"What makes recent Russian immigrants to the USA tick?"
From the second half of the nineteenth century until the
70s, the USA has witnessed four waves of considerable
Russian immigration.
These can be broken down into four time frames: the second
half of the 19th century and early twentieth century before
World War 1; the period between 1917-1921 after the Russian
Revolution and Civil War: after World War 11; the
immigration of the 1970s when the Soviets to a limited
degree lifted the ban on immigration. Red Blues authored by Dennis Shasha and Marina Shron is a
very informative and illuminating study pertaining to the
last wave of Russian immigration.
A wave that was for the most part a "brain drain"
consisting of émigrés who spoke Russian and were culturally
Russian.
This is in contrast to the previous waves of Russian
immigrants who very often did not speak Russian and who did
not comprise the "crème de la crème."
It is also, as the authors indicate in the preface, a book
about leaving a big family that unfortunately was
dysfunctional. Over a period of three years the authors focused their
interviews on artists, scientists, entrepreneurs, and sex
professionals, "as they were the most mobile, the most like
world citizens."
These interviews are organized in eight sections each
dealing with a distinct type of émigré.
Their stories are as varied as their occupations,
ideologies, professions, and attitudes. From reading these oral interviews we become immediately
aware that many of the newly arrived immigrants are highly
skilled and educated.
They also show profound traits of flexibility, ingenuity
and even "chutzpah" in their adaptation to their new
environment. The question as to why these Russian émigrés chose to move
to the USA is very often brought to the forefront of some
of the interviews.
We are made aware of the widespread anti-semitisim, extreme
governmental control on daily life activities, burdensome
economic conditions, and violation of fundamental civic
rights such as freedom of speech, assembly and religion.
As one of the interviewees' states: "I believe that only
pressure-be it moral, physical, or intellectual can move a
person forward. Immigration involves all three. What
doesn't kill you makes you stronger."
This nonetheless does not make it easier for some to make
the move. In fact as another interviewee
states: "immigration may be hardest for the intellectual
because he lives off his mind and his language. Language in
the broadest sense." Although Red Blues is far from an academic study and
certainly it is not addressed to a scholarly audience, it
nevertheless merits reading from the standpoint of
understanding what makes the recent Russian
immigrant "tick."
It is an honest and frank portrayal of the economic,
psychological and sociological struggles faced by the new
wave Russian immigrant to the USA. "Copyright 2002, Bookideas.com"
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookideas
Posted May 18, 2002
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