrivals in New York City. Immigrants from the Dominican Republic continue to top the list of foreign-born residents in the last decade, increasing from over 200,000 in 1990 to well over 300,000 in 1999. Immigrants from the former Soviet Union tripled to over 200,000 while Mexicans quadrupled to almost 150,000 during the same 10-year period.

The city has drawn the foreign-born since the early 1600's when it was still called New Amsterdam. Back then, its 500 residents spoke 18 languages. The 1999 survey shows the county of Queens is the nation's most diverse, boasting 167 nationalities and 116 languages. Now, 40 per cent of all New York City residents were born abroad, a figure unrivalled since the early 1900's.

I spoke with Bruce Lambert, the New York Times Metro reporter whose story on the survey appeared some days ago and also with Professor Andrew Beveridge of Queens College who analysed some of the data provided in the survey.

Lambert reminisced briefly about a trip to India, Sri Lanka and Nepal. He recounted a story related to him by Senator Daniel Moynihan. The Senator from New York remembers seeing a busload of delegates of Indian origin arriving in Albany, the state capital and remembers thinking, "Well, the bus carrying the Pakistani and Bangladeshi delegates can't be far behind!"

In a word, we had arrived. Beveridge wondered whether the Bangladesh and Pakistan foreign born had been "over- counted". I replied that if anything they had been undercounted as had the Indians. Practically every street fruit vendor and small restaurateur in Manhattan is from Dhaka. Besides, all foreign groups tend to be undercounted because many immigrants who are 'undocumented aliens' do not respond to the questionnaires circulated by the Census Bureau.

So the foreign-born, among them Indians and other south Asians, are continuing to come to New York in unprecedented numbers bringing new life to its streets, shops and neighborhoods. We have indeed arrived, as Moynihan implied when he saw the busload of Indian delegates arriving in Albany. But where do we really want to go?

Previous: A year of melody

Tell us what you think of this column

HOME | NEWS | BUSINESS | MONEY | SPORTS | MOVIES | CHAT | INFOTECH | TRAVEL
SINGLES | NEWSLINKS | BOOK SHOP | MUSIC SHOP | GIFT SHOP | HOTEL BOOKINGS
AIR/RAIL | WEATHER | MILLENNIUM | BROADBAND | E-CARDS | EDUCATION
HOMEPAGES | FREE EMAIL | CONTESTS | FEEDBACK