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~From the Los Angeles Times, December 16, 2004
http://tinyurl.com/48dar

Stark Contrasts Found Among Asian Americans

The  group?s  average family income tops the overall U.S. figure.
But while Indians prosper, Cambodians, Laotians and Hmong  strug­
gle.

By Teresa Watanabe and Nancy Wride Times Staff Writers,
December 16, 2004

Indian Americans have surged forward as the most successful Asian
minority  in  the  United States, reporting top levels of income,
education, professional job status and English?language  ability,
even  though  three?fourths  were foreign?born, according to U.S.
census data released Wednesday.

The striking success of Asian Americans who trace their  heritage
to  India contrasted with data showing struggles among Cambodian,
Laotian and Hmong immigrants. Those three groups reported contin­
ued  significant  poverty  rates,  low job skills and limited En­
glish?language ability since their flight from war and  political
turmoil.

The  report,  "We  the  People: Asians in the United States," was
based on 2000 census data and underscored the enormous  socioeco­
nomic  diversity  among  the nation?s 10 million Asian Americans,
more than one third of whom live in California,  the  state  with
their largest population.

Asian  Americans  increased from 6.9 million, or 2.8% of the U.S.
population, in 1990 to 10.2 million, or 3.6%, in 2000.  Including
mixed?race  Asian  Americans, counted by the census for the first
time in 2000, the population was 11.9 million, or 4.2%.

"It is a community of contrasts," said Kimiko Kelly, research an­
alyst  with  the Asian Pacific American Legal Center in Los Ange­
les. "Asian Americans are seen as a model minority  who  are  not
suffering from barriers to education or progress. But if you look
closely, you see a community that covers the whole spectrum, from
wealthy to very poor."

She said the growing diversity of the community, which was mainly
Chinese, Japanese and Filipinos until  1965  immigration  reforms
were instituted, has multiplied the challenges facing service or­
ganizations such as hers.  Translators  for  health  clinics  and
courts are among the pressing needs, she said.

The  contrasts are detailed in the report, which provides data on
such items as age, marital status, citizenship, language,  educa­
tion,  earnings,  poverty  rates,  occupation  and home ownership
among 11 Asian American groups.

Median family income,  for  instance,  ranged  from  $70,849  for
Japanese  and  $70,708  for  Asian Indians to about half that for
Cambodians and Hmong. Indian men  showed  the  highest  full?time
earnings, $51,900, about double the figure for Hmong men.

About  64% of Asian Indians held a bachelor?s degree or more, the
highest rate, compared with 7.7% for Laotians and 7.5% for Hmong,
the  lowest.  More  than  three?fourths  of Indians and Filipinos
spoke fluent English, twice the rate for Vietnamese.

Max Niedzwiecki, executive director of  the  Southeast  Asia  Re­
source  Action  Center  in Washington, D.C., said the differences
stemmed in part from different histories.  Many  Southeast  Asian
Americans  came  here  as refugees with less formal education and
with memories of traumatic experiences stemming from the  Vietnam
War and the murderous Khmer Rouge reign in Cambodia, he said.

In  contrast,  many  Asians  Indians emigrated voluntarily from a
relatively peaceful homeland and were equipped  with  strong  En­
glish skills to pursue higher academic degrees or business oppor­
tunities. Between 1990 and 2000, they doubled their population to
1.6  million  and  now  rank  as the third?largest Asian American
group after Chinese and Filipinos.

Take, for instance, Venkatesh Koka, a 36?year?old real estate in­
vestor  in Artesia. The son of a civil engineer, Koka left a com­
fortable life with servants in southern India to earn a  master?s
degree in business administration at Ohio University. As in other
upper?middle?class families, he had  attended  schools  with  in­
struction  in  English  since his childhood, rendering him fluent
even though he has always spoken Telugu, an Indian  language,  at
home.

He  says  he  came  to  the  United States in 1986 after a friend
studying here lured him with wide?eyed stories  of  freeways,  an
easy life and good money.

Koka worked at a bank and initially lost $1.5 million in real es­
tate deals, filing for bankruptcy in the mid?1990s.  Since  then,
he said, he has bounced back as manager of his family investments
and has increased their value from $3  million  to  $15  million.
This  year,  his family created the Little India Village shopping
plaza on Pioneer Boulevard in Artesia.

