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- <text id=90TT0871>
- <link 93TG0132>
- <link 89TT2075>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Strangers In Paradise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 32
- Strangers in Paradise
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Even as they stake claims to the American West, Asians
- experience the ambivalence of assimilation and the perils of
- prosperity
- </p>
- <p>By Howard G. Chua-Eoan--Reported by Scott Brown/Los Angeles
- and Tupper Hull/Stockton
- </p>
- <p> At the western edge of America, where the continent falls
- into the Pacific as it follows the sun, the coast has always
- seemed an image of Eden, a garden of earthly delights. "There
- is an island called California, on the right hand of the
- Indies, very near the Earthly Paradise," wrote a 16th century
- Spanish fantasist in a novel that gave the Golden State its
- name. California and other stretches of the Pacific shore would
- become the fated and fateful destinations of adventurous
- journeys westward by European settlers, cowboys, miners,
- Forty-Niners and dreamers. There the travelers would pass, or
- so they hoped, from their old lives--and the Old World--into a heaven on earth. As Robert Louis Stevenson wrote in 1879
- at the end of a long trip West, "At every turn we could see
- farther into the land and our own happy futures...For this
- was indeed our destination; this was the `good country' we had
- been going to so long."
- </p>
- <p> In spite of the seemingly inexorable European settlement of
- the Pacific Coast, there are strangers in the Western paradise.
- Other peoples too have sought the "good country," though
- instead of crossing the continent, they have crossed an ocean;
- instead of looking back to Europe, they trace their bloodlines
- to Asia. The profound impact they have made on the West is a
- case study of the changes that will sweep the nation as it
- gradually moves beyond the melting pot. As Asians bring
- vitality and a renewed sense of purpose to the region, is
- history repeating itself with a twist? Just as Europeans took
- the region from Native Americans, is the West being won all
- over again by Korean entrepreneurs, Japanese financiers, Indian
- doctors, Filipino nurses, Vietnamese restaurateurs and Chinese
- engineers?
- </p>
- <p> What often passes for Asian ghettos bustle with the pride
- and promise of middle-class America with an exotic cast.
- Churches hold services in English--and Korean, Chinese and
- Tagalog. The curved eaves of Buddhist temples share suburbia
- with the flat roofs of ranch-style homes. Asian shopping malls
- are stocked with everything from disposable diapers to dried
- sea cucumbers that sell for up to $1,000 per lb. Signs in
- English and Spanish compete with those in the Korean Hankul
- alphabet and in Chinese ideograms. When Roman letters appear,
- they are often tricked out in the rococo accents of Vietnamese.
- </p>
- <p> The ties that bind the West Coast to Asia are not merely
- cultural but also financial. At the news of the earthquake that
- ravaged the San Francisco Bay area last October, Wall Street
- barely blinked. But in Tokyo, Manila and Hong Kong, stock
- markets dipped nervously. The Pacific coastland is a 20th
- century Asia Minor, a continent in miniature, with a diversity
- of mores and languages not matched anywhere else. Among those
- who have sunk roots are Cambodians, Thais, Filipinos, Koreans,
- Japanese, Indians, Vietnamese, Indochinese hill people, and
- Chinese from the People's Republic, Taiwan and Southeast Asia.
- Most hold on to vibrant links across the Pacific Basin. East
- may be East and West West, but in this case the West seems more
- and more East as well.
- </p>
- <p> Even as they stake their claims to the American West, Asians
- are encountering problems: racism, the ambivalence of
- assimilation, the perils of prosperity, ethnic jealousies and
- the sometimes dire inequities of a laissez-faire society.
- Asians in general are still strangers in the Western paradise,
- and they are keenly aware of their status.
- </p>
- <p> Many have found success and prosperity in their new home.
- A decade ago, a 1 1/2-mile strip of Bolsa Avenue between Garden
- Grove and Westminster in Orange County, Calif., was a ragged
- quilt of vacant lots and small stores, bean fields and discount
- emporiums. Today the stretch is as alive as payday in a port
- city--specifically, Saigon. Between 20,000 and 50,000
- Vietnamese flock each weekend to 800 shops and restaurants,
- buying herbal medicine and dining out on
- snail-tomato-rice-noodle soup. In the mornings people may attend
- Buddhist ceremonies in makeshift temples; in the evenings they
- can applaud Elvis Phuong, who, complete with skintight pants
- and sneer, does Presley Vietnamese-style.
