Women immigrants key to family unity
By Viji Sundaram
New America Media
Jun 08, 2009
ATLANTA, Ga. -- Women
immigrants must overcome formidable barriers when they first come to the
United States, but their determination to hold their families together
helps them overcome many of those obstacles.
Those are among the
findings of a recent New America Media-commissioned national survey that
pollster Sergio Bendixen shared with a tightly packed gathering here at
the Hyatt Regency Hotel on June 5 at a forum, "Women in Ethnic Media
Breakfast: Women Changing the Face of Immigration and Journalism."
NAM chief of staff Odette
Keeley, who immigrated from the Philippines nine years ago, said women
are redefining themselves both in the home and the workplace.
Meredith Greene Megaw,
communications director at the Committee to Protect Journalists, a press
freedom advocacy group, talked about her organization's efforts to shine
the spotlight on the two North Korean journalists and the Iranian
American journalist, Roxanna Saberi, all of whom were arrested while in
pursuit of stories.
The threats to women
journalists are not much different than those faced by their male
counterparts, Megaw noted, except that women journalists also face
cultural taboos, as well as the danger of being sexually assaulted and
threatened.
Those risks have forced
many of them to switch to other forms of media like the radio and the
Internet, where they can maintain some amount of anonymity while still
practicing their trade, Megaw said.
Bendixen said that one of
the greatest challenges new immigrant women initially face is language.
It is even more challenging if they come from a certain socio-economic
status. Many have little or no access to health care. And to top it all,
most of them face gender discrimination.
"But within 10 to 15 years
after they come to United States, women shed their submissiveness,"
become more assertive and take on a new role: family stewardship,
Bendixen said. "Keeping their families together is their number one
goal," and they will do whatever it takes to ensure that.
One of the first things
they do in their new role in their family is to urge their spouses to
seek citizenship.
"What could be more
American than that?" Bendixen said.
Women who were forced to
leave their children behind in their homeland when they migrated to the
United States generally succeed in bringing their children over within
five years, the poll shows. Those who face deportation, take their
children back with them.
Of the 90 percent of the
women immigrants interviewed, 30 percent were undocumented. Nearly all
the women interviewed said that their families were intact, their
husbands live with them and their children were either born here, or
live with them in the United States.
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