Monday, October 21, 2019
How Irish Immigrants Overcame Discrimination in America
How Irish Immigrants Overcame Discrimination in America The month of March isnââ¬â¢t just home to St. Patrickââ¬â¢s Day but also to Irish American Heritage Month, which acknowledges the discrimination the Irish faced in America and their contributions to society. In honor of the annual event, the U.S. Census Bureau releases a variety of facts and figures about Irish Americans and the White House issues a proclamation about the Irish experience in the United States. In March 2012, President Barack Obama ushered in Irish-American Heritage Month by discussing the ââ¬Å"indomitable spiritâ⬠of the Irish. He referred to the Irish as a group ââ¬Å"whose strength helped build countless miles of canals and railroads; whose brogues echoed in mills, police stations, and fire halls across our country; and whose blood spilled to defend a nation and a way of life they helped define. Defying Famine, Poverty, and Discrimination Defying famine, poverty, and discrimination, these sons and daughters of Erin demonstrated extraordinary strength and unshakable faith as they gave their all to help build an America worthy of the journey they and so many others have taken.â⬠History of Discrimination Notice that the president used the word ââ¬Å"discriminationâ⬠to discuss the Irish American experience. In the 21st century, Irish Americans are widely considered to be ââ¬Å"whiteâ⬠and reap the benefits of white skin privilege. In previous centuries, however, the Irish endured some of the same discrimination that racial minorities endure today. As Jessie Daniels explained in a piece on the Racism Review website called ââ¬Å"St. Patrickââ¬â¢s Day, Irish-Americans and the Changing Boundaries of Whiteness,â⬠the Irish faced marginalization as newcomers to the United States in the 19th century. This was largely because of how the English treated them. She explains: ââ¬Å"The Irish had suffered profound injustice in the U.K. at the hands of the British, widely seen as ââ¬Ëwhite negroes.ââ¬â¢ The potato famine that created starvation conditions that cost the lives of millions of Irish and forced the out-migration of millions of surviving ones, was less a natural disaster and more a complex set of social conditions created by British landowners (much like Hurricane Katrina). Forced to flee from their native Ireland and the oppressive British landowners, many Irish came to the U.S.â⬠Immigrating to the U.S. Didnââ¬â¢t End the Hardships But immigrating to the U.S. didnââ¬â¢t end the hardships the Irish experienced across the pond. Americans stereotyped the Irish as lazy, unintelligent, carefree criminals and alcoholics. Daniels points out that the term ââ¬Å"paddy wagonâ⬠comes from the derogatory ââ¬Å"paddy,â⬠a nickname for ââ¬Å"Patrickâ⬠widely used to describe Irish men. Given this, the term ââ¬Å"paddy wagonâ⬠basically equates being Irish to criminality. Competing for Low-Wage Employment Once the U.S. ceased to enslave its African American population, the Irish competed with blacks for low-wage employment. The two groups did not join together in solidarity, however. Instead, the Irish worked to enjoy the same privileges as white Anglo-Saxon Protestants, a feat they accomplished partly at the expense of blacks, according to Noel Ignatiev, author of How the Irish Became White (1995). Subjugating Blacks to Move up the Socioeconomic Ladder While the Irish abroad opposed slavery, for example, Irish Americans supported the peculiar institution because subjugating blacks allowed them to move up the U.S. socioeconomic ladder. After slavery ended, the Irish refused to work alongside blacks and terrorized African Americans to eliminate them as competition on multiple occasions. Due to these tactics, the Irish eventually enjoyed the same privileges as other whites while blacks remained second-class citizens in America. Richard Jenson, a former University of Chicago history professor, wrote an essay about these issues in the Journal of Social History called ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËNo Irish Need Applyââ¬â¢: A Myth of Victimization.â⬠He states:ââ¬â¹ ââ¬Å"We know from the experience of African Americans and Chinese that the most powerful form of job discrimination came from workers who vowed to boycott or shut down any employer who hired the excluded class. Employers who were personally willing to hire Chinese or blacks were forced to submit to the threats. There were no reports of mobs attacking Irish employment. On the other hand, the Irish repeatedly attacked employers who hired African Americans or Chinese.â⬠Advantages Used to Get Ahead White Americans often express incredulity that their ancestors managed to succeed in the United States while people of color continue to struggle. If their penniless, immigrant grandfather could make it in the U.S. why canââ¬â¢t blacks or Latinos or Native Americans? Examining the experiences of European immigrants in the U.S. reveals that some of the advantages they used to get ahead- white skin and intimidation of minority laborers- were off-limits to people of color.
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