This is a summary of (http://103orchard.tenement.org/stories/103-orchard/?_ga=2.95417944.575684299.1510051125-202175268.1510051125)
Which I highly suggest going over and reading the web site.
The site is separated into
5 sections. Overview (103 Orchard Street), 1950s (Lower east side), 1960s
(Loisaida), 1970s (Chinatown), and Your story (your objects).
Overview (103 Orchard
Street)
The first one gives you a
quick summary, so I don't know why you’re reading this, but oh well.
1950s (Lower east
side)
The second part talks about
the life of Bella and her mom, there are some videos of Bella talking about
here mom and how she was a Holocaust survivor, and because they were Jewish and
highly prosecuted. But it wasn't all bad.
She remembers her dad
bringing back a portable record player and playing music of to hear Moishe Oysher and Josef “Yossele”
Rosenblatt. She also remembers convincing her mother to buy her one
record (Paul Anka), and she said after having that she became American.
She
also remembers listing in the kitchen to Yiddish, Spanish, Italian,
and English.
She also said that her
mother would never talk about her time in concentration camps, except
one day a lady saw them in a restaurant and talked to her mother and it turned
out her mother was in charge of the children before they went to the
gas chambers.
1960s (Loisaida)
This part talks about Andy
and his family from Puerto Rico, he talks about how she would put beans in a
little bit of water before they would leave school at around 6:45 and when they
came back him and his brother would put the beans cooking at the lowest heat,
and when they're mom came back at 5 the beans would be ready.
He remembers joining the
Boy Scouts when he a very young boy, and when he was 15 he was able to get a
prominent job in the Boy Scouts, he would also do lots of little jobs for
people.
His mom also worked a lot
he says, and she was a prominent member of a sewing union and whenever they did
parades she would be in the front. When she came to America sewing was one of
the few jobs where you didn't need to be skilled, but because she was Puerto
Rican she was already highly skilled in sewing.
1970s (Chinatown)
In 1965, President
Lyndon Johnson signed the Hart-Celler immigration act, abolishing the
race-based quota system of 1924. For the first time since 1882, significant
numbers of Asian immigrants could enter the US.
This one fallows
Allison Wong.
She talks about how
there was a huge day care problem and how industry owners knew they
needed to let the Chinese parents go pick up there children at three
and give them a half hour to come back.
Kattie Quang talks about how
they held a news conference (for helping their petition that they were going to
get signed to convince their union for child care) at their job, and she says
it was very chaotic, every half a sentence the parents were yelling and the
children to be calm (as children ran around yelling). She says that she thinks
the reporters got the point from that.
Your story (your
objects)
The last part is where you
can add your parent's (or your/other family member's) story's of immigration.
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