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Tuesday, December 3, 2019
The Immigrant Experience Essays - Semitic Peoples, Antisemitism
  The Immigrant Experience         They are our grandparents, our relatives, our friends. They are the  immigrants. They came from all over the world for many reasons, such as,  religious persecution and racial tension, but the largest reason for coming  to America was for freedom. The freedom to live where we want, to own  property, to take part in the government and most importantly, the freedom  to be treated like a human being.       Coming over was extremely difficult. For some, there were good,  seaworthy boats, but most boats were overcrowded, dirty, and disgusting.  For Jews, the passage was extremely difficult because of the non-kosher  ship food. People were pushed together like cattle. Most people became  seasick.       From one account came descriptions of unsanitary bathrooms. This,  surely, must have been torture, but, hopefully, most immigrants found the  dreadful trip to be worth the freedom at the other end.       Ellis Island, also, was far from sanitary. The people would break down  into lines, and walk by a doctor, trying to hide any physical problems.  Children over two had to be able to walk by themselves. If the doctor  noticed anything wrong he would use a piece of chalk to show the person  required further inspection. If, this was indeed the case, the person would  be set aside in a cage.      Another test was that of sanity. An interpreter would ask each person a  few questions just to find a sensible answer to test mental stability.       The last and most feared doctor checked for disease by lifting the  eyelid. He scared children, and probably spread more disease than the  people he checked. From an eyewitness account, his gloves were not sterile,  and he did not change or even wash them between examinations. I, myself,  found this disgusting, and dangerous.      Then, immigrants filed into lines by nationality to be questioned. The  questions scared many people. Should they tell the truth or lie. Which  answer would make sure that they could stay in America.      Later, for Jews, help came. A group called the "Hebrew Immigrant Aid  Society," (HIAS) told them to tell the truth, and helped them through the  period between leaving the boat and getting settled in the west.       Some officials were corrupt, and allowed bribes. This makes me wonder,  if this was the land of freedom and justice as it had been claimed. Through  the ordeal, one thing is certain. All of the immigrants passing through  Ellis Island were scared and confused. It was one feeling that most of  these people would probably be exposed to for the next few months.       There were many restrictions. People with certain diseases would be  sent back. Laws, such as the Chinese Exclusion Act, would not let certain  nationalities into America. In the early twentieth century it was decided  that Japanese people would not be allowed into America. This was surely not  the land of liberty that had been promised by our forefathers.       One of the nationalities traveling to America were Jews. They were  treated somewhat differently. This was probably because many of their  countries would not accept them.       The first Jews in the new world were Morranos from Spain. They fled  their homeland because of the inquisition. They traveled from Spain to  South America, and then to New Amsterdam. They, at first were rejected by  Peter Stuyvesant, but petitioned the Dutch West India Company of Amsterdam,  Holland, and, eventually were let into the colony.       Stuyvesant was determined to make life hard for the Jews, and  therefore denied them the right to build a synagogue. Luckily, for the  Jews, the colony was soon to be taken over by the British. Under certain  British naturalization laws, the Jews were able to build a synagogue in the  colony.      Jews in Savannah were accepted, but only to a degree. This was because  of Samuel Nunes, a Jewish doctor who helped to stop a disease that had  already killed many people. Even then, Jews were given land away from the  main town.      In the American Revolution Jews did not take any specific sides. Some  believed that the freedom that they had gained under the English rule would  be lost. Other felt that the taxes were too high and joined the Patriots.      Later, in the Civil War, Jews took sides as everyone else. Their  location meant everything. Jews in the north sided with the Union, and Jews  in the south sided with the Confederacy.      Unfortunately, a law was passed by Congress forbidding Jewish Chaplains  in the Union army. Congress later passed a law stating that chaplains    
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