Immigrants Coming To America Essay

621 Words2 Pages

What promise does America hold to countless immigrants and refugees who venture into this great nation by way of train, airplane, and ship each and every year? Obviously America must offer some major improvements in living conditions that the foreign immigrants and refugees were missing back home, but why do they really choose to come to America. If the simplest answer a person gave was to realize the “American Dream” then they would be only partially correct in the sense that “The American Dream” is simple to envision, but much more difficult in achieving. Almost any 6th grade student can provide the basic definition of the “American Dream” being free from oppression and being able to elect officials without intimidation. Some immigrants …show more content…

Many immigrants risk life and death in the journey to freedom in the U.S. The Irish are one particular type of immigrant that had to face the difficult choice of staying in their famished country with inadequate supplies of nutritional potatoes, or journey into the unknown wondrous land of America. Deciding to leave your homeland in a matter of days is not a typical obstacle a lot of people in America ever feel, and even more impacting leaving behind generations of family history and culture for survival is never satisfying no matter how much rewarding the results are. The “American Dream” is freedom and the right to be individualistic to many people who come to America, but it’s also one of the biggest sacrifices that can ever be made to most …show more content…

The adjustment wasn’t easy for anyone in my family, especially after our first night in America where we felt so small and displaced by the whole Western culture and their customs. Even though my family was replaced in a totally different culture my parents still knew that we would be more secure and protected here than if we had remained in Bosnia. The “American Dream” offered immigrants a chance to change their lives forever, and my parents would take full advantage of that opportunity. Never before had my parents had so much optimism in the future of their children than at the moment the next morning when they woke up to peace and the relaxing noise of regular city life free of any gun shots, tanks, or heavy armor cars. My parents truly did appreciate what the “American Dream” accomplished for them, but I don’t think they realize how much of an effect it had on

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