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- <text id=91TT2574>
- <title>
- Nov. 18, 1991: Society:Shades of Difference
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 18, 1991 California:The Endangered Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 66
- CALIFORNIA
- Shades Of Difference
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Immigrants are building an ethnic mosaic, but the pieces don't
- quite fit together
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> To travel the streets of Los Angeles is to glimpse
- America's ethnic future. At the bustling playground at
- McDonald's in Koreatown, a dozen shades of kids squirt down the
- slides and burrow through tunnels and race down the catwalks,
- not much minding that no two of them speak the same language.
- Parents of grade-school children say they rarely know the color
- of their youngsters' best friends until they meet them; it never
- seems to occur to the children to say, since they have not yet
- been taught to care.
- </p>
- <p> By high school, ethnic diversity has become an issue, but
- it still competes with the distractions of hormones and grades
- and social status and sports. Most schools are teaching
- students to celebrate diversity and search for common ground.
- Inglewood High School, 90% white 20 years ago and 90% black 10
- years ago, is 48% Latino today. "We have the same challenges,
- and I've learned to see that if everybody united, we could be
- a big force," says Efrain Nava, a 16-year-old Mexican American.
- "We are all minorities, but together we are a majority."
- </p>
- <p> At the University of California, Berkeley, most entering
- freshmen say they were attracted to the school because of its
- cultural variety: there is no ethnic majority. But very soon,
- university officials note, the students tumble into groups that
- celebrate division, not diversity. There is a Korean Catholics
- group, a Korean Baptists group, black engineers, Hispanic
- engineers, Chinese business students. Asian students may be
- divided among some 30 groups, including Thais, Cambodians,
- Filipinos and three Chinese organizations representing students
- from Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China.
- </p>
- <p> There, in a nutshell, is the story of California's ethnic
- landscape. As recently as 1980, California was 76% white. During
- the past 10 years, the Hispanic community grew nearly 70%, the
- Asian community 127%, so that by last year's census, California
- was only 57% white. It is clear that early in the next century
- there will be no racial majority at all. The children may have
- no trouble adjusting, but their parents still have much to
- learn. Metaphors of conciliation don't seem to apply: no one
- talks of a melting pot anymore, or even of a rainbow coalition.
- "I could not imagine anyone running for mayor on a platform of
- greater diversity and winning," says Leo Estrada, a professor of
- urban planning at UCLA. To be anti-immigrant and antiminority,
- he says, is a more promising platform. "If you are for
- diversity, you hide it."
- </p>
- <p> California is, by any measure, America's most colorful
- state. The richness of its culture, the liveliness of its
- fashions, the nuttiness of its fads and the ruthlessness of its
- politics all reflect the mix of races and cultures that blend
- and clash throughout the state. This is the land where Asian
- dragons dance at Cinco de Mayo parades, where viewers can tune
- in the evening news spoken in Tagalog, where suburban developers
- study the ancient Chinese concept of feng shui to ensure
- harmonious building design and smooth cosmic energy flow. It is
- not the Beach Boys or the Eagles or the Grateful Dead who
- provide the voice of California today; it is Los Lobos, a
- Mexican-American rock band. Amy Tan novels and Boyz N the Hood
- are the artifacts of the new United States of California. And
- when it comes to the latest groups of immigrants--as with the
- settlers in Steinbeck country--few of the stereotypes apply:
- most of the state's Hispanics and Asians, not notably
- self-indulgent, are a long way from hydrotherapy classes or from
- sleeping with their therapists. The Filipino punk joint may be
- a symbol of the latest form of California strangeness--polyglot multiculturalism--but it hardly seems out of place
- in a state where tire stores are built in the shape of Mayan
- temples and movies are screened in a replica of a palace at
- Thebes.
- </p>
- <p> If California represents the future of America, then Los
- Angeles may be the future of California. Already there is no
- racial majority in either Los Angeles city or county, "a
- situation encountered by few large urban areas anywhere in the
- world," says Eugene Mornell, executive director of the Los
- Angeles County commission on human relations. "All our
- stereotypes are obsolete. Many immigrants are conservative, many
- poor people are patriotic, and vice versa. All groups include
- those who desire to maintain their original culture, reinterpret
- it or leave it behind."
- </p>
- <p> The most visible fights are occurring on the political
- battleground of local and statewide elections. Though the
- state's economy has expanded over the years to provide
- opportunity to new waves of immigrant workers and entrepreneurs,
- the political arena is less spacious. Any gain by one ethnic
- group represents a loss to another, so the fight over drawing
- new electoral-district lines based on the 1990 census has been
- fierce. The only point of agreement is that by 1992 the
- political map is likely to look very different than it has in
- the past.
- </p>
- <p> On the basis of numbers alone, the redistribution of
- political power is long overdue--and it may be hastened by a
- new law that will force state representatives to leave office
- after two or three terms, creating openings for minority
- candidates. Despite the phenomenal growth of California's
- minority populations in the past 20 years, just two blacks and
- one Asian have been elected to statewide office. Of the 120
- members of the state legislature, only 10 are black, six Latino
- and none Asian. The 45 members of Congress from California
- include only four blacks, three Latinos and two Asians.