- </p>
- <p> More than 80,000 refugees have made the area, known locally
- as Little Saigon, the center of one of the largest Vietnamese
- enclaves outside Indochina. Says Frank Jao, the
- Vietnamese-American developer of Bolsa Avenue: "The Chinese,
- the Japanese, the Italians and the Jews grouped together when
- they came to the U.S. There seemed to be no reason why the
- Vietnamese wouldn't follow the same tradition."
- </p>
- <p> Southern California is full of Asian immigrants who are
- doing just that. Across the intersection of Crenshaw and
- Olympic boulevards in Los Angeles is Koreatown, with its
- thousands of Korean businesses: mom-and-pop curio stores,
- multinational banks, tiny storefronts, gleaming glass
- buildings. Upwards of 300,000 Korean Americans live in or near
- Koreatown.
- </p>
- <p> Some 15 miles away, near the intersection of Coldwater
- Canyon and Roscoe boulevards, in the San Fernando Valley
- working-class section of North Hollywood, Buddhist monks pray
- in a Thai temple pungent with incense and dominated by a 10-ft.
- statue of Buddha. On weekends Thai families turn the temple's
- parking lot into a festival straight out of Bangkok.
- </p>
- <p> To the east of Los Angeles is Monterey Park, a city of
- 60,000 people, approximately half of whom are of Chinese
- descent. The rest of the population is 32% white and 16%
- Hispanic. After a Chinese-American developer placed an ad in
- Hong Kong and Taiwan newspapers, an explosion of real estate
- sales occurred in Monterey Park. Dozens of shopping centers
- sprouted to cater to new Chinese residents.
- </p>
- <p> Asians fill the professions and the universities. Already
- Asia has replaced Europe as the leading foreign source of U.S.
- engineers, doctors and technical workers. The 400 Silicon
- Valley electronics firms owned by Asian Americans last year
- earned revenues of $2.5 billion. From 1975 to 1985, the number
- of full-time Asian faculty members in colleges throughout the
- U.S. nearly doubled, to 19,000. Asians make up 10% of
- California's population but 12.2% of the state's university
- enrollment. At the University of California's Berkeley campus,
- the proportion is 20.8%. In February the University of
- California named Chang-lin Tien, a Chinese American, as head
- of the prestigious campus. Still, Asian parents complain of
- quotas that limit the access of their children to the top
- schools.
- </p>
- <p> With the influx from across the Pacific have come Asian
- trade and Asian money. New immigrants do business with friends
- and relatives in their home countries, tapping into Tokyo and
- the expanding capital markets of Hong Kong, Taipei, Singapore
- and Bangkok. Healthy stakes in real estate, banking, medicine,
- engineering, commerce and finance give Asians in America the
- appearance of a gilded community. According to the latest U.S.
- Census, Japanese Americans and Asian Indians possessed the
- largest average family incomes among all ethnic groups,
- including whites.
- </p>
- <p> Yet there is no pan-Asian prosperity, just as there is no
- such thing as an "Asian American." There are comfortably
- middle-class, fourth-generation Japanese Americans, and there
- are prospering new immigrants from Taiwan and South Korea, all
- driven by an admirable work ethic. There are also fragmented
- Filipino families headed by women, and Hmong tribesmen who know
- little of technology and are dependent upon public assistance.
- "There are people without hope in the Asian-American
- community," says Michael Woo, the lone Asian member of the Los
- Angeles city council. It is a strange notion to those whose
- only awareness of Asian Americans is of whiz-kid scholars and
- hardworking greengrocers.
- </p>
- <p> The record of the largest Asian ethnic group in the U.S. is
- ambivalent, with success stories alternating with tales of the
- underclass. Numbering nearly 1 million in California alone,
- Filipinos have found their situation complicated by the
- practice of pressing the Philippine immigration level--currently close to 50,000 a year--to the fullest in order to
- bring along as many relatives as possible, including those who
- have little education and work experience.
- </p>
- <p> Furthermore, prosperous Asian-American families are not
- immune to fragmentation, even among the Koreans, who are
- perhaps the most entrepreneurial of the new immigrants. Long
- hours at the store and the office have taken their toll. The
- all-consuming work ethic has robbed some Korean youths of
- parental supervision and, by extension, a sense of identity.
