| Zalmay Khalilzad • Lina Rozbih Khaled Hosseini • Ali Ahmad Jalali |
| Total population |
|---|
| 300.000 [1] |
| Regions with significant populations |
| West Coast (California), Northeast (Virginia), South (Florida) |
| Languages |
|
American English, Pashto, Dari (Persian), Uzbek, and other languages of Afghanistan |
| Religion |
|
Predominantly Muslim |
An Afghan American refers to an American with heritage or origins in Afghanistan.
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Afghan Americans have a long history of immigrating to the United States, as they may have arrived as early as the 1920s.[2] Due to the political borders at that time period, some of these Afghan immigrants may have been ethnic Pashtuns from British India (present-day Pakistan) or Afghanistan.[2] Wallace Fard Muhammad, credited for being the founder of the Nation of Islam, may have been from Afghanistan. World War I draft registration card for Wallace Dodd Ford from 1917 indicated he was living in Los Angeles, California, as an unmarried restaurant owner, and reported that he was born in Shinka, Afghanistan in 1893.[3] During the 1930s and 1940s, well-educated Afghans entered America.[2] Between 1953 and early 1970, at least 230 migrated into the United States.[2] Some of those who entered the US were students who won scholarships to study in American universities. After the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, around five million Afghan citizens decided to leave their country to immigrate or seek refuge in other countries. These Afghan refugees mostly settled in neighboring Pakistan and Iran, and from there many made it to the European Union, North America, Australia, and else where in the world.
Those who were granted asylums in the United States began to settle in California (mainly the Los Angeles-Orange County area and San Francisco Bay Area) and in the Northeastern United States, where large Muslim community centers keep them closely bonded. Fremont, California, is home to the largest population of Afghan Americans in the U.S.[4] Smaller Afghan American communities also exist in the states of Texas, Illinois, Florida, Washington and elsewhere.
According to the United States Census Bureau, there were approximately 65,972 Afghan-Americans living in the country in 2006. According to the Embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, DC, the over-all Afghan population in the United States in 2011 is around 300,000.[5] While 30,000 reside in Northern Virginia, approximately 65,000 Afghans comprise the diaspora community based in the San Francisco Bay Area.[5] Some figures estimate that there may only be about 80,000 Afghan-Americans but the actual number may be 200,000[6] to as high as 300,000.[5] Nevertheless, such higher figures may be an exaggeration, as a recent census of 2001 found approximately 9,000 of Afghan ancestry living in New York metro area, considerably lower than the 20,000 regularly cited.[7] Although, the 300,000 figure is a commonly accepted number. Flushing, Queens has a substantial amount of Afghan Americans[citation needed].
Although the majority of Afghans have assimilated into the American way of life, some migrants from Afghanistan have attempted to not assimilate into American culture as they have valued their traditional culture even after several generations. Afghan Americans value their oral tradition of story telling. The stories they tell are about Nasreddin, history, myths and religion.[2]
Afghan Americans celebrate August 19 in the United States as "Afghan Day" or "Afghanistan Day", it is the day that their former nation had won the war against the British in 1919. Smaller festivals are held in cities that have Afghan communities, usually at the parks where black, red and green colored Afghan flags are spotted around cars.[8]
The overwhelming majority of Afghan Americans are Muslim, which includes the majority Sunni and the Shia minority of Islam. There is a small community of Afghan Jews in New York City, numbering about 200 families[9]
While the early immigrants were well-educated, the subsequent waves of migrants have not been as educated.[2] The first immigrants came to the US by choice and were well-educated.[2] In contrast, current immigrants have fled Afghanistan after it destabilized during the Soviet occupation as this group has had trouble coping with learning a new language.[2] Those who have pursued their education in America in the middle 20th century and traveled back to Afghanistan, faced trouble attaining employment when returning back to the US since their education, often in medicine and engineering, is frequently viewed as outdated.[2] After the Soviet invasion, Afghanistan's education system worsened, causing many migrants in the late 20th century to place less emphasize on educational attainment.[2]
In almost every Afghan American household someone is attending or has graduated college. A sizable number of Afghan Americans who do not seek higher education often enter into food industry, mainly in running Afghan cuisine restaurants and fast food establishments such as Kennedy Chicken.[10] The newcomers to America can be sometimes found vending coffee and bagels in Manhattan where they have replaced Greek Americans in the field.[11]
After 9/11, a mosque run by Afghan-Americans in Flushing, New York, donated blood, held a vigil for World Trade Center deceased and funded a memorial for the fire fighters.[13] Since late 2001, after the U.S. war in Afghanistan, large numbers of Afghan-Americans work for the U.S. government as translators and others. Many of them lost their lives in the war, the same way US soldiers have.
Around the time of 9-11 an individual went on a shooting rampage in Mesa, Arizona, where he shot at a home owned by an Afghan-American.[14] Additionally, vandals defaced an Afghan restaurant with red liquid intended to appear as blood.[15] Moreover, the Afghan Mission to the UN received a letter that contained quotes from Osama Bin Laden along with a dried pig's ear.[15]
In more recent acts, Alia Ansari, a mother of six children, was shot dead in California on October 20, 2006, an incident which the victim's family and local leaders deemed a hate crime.[16][17] While wearing her hijab, Ansari was gunned down in front of her children. The incident eventually led to local politicians to call November 13 "wear-the-hijab-day".[18]
Other Afghan-Americans, like U.S. Air Force veteran Mustafa Aziz, have faced long delays in obtaining their US citizenship. The ACLU consequently filed a lawsuit and accused government officials of improperly delaying background checks and allowing applications to linger indefinitely.[19] In 2006, the ACLU claimed victory as Aziz ultimately received his citizenship.[20]
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This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)