Head
Strong | What we lose now that newcomers don't assimilate
12.09.07
By
Michael Smerconish
I have gotten used to being
asked: "So what kind of a name is that?"
My simplest and most
accurate answer is "Eastern European."
Pinpointing my heritage gets
difficult in light of a few name changes. Take my dad's side of the family.
Mildred Walker, my paternal grandmother, was born Carmella Vaccaro. Her family,
who were from a town called Lungro in Calabria, Italy, became the Walkers in
the United States.
She led her life as Millie
Walker until she married Wasil Smerconish, whose family came from somewhere in
Austria-Hungary. His name had been changed from Smerakanich. Still, the census
takers couldn't get it straight. In three consecutive censuses beginning in
1900, it was recorded as Smerakowitz, Smerakanos and Smerkovitch.
Mom's side is more
straightforward. The Grujichiches were from Yugoslavia. But they, too, changed
- to Grovich - when they passed under Lady Liberty. And there is hardly
anything unique in that. My family's willingness to change their name was just
part of their assimilation process, one that began at Ellis Island.
But today I see evidence of
that process in retreat, as the Smiths, Jones and Wilsons are quickly being
displaced by the Garcias, Rodriguezes and Martinzes.
A recently released analysis
of U.S. Census data compiled in 2000 found that we have to change our ideas (if
we have any) about what constitutes an "American" surname. Among the
most common surnames, two Hispanic names - Garcia (No. 8) and Rodriguez (No. 9)
- cracked the top 10, a first according to many demographers. Martinz advanced
eight spots to No. 11, barely behind Wilson. (The data made no distinction
between those here legally and illegally.)
The influx of Hispanic names
has been swift: Between the 1990 and 2000 census analyses, Garcia jumped 10
spots, while Rodriguez moved up 13. There are six Hispanic names among the top
25 - double the number in the previous compilation.
The increased frequency of
Hispanic names is, no doubt, due in part to unprecedented immigration. An
analysis of census data conducted by the Center for Immigration Studies
revealed that 10.3 million new immigrants have come to the United States over
the last seven years - more than any other seven-year period in our country's
history. It is estimated that more than half came illegally.
Today, 1 out of every 8
people living here is an immigrant - good for an estimated total of almost 38
million.
That many of those 38
million are arriving with their names intact may illustrate the main difference
between today's immigrant and those who arrived at the turn of the last
century.
The Smerakowitz, Vaccaro and
Grujichich families arrived prepared to do whatever it took to be
"American," even if that meant updating the spelling of their names
every 10 years. While they did not forget where they came from, they were
anxious to follow immigration laws, to learn the English language, and to
become a legitimate, moving part of the economy. The result was the oft-cited
image of the United States as a melting pot.
But today, we've stopped
melting. Or as former presidential adviser and candidate Pat Buchanan recently
told me: "The melting pot is cracked and broken."
What has changed? The issue
is not that too many Hispanic names are finding their way over the border. It's
what happens - or doesn't happen - once they arrive.
I know I'm not alone in my
belief that today's immigrants - those here both legally and illegally - are
not assimilating the way my forefathers did when they arrived.
And before I'm shouted down
as a xenophobe, hear me out. My intent isn't to amplify the shrill debate
surrounding illegal immigration. What I'm interested in is defending the
tradition to which my grandparents adhered: the one that led them to a new name
and a better life in this country.
I fear we are leaving it
behind.
Something else Buchanan told
me struck a chord.
"We all want to be
proud of our ethnic groups," he said. "It is when we diverse people became
one new people that we became strong, that we became Americans, that America
became great.
"It is when we came
together as one that we became a united and great nation. So . . . I'm not
denying people the right to their roots; they ought to be proud of them. But we
ought to celebrate the fact that we are a new nation, one nation, one people,
we are Americans."
He's right. And it's the
reason I find no fault with those who want the same for the Garcias as we did
for the Grujichiches. And the Vaccaros, as well as the Walkers.
Michael
Smerconish's column appears on Thursdays in the Daily News and on Sundays in
Currents. He can be heard from 5:30 to 9 a.m. wekdays on "The Big
Talker," WPHT-AM (1210). Contact him via the Web at http://www.mastalk.com.