There had always been fluctuations in how Mexican immigrants have been received. During the Great Depression‚ when white individuals needed jobs‚ hundreds of thousands of Mexican Americans were illegally deported‚ or as president Herbert Hoover put it‚ "repatriated" back to Mexico. During the second World War‚ with the American servicemen overseas‚ American companies needed labor‚ so they relied on Mexico for workers. The U.S. Government‚ in conjunction with big business‚ put together the Bracero
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El Nino Fidencio The Mythical Curandero Throughout the book Curanderismo: Mexican American Folk Healing Trorrer and Chavira make mention of el Niño Fidencio in countless areas of the book. It is mentioned that one of the most important spiritualist movement is based on “the life teaching‚ and the spirit of a famous young folk healer (now dead) from northern Mexico el Niño Fidencio” (1997:35). Even today el Niño is an important figure in many aspects of the belief system and practice associated
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Chavez and the Chicano Civil Rights Movement Introduction In the mid-1960s thousands of Chicanos‚ people of Mexican descent‚ walked off the California grape fields in which they worked in protest of exploitation and poor working conditions. They wanted fair wages‚ better working conditions‚ and education for their children. They wanted all the opportunities that were extended to other Americans. Among the disgruntled employees was the soft-spoken César Chávez‚ who believed that his people’s plight could
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Lisa Raya. Anna Lisa struggled with her identity while she was an undergraduate student attending Columbia University in New York. She’s the daughter of a second-generation Mexican American father and a Puerto Rican mother and grew up in Los Angeles‚ California. Anna Lisa‚ all her life has identified herself as a Mexican. However‚ now that she’s in her new environment in college and having to identify herself with a broad term “Latina” she experiencing an identity crisis. She complained
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academic prejudice and dire school conditions. In the film‚ it starts off by showing how the Mexican American culture is being completely ignored throughout the lectures of history in American schools. The students read about the wars that the Americans fought‚ when the teacher suddenly points out that it never once mentions Mexican Americans being part of that history. This shows how the majority of Americans‚ the school board of America‚ does not want to teach nor have an interest in the culture of
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Maya Arce Period 6 3/20/13 Reading Response Questions 1. –Reviled: (Verb) Criticize in an abusive or angrily insulting manner. “Tom reviled after listening to a lecture that he didn’t agree with.” -Subversive: (Adjective) Seeking or intended to subvert and established system or institution. “The subversive prisoner approached the warden to speak his mind.” -Reconcile: (Verb) Restore friendly relations between. “She wanted to be reconciled with her mother.” -Rapacious: (Adjective) Aggressively
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Vietnam they are‚ for the most part‚ almost absent. They fail to recognize how important Mexican Americans were in this war. They fail to mention that Mexican American soldiers are the most decorated ethnic group in the America. In the bestseller Everything We Had by Al Santoli‚ though it discusses soldiers in the Vietnam War‚ not one Chicano is interviewed . The Vietnam War failed to advance status as Americans and help their civil right battles. Even though they fought bravely Chicanos still faced
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The book‚ Honor and the American Dream: Culture and Identity in a Chicano Community‚ and the film‚ Salt of the Earth‚ both relay to their audience‚ the pursuit of happiness within the Chicano community in which they live. These works aim to show how Mexican-American immigrants fight to keep both their honor and value systems alive in the United States of America‚ a country which is foreign to their traditions. The Mexican-Americans encountered in these works fight for their culture of honor in
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weaves fact and fiction to depict the fate of 22 young Mexican Americans brought to trial for a murder they did not commit. The play has symbolic significance for Mexican Americans and tells about the riots during World War II. The Sleepy Lagoon Murder was one step in the fight for the rights and respect of Mexican American’s. This riot involved young servicemen and civilians who clashed in the streets of the city with young Mexican Americans who wore the noticeable "Zoot Suit." Although it was
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Great Depression Impact "The American People in Hard Times" Employment African Americas Minorities Women Most ppl saw unemployment/poverty as signs of personal failures Men= ashamed of being jobless Relief eventually collapsed Thousands sifted through garbage cans for scraps of food or waited outside restaurants Nearly 2 million men (few women) road freight trains living as nomads Farm income declined 60% 1/3 of farmers lost their land “Dust Bowl”- worst drought in nations’ history
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