The Real Multinationals
By Linda Robinson
NY Times, March 5, 2000
Behind a common language, Hispanics are
as various as people get.
The
hit songs of Ricardo Martinez, better known as Ricky Martin,
are unlikely to remembered a decade from now, but the recent boomlet
of Latino pop stars in this country appears to mark the start
of a more generous appraisal of Hispanics in the United States.
For the most part they have been treated as unwelcome interlopers
or ignored altogether, even though their swelling ranks constitute
the most dramatic demographic transformation the United States
has ever undergone. For a country long used to seeing itself
as black and white, it will be something of a shock when Hispanics
become the nation's largest minority group in five years and
fully one-quarter of the population by midcentury.
Even Americans who are aware of the statistics generally lack
a fuller appreciation of what the country's Latinization portends.
But now, with ''Harvest of Empire,'' Juan Gonzalez has made a serious,
significant contribution to understanding who the Hispanics of
the United States are and where they come from. This ambitious,
well-researched book highlights positive traits that are often
overlooked, like Hispanics' high rates of employment and business
formation, and underscores how their struggles have been compounded
by an anti-immigrant climate and the disappearance of high-wage
union jobs that helped earlier arrivals climb up the socioeconomic
ladder.
The defining feature of United States Latinos, which poses the
main challenge in writing about them, is their tremendous diversity.
Although joined by a common language (Spanish), they come from
20-odd countries with distinct histories, customs and blends of
European, African and indigenous stock. Gonzalez takes the sensible
approach of devoting separate chapters to Mexicans (two-thirds
of United States Hispanics), Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Colombians
and Panamanians, Dominicans and Central Americans. Though he gives
short shrift to the uniquely American Latino hybrid forming in
cities where several nationalities cluster, interact and intermarry,
his multigenerational stories of immigrant families in New York,
Texas, California and Florida endow his text with depth, detail
and emotional resonance.
The book's unifying theme, as the title suggests, is that the
United States caused this wave of immigration by two centuries
of neocolonialism, imperialism and economic exploitation. The author,
a Puerto Rican and a columnist for The Daily News in New York,
hammers away at this argument, recounting the military interventions
and heavy-handed, self-interested Washington policies that certainly
did exacerbate the region's troubles. But his insistence that the
United States is the sole culprit behind the poverty and turmoil
propelling so many people northward ignores equally important factors
-- beginning with the anti-entrepreneurial, anti-individualistic
bent of Spanish colonialism -- that restricted economic opportunity
and political liberty. His sustained broadside against Uncle Sam
does help make the point that what happens down there affects what
happens up here, and more specifically that the one realistic way
to curtail immigration to the United States is by improving people's
lives at home.
Unfortunately, Gonzalez is so convinced that the United States
can be only an unremitting force for evil that he cannot see a
good thing if the gringos are behind it. He labels free trade,
which Washington has promoted, an economic disaster for Latin America
and for Mexico in particular. But free trade has in fact spurred
huge job creation there, and Mexico's economy has averaged five
percent growth since 1996, although one would not know it from
reading this book. The United States has a great deal to be ashamed
of in its historical treatment of Latin America, but the region's
development today is hampered less by United States competition
than by its own practices that favor monopoly, discourage investment
and allow vast sums to end up in overseas bank accounts.
Gonzalez explains his point of view in a rich and touching portrait
of his family. An urban New York leftist, he got an Ivy League
education and helped found a militant Puerto Rican group called
the Young Lords, but success did not make him forget his parents'
struggles with racism, violence and poverty or his own memories
-- for example, of the teacher who wanted to call him John -- that
still rankle. His thesis best applies to Puerto Rico, which was
and still is the United States' sole Latin American possession.
Its anomalous, quasi-colonial status has played havoc with Puerto
Ricans' social stability, economic fate and national identity.
But whereas Gonzalez's personal politics would seem to make independence
the logical solution for him to embrace, he instead takes the awkward
position that Puerto Ricans should gain full autonomy but retain
their coveted United States citizenship. Such conflicted stances
are exactly what has kept the island on the fence, unwilling to
give up the benefits of tax-free welfare and open access to the
mainland despite the political humiliation of limited suffrage
and subjection to wartime draft.
The book's final section tackles the issues that will determine
whether the Latinos of the United States are successfully integrated
into the mainstream: immigration, education and political enfranchisement.
Gonzalez makes a persuasive case that newcomers and natives alike
ought to be able to agree on certain common-sense goals, among
them that the federal government should help areas hardest hit
by immigrant influxes, that English fluency is a critical asset
for economic advancement and that foreign-born residents should
become legal citizens, with a voice in the system. Recent elections
show that the Latino vote has become key in critical states, and
most presidential candidates now on the stump are at least trying
to speak a few words of Spanish.
Gonzalez has high hopes for a future Latino-led, multiethnic coalition
that will inspire new political activism. And he suggests that
non-Hispanic Americans might grow more accepting of the Latino
presence if they recall earlier fears of Irish, Italian and Jewish
immigrants. They might remember, as they get used to pop tunes
with a Latin beat, that some of the most quintessentially American
songs were written by Israel Baline, a working-class man from Siberia
better known as Irving Berlin.
Linda Robinson is the Latin America
bureau chief for U.S. News & World
Report and the recipient of the 1999 Maria Moors Cabot award for
reporting on Latin America. |