- Says Youngbin Kim, program coordinator for the Korean Youth
- Center in Los Angeles: "We see a lot of problems with identity
- and self-esteem. These kids look Korean, but they don't want
- to be Korean. They only sense that they are Asian, and then
- they join Asian gangs." In fact, gangs of Korean teenagers from
- affluent homes have replaced an earlier generation of Korean
- gangs that dealt mainly with turf protection and peaked in the
- mid-'80s. The new gangs focus on criminal activity and are made
- up of Filipinos and Vietnamese as well.
- </p>
- <p> The most troubled Asian Americans are the ones from
- Indochina. The 40,000 Cambodians in Southern California have
- settled primarily in one area, Long Beach, 20 miles south of
- downtown Los Angeles. They have few marketable skills and thus
- enter the work force at the lowest levels. Often they have only
- the most basic of business instincts--including imitation.
- In one of the quirks of assimilation, many Cambodians in
- Southern California have gone into the doughnut business,
- following the lead of a countryman whose success at the trade
- was widely publicized; some 500 doughnut shops in Los Angeles
- County are owned or operated by Cambodians.
- </p>
- <p> Survivors of a genocidal war, Cambodians carry traumatic
- psychological burdens. Sometimes it seems as if the war has
- quite literally followed them across the sea. In the municipal
- cemetery in Stockton, Calif., a few graves are marked by odd,
- poignant gifts: plastic dolls, balloons, soft-drink cans,
- plates of fruit, piles of pennies. They are the offerings of
- bereaved Cambodian parents to the spirits of four children who
- were murdered in last year's rampage by a mentally deranged
- drifter at the city's Cleveland elementary school. Though
- Stockton police maintain that the episode was not racially
- motivated, the Indochinese in California's Central Valley
- believe otherwise. Almost a year before the shooting, school
- officials had to paint over anti-Asian graffiti, including
- signs that said GOOKS GO HOME. Fights break out almost daily
- between Cambodian and Hispanic students at one high school.
- Says Sarmon Sor: "My daughter was shot, my son stabbed. I used
- to be happy here. Now all I do is worry. I worry all the time."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the cause, racism in one form or another, subtle
- or blatantly obvious, plagues many Asian Americans. Sometimes
- strong biases brought over by the immigrants themselves--including racial prejudice, clannishness and a reluctance to
- make problems public--hamper their assimilation into the
- majority. More often, however, Asians are the victims of
- discrimination. The very visible success of some Asian
- immigrants and the power of Asian finance have triggered a
- backlash.
- </p>
- <p> In Los Angeles, as in other cities across the U.S., tension
- has arisen between Korean Americans and members of the black
- community, who resent the influx of "foreign" businesses that
- take money out of their neighborhoods. In a wider context, even
- though Canadians until recently owned more of California than
- Japanese did, it is the latter who are looked upon as
- encroachers. "I've heard more anti-Japanese sentiment in
- working-class bars than I can remember," says Richard Kjeldsen,
- a University of Southern California financial specialist on the
- Pacific Rim. Japan bashing easily becomes Asian bashing. The
- most famous case is the 1982 murder of Chinese American Vincent
- Chin by Detroit autoworkers who thought he was Japanese. As
- late as 1985 and 1986, violence against Asians jumped 50% in
- Los Angeles County. Says Henry Der of Chinese for Affirmative
- Action: "We're still vulnerable because of what we look like."
- </p>
- <p> While Asians are often thoroughly assimilated into American
- culture after a generation, many say that no matter how
- integrated they become, they will never be considered bona fide
- Americans because of an "otherness" factor based entirely on
- race. The claims of an American meritocracy also ring hollow
- to some skilled immigrants. Says Dr. Jagjit Sehdeva, a member
- of the Los Angeles human-relations commission: "It is almost
- impossible for medical graduates from India to find residency
- positions in hospitals here. Many wind up in lower-paying jobs
- as lab technicians or hospital orderlies." Says Dr. Stanley
- Sue, director of the National Research Center on Asian American
- Mental Health: "Some people want you to be American, but then
- they treat you differently. Why, then, would you want to
- assimilate?"
