Indian Migration To USA
Indian Migration To USA
Indian Migration To USA
FIRST PHASE
- A second, much larger number of persons moved after India and Pakistan
independence in 1947.
- The third phase followed the enactment of the 1965 Immigration law.
- The first recorded arrival of an unnamed 'Man from Madras' in the streets
of Salem Massachusetts was in 1970.
- In the U.S., the state of California became the goal of most of the early
Indian immigrants. The overwhelming majority of these Indians were
Sikhs although some Hindus and a few Muslims immigrated as well.
- Most of the people who stayed, perhaps 5,000 at the most, found niches
in two Californian localities - the Imperial Valley, near the Mexican
border and the Northern Sacramento Valley, where the more successful
of them became farmer.
- There were three distinct groups of elite migrants - swamis, students and
merchchants.
SWAMIS :
- Historians of religion in America say that the most important of these was
the Swami Vivekananda, who spoke at the World Parliament of
Religions, part of the Chicago World Fair in 1893. Vivekananda stayed
for two years, founded the Vedanta Society, and returned in 1895.
- Vivekananda was not the first such religious leader to come to the United
States. Pratap Chander Muzoomdar had come as early
- The second most important missionary was Swami Yogananda who first
came in 1920 to attend the Pilgrim Tercentenary Anniversary
International Conference of Religious Liberals held in Boston sponsored
by the Unitarians.
- He stayed on to found a religious organization, the Togoda Satsanga
Society in Los Angeles.
- The most popular leader to visit United States was the Nobel Laureate,
Rabindernath Tagore, who came several times, beginning in 1916.
STUDENTS :
- The early students in the United States were largely rebels with emotional
ties to the Indian freedom movement.
- Some students, for example, Kartar Singh Sarabha, one of the most active
fund raisers, mostly at Berkeley, became part of the Ghadar Movement of
1913.
- They held meetings in the rural the farmers donated generously to sustain
the movement.
- Ghadar Movement :
- They had set up the 'Yugantar Ashram' in San Francisco. They used to
publish a weekly newspaper in Urdu and Gurumukhi.
- About half were Asian Indians, the others were Germans and Americans.
- Indian migration to the United States at the turn of the nineteenth century
was influenced by a variety of causes and developments.
- Some were at the individual level: caste discrimination and the desire for
a better livelihood were major factors.