- </p>
- <p> Los Angeles was the arena for the first bitter round of
- fighting, when Hispanics campaigned for a seat on the county's
- powerful five-member board of supervisors. While Los Angeles
- County's 3 million Hispanics are fully one-third of the region's
- total population and represent the largest concentration of
- Latinos in the nation, it was only this year that newly drawn
- districts enabled them to win a seat. "We have the numbers, but
- the numbers are not reflected in the political and economic
- power structures," says Antonia Hernandez, president and general
- counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
- Fund, which led the redistricting battle.
- </p>
- <p> And although 35% of the nation's 7.2 million Asians live
- in California, they too remain almost invisible in California
- politics. "While we've made progress educationally and
- economically, we still have some major challenges," says Stewart
- Kwoh, executive director of the Asian Pacific American Legal
- Center of Southern California. "Our main problem is that we are
- locked out of the political process."
- </p>
- <p> Given the concrete challenges that California faces in
- trying to absorb and appease so many diverse groups--challenges to the school system, the housing market, the job
- market, the infrastructure--it is ironic that some of the
- fiercest battles revolve around largely symbolic issues. Much
- of the tension arises from misunderstandings rooted in the clash
- of cultures. These days it is impossible even to formulate
- stereotypes about Asians or Hispanics, because those categories
- conceal much more than they reveal. Koreans and Japanese
- continue to deride one another; Peruvians resent being mistaken
- for Mexicans. The largest Asian group is not the Japanese or the
- Chinese but the Filipinos, who have different traditions.
- </p>
- <p> Blacks and Hispanics are fighting over jobs at Martin
- Luther King hospital in Watts, where nearly 9 out of 10 babies
- born are Hispanic. As the hospital comes to serve a more
- diverse community, Hispanic leaders have demanded more of the
- health-care jobs. But blacks view the facility, built after the
- Watts riots in 1965, as a symbol of their hard-fought struggle
- for civil rights. Says Eugene Grigsby III, acting director of
- UCLA's Center for Afro-American Studies: "The feeling is we've
- been left out so long, now these new kids on the block who
- haven't paid their dues, who haven't fought in the streets, who
- haven't put up with racism and discrimination, all of a sudden,
- because they have only 3% of county hospital jobs, they should
- have that grievance redressed at our expense."
- </p>
- <p> In June blacks began a boycott of a Korean-owned store in
- South Central Los Angeles after the owner shot a black man he
- thought was a robber. Korean storekeepers have become a highly
- visible economic presence in what were traditionally black
- neighborhoods; blacks charge that the owners treat black
- customers like criminal suspects and fail to hire local workers.
- In the past six months alone, three blacks--and two Koreans--have been killed in Korean-owned stores. Though police
- concluded that the fatal shooting in South Central Los Angeles
- was justified, the boycott lasted four months, ending only after
- the Korean owner agreed to close the store and give blacks the
- opportunity to buy it.
- </p>
- <p> Other Korean shopkeepers donated more than $20,000 to help
- keep the boycotted owner's business going during the protest.
- "We don't make trouble first," says Do Hyun Chung, who owns a
- liquor store in Compton. "We try to make money first." The
- 31-year-old merchant came to America nearly seven years ago with
- scarcely a penny in his pocket, in the hope of finding what he
- refers to, without irony or embarrassment, as "the American
- Dream." The previous owner of his store was shot dead by a
- robber. For Chung and his wife Sue Hee, it is a constant
- struggle to maintain peace with their customers. Every morning
- they provide free coffee and breakfast to poor people in the
- neighborhood, and they donate sodas and snacks to community
- groups organizing picnics for local kids.
- </p>
- <p> But it is still difficult for the Chungs to understand the
- resentment of his patrons, some of whom he sees as too lazy to
- go to work for themselves. "In America you get what you work
- for," says Sue Hee. "If you don't get it, then you didn't work
- for it." The rage that African Americans direct at Korean
- merchants, says Wayne Gibson, a black barber in Compton, stems
- from a feeling of exploitation and lack of respect. "It seems
- everybody's just trying to get over on the residents of Compton
- without giving anything back," he says. "That's where the
- hostility comes in. So the people out here resent these
- immigrants getting a leg up on them."
- </p>
- <p> One appalling tendency is for the newcomers to adopt
- historic American racism. UCLA's Estrada says he is "amazed" at
- how quickly immigrants move "from never having seen a black
- person to becoming racist against them." Their view, he argues,
- is shaped by the media, the movies, the countless subtle and
- obvious expressions of hostility to blacks and "black issues"
- that immigrants encounter. "It's all part of a process of
- arriving," adds Estrada.