- </p>
- <p> Fitting in can be a traumatic, sometimes infuriating
- experience. Amy Tan, author of the best-selling novel The Joy
- Luck Club, recalls being ashamed that her homelife was not
- quite that of her white peers. "The Chinese food was wonderful
- when it was family," she remembers. "But when my friends came
- over, I was embarrassed." Selling movie projects in Hollywood,
- director Wayne Wang (Chan Is Missing, Eat a Bowl of Tea) finds
- some studio executives "patronizing or confused." Says he: "If
- you speak English with a French accent, they say, `That's
- cute.' But if you speak it with a Chinese accent, people say,
- `That's awful. He's killing our language.'"
- </p>
- <p> Asians also sense that a "glass ceiling" prevents them from
- rising to the top ranks in corporate America. To the extent
- that U.S. executives often equate leadership with
- assertiveness, Asians' traditional reticence and
- self-effacement have proved detrimental to corporate
- advancement. "We mind our own business and keep our noses to
- the grindstone," says David Lam, head of Expert Edge Technology
- in Palo Alto, Calif. "Doing a good job has turned into a bad
- thing." Now that Asians see themselves as players, they want
- to be part of the corporate game. Says Harry Kitano, professor
- of social welfare at the University of California, Los Angeles:
- "Twenty or 30 years ago, we didn't expect to be promoted. A lot
- of people suffered in silence."
- </p>
- <p> The retreat into silence also hampered the immigrants' quest
- for political influence. "All the things that are required in
- Western politics go against Asian culture," says Judy Chu,
- mayor pro tempore of Monterey Park. Asian Americans turn out
- at the voting booth even less frequently than whites or blacks:
- a 1986 study of Southern California voters showed that only 30%
- of eligible Asian voters registered, compared with 80% of
- whites.
- </p>
- <p> Yet when Asians try out political roles, the "otherness"
- factor again comes into play. The family of Lon Hatamiya, a
- Japanese-American attorney, has lived in the agricultural
- region around Sacramento for more than 80 years. But when
- Hatamiya decided to run in next June's primary for a seat in
- California's 120-member state legislature, most voters seemed
- to regard him as an alien. "They look at us as if we're recent
- immigrants," he says. No one seemed to notice that the local
- roots of his white opponent do not go back as far as those of
- the Hatamiya clan.
- </p>
- <p> Asians have made impressive forays into California politics.
- Since 1975, California's secretary of state has been March Fong
- Eu, a Chinese American. Two of the state's Congressmen are
- Norman Mineta and Robert Matsui, Japanese Americans. Another
- Japanese American, the noted philologist and educator S.I.
- Hayakawa, has served as U.S. Senator.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the history of Asian settlement on the West Coast has
- been one of displacement and suppression. After completing the
- transcontinental railway in the 19th century, Chinese
- immigrants were rewarded with race riots, demagoguery and the
- Immigration Exclusion Act of 1882, which cut off the Chinese
- influx. Local hostility forced Asian Indians out of Washington
- State in 1907. During World War II, Japanese Americans were
- forced to liquidate their assets and relocate to detention
- camps, taking only the belongings they could carry by hand; a
- similar fate did not befall residents of German or Italian
- ancestry.
- </p>
- <p> Today social and political integration remains fraught with
- ambiguity. Seen as a "model minority" rather than as a group
- of separate communities requiring specific kinds of help, Asian
- Americans are often shut out of affirmative-action programs.
- Asian Americans say the label is used to taunt blacks and
- Hispanics, that it implies, "The Asians have made it, so why
- can't you?" Says Reed Ueda, a Japanese-American professor of
- history at Tufts University in Massachusetts: "It's a way of
- manipulating other minorities. It tends to isolate Asians and
- brings resentment." Unfortunately, the typical response from
- Asian Americans to being held up as an example is to denigrate
- their own very real strengths--industriousness, perseverance,
- sacrifice--making it almost shameful for them to try to
- excel. Says Ueda: "It gets to the point where a lot of
- Asian-American leaders don't like to focus on success."
- </p>
- <p> In the 16th century Chinese comic novel Journey to the West,
- a motley group of pilgrims, at the end of a magical, sometimes
- terrifying quest, arrive at the Western Paradise of Buddha to
- receive sacred books imparting enlightenment. To their chagrin,
- they discover that in order to secure their prize, they must
- grease the palms of Buddha's disciples. Buddha himself is
- rather condescending. Paradise has turned out to be less than
- perfect and more than a little disconcerting. What was it they
- set out to find, and why is it yet to be found? Even as their
- numbers and their influence expand, Asian Americans are
- pondering those very questions.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-