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Russian Immigration. Genesis ... Russian immigration has a long history in the
United States, dating back to early 1900's. Successive ...
... ballet dancers. After that wave there was no more ethnic Russian immigrants
because the Soviets banned all immigration. The end ...
... which at one time was a small Russian immigrant community. During the 1970s and
the early 1980s, the Soviet government liberalized its immigration policy which ...
... (Dehart) The German and Russian Jews immigrated to the United States ... American
assimilation process was made easy from the help of Hebrew Immigration Societies. ...
... tailor. The surge of Russian Jew immigration was as a result of several
anti-semitic activities occurring in Russia at the time. The ...
Submitted by marsgur on April 6, 2005
Category: American History
Words: 1670 | Pages: 7
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Genesis of Contemporary Russian-American
Anton Gurov
En 102-6: Wasilko
May 12, 2004
Final Paper
In the 1990s the United States of America was marked with an incredible surge of immigration from the territories of former Soviet Union. "Liberated" émigrés decided to take a chance, leaving everything they had behind in pursuit of a better life. They brought with them education, numerous skills and talents. Their difficulties, however, including a foreign language, their age and inability to quickly adapt their social attitudes to new values, bogged down their feat to succeed in conquering the "American Dream" (Fox 79). Overcoming aforementioned obstacles, the responsibility of creating own fortunes and great accomplishments is now inherited by the second-generation of immigrants.
Russian immigration has a long history in the United States, dating back to early 1900's. Successive waves of immigration were triggered by World War I, The Russian Revolution and World War II. During a period of liberalization in the late 1970s and early 1980s, starting with Jackson-Vanik Amendment, Jews were allowed to leave Soviet Union. Even Andropov, the General Secretary of the Communist Party at a time, urged thousands of impoverished Jews to leave USSR (Khazbulatov 7). The regime however refused to allow most educated Jews and for that matter other ethnic groups especially Russian, to emigrate, despite the KGB claim that all individuals wishing to emigrate were free to do so (Khazbulatov 8). Most recently, with the collapse of the Soviet Union and opening of immigration rules, an unprecedented million Russians immigrated to the United States. As evidence, the Russian-speaking population in America surged 254 percent from 1990 to 1998. (Fox 79)
This most recent wave of immigration consisted mainly of Jewish refuges, skilled workers, elite scientists and artists. They came to the United States for a variety of...
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