- </p>
- <p> In the coming decades, while California's population grows
- ever more diverse, it will also become less black. As
- immigrants flood into formerly black neighborhoods, many black
- families are deciding that it is time to leave. During the past
- decade, the black populations in both Los Angeles and San
- Francisco declined. Many African Americans fled to suburban
- cities in search of space and safety and jobs. But a great many
- African Americans are leaving the state, some to return to the
- Deep South that their parents and grandparents fled years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Some white Californians, meanwhile, welcome the new
- arrivals. In their 49 years on Clinton Avenue in Richmond, a
- blue-collar refinery center on the eastern side of San Francisco
- Bay, Gladys Parks, 76, and her husband Bruce, 81, have seen the
- city go from white to black, then to Hispanic and Asian, and
- finally to mixed-white again on the gentrifying edge of the
- city. Bruce, a Stockton-born "prune picker," as native
- Californians are called, recalls having real misgivings when the
- "coloreds" first came to town during World War II. Today he and
- Gladys call the black family next door the best neighbors
- they've ever had. They've become such friends with their Chicano
- gardener that they go to Las Vegas with him and his family. And
- they admire the brilliant 15-year-old Vietnamese girl who
- baby-sits around the corner and plans to attend Harvard or
- Stanford. They are persuaded that Californians are, in fact,
- more tolerant than most Americans. It's probably because, as
- Bruce says, "almost everybody here is new."
- </p>
- <p> But in a time of such heady change, no single reaction
- speaks for the majority. In a sense, the entire state is going
- through a process of re-education about just what diversity
- means and what the future holds. "People's idea of being
- culturally aware is going to a Chinese restaurant," says Marcia
- Choo, program director for the Asian Pacific American Dispute
- Resolution Center in Los Angeles. Some whites are running away
- from neighborhoods that have been rapidly integrated in the past
- 10 years or so. Typical of their sentiment is the bumper sticker
- that used to be common in one formerly all-white community: WILL
- THE LAST AMERICAN TO LEAVE MONTEREY PARK PLEASE BRING THE
- AMERICAN FLAG? During the past decade, the "Orange Curtain" has
- descended south of Santa Ana, as whites migrate to the protected
- enclaves of Orange County. "The city won't be abandoned,"
- predicts UCLA's Eugene Grigsby. "But if the white corporate
- power structure stays as it is, you'd be hard pressed to
- distinguish this area from South Africa relative to who
- controls, who's employed and who's impoverished."
- </p>
- <p> California's student population has the advantage of
- working through the issues that divide neighborhoods,
- institutions and governmental bodies within the protected
- framework of the campus. Declares Francisco Hernandez, dean of
- student life at Berkeley: "The real story is actually how well
- students get along. That's not to say there aren't problems and
- issues. But students aren't shooting each other. They aren't
- killing each other. They're trying to understand each other in
- an academic setting. The picture that's been drawn of Berkeley
- is that there is a great deal of racial tension. What there is,
- is a great amount of racial awareness on campus. Students are
- aware of who they are and what they are, and so are we. Instead
- of ignoring it or pretending that students don't have
- differences, we acknowledge the differences with the intent of
- having students understand them, tolerate them and eventually
- enjoy them."
- </p>
- <p> As an objective for the rest of the state, that is both an
- unavoidable choice and a tall order.
- </p>
- <p>SHADES OF DIFFERENCE
- </p>
- <p>Perceptions of the increasing number of Hispanics and Asians
- in California:
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell><cell>Hispanics<cell>Asians
- <row><cell type=a>Possible Positive Effects<cell type=a>Increases number of people anxious to work hard<cell type=i>68%<cell type=i>70%
- <row><cell><cell>Our culture will be enriched providing new ideas, customs<cell>68%<cell>68%
- <row><cell><cell>Provides needed labor for new jobs<cell>65%<cell>63%
- <row><cell><cell>Fosters higher economic growth<cell>48%<cell>61%
- <row><cell>Possible Negative Effects<cell>Higher taxes due to more demands for public services<cell>79%<cell>71%
- <row><cell><cell>Increases the amount of unemployment in the state<cell>77%<cell>71%
- <row><cell><cell>Increases crime<cell>64%<cell>60%
- <row><cell><cell>Lowers the quality of education in the public schools<cell>57%<cell>43%
- <row><cell><cell>Endangers the place of English as our common language<cell>48%<cell>41%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>ONE YEAR'S NEW ARRIVALS
- </p>
- <p>Where they came from in 1989--Total: 836,700
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Other states<cell type=i>656,000
- <row><cell>Canada<cell>1,000
- <row><cell>Ireland<cell>900
- <row><cell>Britain<cell>3,000
- <row><cell>W. Germany<cell>1,000
- <row><cell>Poland<cell>800
- <row><cell>Romania<cell>1,000
- <row><cell>Soviet Union<cell>5,000
- <row><cell>China<cell>10,000
- <row><cell>Korea<cell>10,000
- <row><cell>Taiwan<cell>5,000
- <row><cell>Vietnam<cell>16,000
- <row><cell>Philippines<cell>24,000
- <row><cell>Laos<cell>5,000
- <row><cell>India<cell>5,000
- <row><cell>Iran<cell>10,000
- <row><cell>Mexico<cell>33,000
- <row><cell>Guatemala<cell>2,000
- <row><cell>El Salvador<cell>7,000
- <row><cell>Peru<cell>1,000
- <row><cell>Other countries<cell>40,000
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>In addition, an estimated 100,000 illegal immigrants moved
- to California in 1989.
- </p>
- <p>Source: California Department of Finance.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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