"You never learn life unless you come to America," Koka said. "In
India,  you  have servants and money from your parents. Here, you
learn independence and how to lose, how to gain."

Vinay Lal, an associate professor of history at UCLA who special­
izes in the Indian diaspora, said Indian Americans had made their
strongest contributions in the medical and high?technology indus­
tries. He said more than half of all graduates from India?s pres­
tigious Indian  Institutes  of  Technology  come  to  the  United
States,  and  currently number at least 25,000. He estimated that
Indian Americans constituted 20% or more of  Silicon  Valley  em­
ployees.

He believes, however, that the Census Bureau significantly under­
counted lower?income Indian Americans.  Other  scholarly  studies
have found both high rates of wealth and high rates of poverty in
the community.

The new report found that Southeast Asian  communities  continued
to  struggle  the  most,  which Niedzwiecki attributed in part to
lingering traumas of strife in that region.

The nation?s Hmongs originally hailed from Laos but  largely  mi­
grated  here  from  refugee  camps in Thailand. Many of them have
settled in California?s Central Valley.

Pang Houa Moua, a program manager for the Hmong National Develop­
ment  advocacy  group in Washington, D.C., said traditional Hmong
society was agrarian and isolated, with no running water or elec­
tricity.  A  written  language  was not developed until 1950, and
formal education was limited: Her own parents, she said, did  not
learn that the world was round until they were teenagers.

"When  you  throw  a  population like that into the middle of the
most technologically advanced society in the  world,  people  are
going to be confused," she said. "They?re going to struggle."

Still,  experts  say  they find a striking divide among Southeast
Asians between adult refugees and their children,  who  are  more
assimilated and successful here.

For instance, 17?year?old Prumsodun Ok of Long Beach is a promis­
ing filmmaker who just won an award and recognition from the  YM­
CA?s Youth Institute, where he works after school. Prum, as he is
known among friends, also is a late?blooming accomplished classi­
cal Cambodian dancer at the Khmer Arts Academy in Long Beach.

He  is  the  third?youngest of 10 children whose parents speak no
English and have never gotten off welfare here. They  have  their
hearts  in  the  homeland  and are "stuck in place," the teenager
said Wednesday.

He said his parents? financial dependence  on  public  assistance
stemmed  from  their failure to learn English, from advancing age
and from isolation.

"I think they?ve just been so unable to adapt to life  here,"  he
said of his parents. "It?s always, ?Cambodia! Cambodia!? They al­
ways look inward and are scared and isolated."

Prum was born in Long Beach, the first of the siblings  to  be  a
U.S.  citizen.  His  older siblings were born in prewar Cambodia,
postwar Thai refugee camps or elsewhere before the family settled
in  Long  Beach,  home  to  the  largest  population of Cambodian
refugees outside Cambodia.

His eldest  siblings,  now  approaching  middle  age,  have  been
schooled  and  employed,  and some have their own businesses. One
owns a florist shop in Eagle Rock. Another works  in  the  after?
school  program  at Whittier Elementary School in Long Beach. All
are off welfare, which is Prum?s aspiration.

A senior in Long Beach Polytechnic High School?s magnet  program,
Prum  dreams of becoming a filmmaker and is applying to the Cali­
fornia Institute of the Arts in Valencia.

"I want to be independent," he insisted, "and I don?t  want  any­
thing to hold me back."

*

Asians in America

The  median  annual income of Asian families exceeded that of all
U.S. families, and the percentage of Asians with at least a bach­
elor?s degree was almost double that of the total population, ac­
cording to the 2000 census.

~  Median family  Bachelor?s
~  income in 1999  degree or  more*  All  U.S.  families   $50,046
24.40% Asian Americans  $59,324  44.10% (Percent distribution be­
low)

Chinese (23.8%) $60,058 48.10%
Filipino (18.3%) $65,189 43.80% Asian Indian (16.2%) $70,708 63.90%
Vietnamese (10.9%) $47,103 19.40%
Korean (10.5%) $47,624 43.80% Japanese (7.8%) $70,849 41.90%
Cambodian (1.8%) $35,621 9.20%
Hmong (1.7%) $32,384 7.50%
Laotian (1.6%) $43,542 7.70% Pakistani (1.5%) $50,189 54.30% Thai (1.1%) $49,635 38.60%
Other Asian (4.7%) $50,733 41.40%


*Age 25 and older

Source: U.S. Census Bureau
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