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An old struggle to adapt to a new country's ways (Geno's Steaks:"Speak English")
Philadelphia Inquirer ^ | 5/30/06 | Gaiutra Bahadur

Posted on 05/30/2006 5:41:16 AM PDT by Fintan

 
Joseph Vento, whose grandparents came from Italy, insists that customers at Geno's Steaks order in English. "Why should I have to bend?" he says.
 

 

Joseph Vento, whose grandparents came from Italy, insists that customers at Geno's Steaks order in English. "Why should I have to bend?" he says.

How do you say cheesesteak with in Spanish?

Joseph Vento, the owner of Geno's Steaks, doesn't know. And he doesn't care.

Just read the laminated signs, festooned with American eagles, at his South Philadelphia cheesesteak emporium: This is America. When Ordering, Speak English.

Vento's political statement - from a man whose Italian-born grandparents spoke only broken English - captures the anger and discontent felt by many Americans about illegal immigrants.

With a battle looming between the House and Senate on legalizing some immigration violators, the public backlash is framed by two complaints:

One, my grandparents came legally. How come these guys can't? And, two, my grandparents had to learn English. How come these guys don't?

"Go back to the 19th century, and play by those rules," said Vento, 66, whose grandfather became a U.S. citizen in 1921.

But history challenges many assumptions about the hurdles aspiring Americans used to face, say scholars of the last massive migration to the United States, which occurred between 1880 and 1920.

"There was no such thing as an 'illegal' immigrant," said Roger Daniels, a member of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island History Committee and author of Guarding the Golden Door: American Immigrants and Immigration Policy Since 1882.

The Old Country often required exit visas, which created the possibility of illegal emigrants. But the United States did not issue entry visas until 1921.

Before that, no meaningful immigration restrictions existed, except for a bar on Chinese enacted in 1882. Congress imposed no other limits on the number of immigrants - from any one country, or in total. About a million arrived each year in the early 1900s. It wasn't until 1924 that Congress imposed an annual cap of 155,000 immigrants.

"If you could get here and weren't terribly diseased, you could get in," Daniels said.

By contrast, backlogs, country quotas and annual caps now make legal immigration a tortuous and nearly impossible process for many, said Thomas Conaghan, director of the Irish Immigration and Pastoral Center in Upper Darby.

Past immigrants, once here, faced a backlash fueled by anxiety about religions, languages and races that were relatively new to the United States. Fear of anarchist and "Red" ideologies and the competition for jobs also played roles.

Help-wanted ads limited applicants to native-born Americans, said Kathryn Wilson, director of education at the Pennsylvania Historical Society.

Current critics of illegal immigration echo earlier generations of nativists, say academic experts on ethnicity.

"A lot of the rhetoric was similar: 'They don't speak English. They don't want to be Americans,' " said Mae M. Ngai, a University of Chicago historian and author of Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America.

The Senate bill passed last Thursday, which gives some illegal immigrants a chance to become citizens, included an amendment that would make English the national language.

An English-only movement also took shape in the late 19th century, with an abortive attempt to require newcomers to read a passage in English at Ellis Island. In the end, the literacy test was administered, but in the immigrant's native tongue.

Joseph Vento's grandfather and namesake, a street-corner jeweler from Sicily, had trouble with English.

"They tried," Vento said of his grandparents. "They had a hard time. Look at the price they paid. They were limited."

The Ventos rarely left their South Philadelphia neighborhood. Now, in a way, the neighborhood has left the couple's descendants. Geno's sits at Ninth and Passyunk, the hub of Little Italy turned home to thousands of Mexicans.

Some try to order a cheesesteak. And it bugs Vento if they can't ask for American cheese, provolone or the classic - Cheez Whiz - without pointing.

"If you can't tell me what you want, I can't serve you," he said. "It's up to you. If you can't read, if you can't say the word cheese, how can I communicate with you - and why should I have to bend?

"I got a business to run."

Vento, who lives in Shamong, put up the signs when the immigration debate seized national headlines six months ago.

With Geno's Steaks tattooed on his arm, Vento is used to publicizing things, especially what's on his mind. Speak English signs also poster his Hummer. He has driven through South Philadelphia blaring through the SUV's P.A. system denunciations of neighborhood business owners who hire illegal immigrants.

"I say what everybody's thinking but is afraid to say," Vento said.

That many think as he does may be true. The dominance of Latinos among new immigrants has triggered a backlash, said Peter Skerry, a political scientist at the Brookings Institution.

Spanish-speakers make up about 30 percent of legal migrants and roughly 80 percent of illegal migrants, compared with the 21 percent preponderance of Italians a century ago.

"It's just a huge concentration . . . that raises questions for people about how these immigrants are assimilating," Skerry said.

He and other experts say that current immigrants are taking no longer to assimilate than Vento's grandfather did. Now, as then, English takes hold among the children of immigrants, and native languages disappear by the third generation.

What's different, Skerry said, is that many Americans now value multiculturalism, and technology allows it to flourish. Satellite TV beams soap operas from Latin America to U.S. living rooms, phones make it cheap and easy to connect with relatives back home, and airplanes allow a back-and-forth existence.

In society, "there is a notion that people are entitled to their own culture," he said. "Assimilation is a dirty word in many quarters. Sometimes, we don't even use the word anymore."

Vento is lashing out at that self-assertion by immigrants: "I don't want somebody coming here to change my culture to their culture," he said.

"They want us to adapt to these people. What do you mean, 'Press 1 for Spanish'? English, period. Case closed. End of discussion. You better make it the official language."

 


 

 


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; englishonly; illegalaliens; immigrantlist; immigration; language
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1 posted on 05/30/2006 5:41:21 AM PDT by Fintan
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To: Fintan

I've been to Geno's... great cheesesteaks.


2 posted on 05/30/2006 5:42:18 AM PDT by Lunatic Fringe (http://ntxsolutions.com)
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To: Fintan
How do you say cheesesteak with in Spanish?

biftec con queso?

3 posted on 05/30/2006 5:44:48 AM PDT by edpc
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To: Fintan

What is "Pat's" stance on this?


4 posted on 05/30/2006 5:44:56 AM PDT by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: Lunatic Fringe; Owl_Eagle; Temple Owl
PHILLY PING!

The immortal debate...Pat's or Geno's?

Personally, I like Tony Luke's.

5 posted on 05/30/2006 5:45:09 AM PDT by Malacoda (The Posting Police need an enema.)
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To: Fintan

Americans need to take this battle on themselves. Insist on doing business ONLY with companies that employ only 100% legal residents or citizens. Ask them on the phone or in person when you speak to them. It makes a difference, every little bit.

God Bless Vento.


6 posted on 05/30/2006 5:46:52 AM PDT by AbeKrieger (A country without secure borders will not long be a country.)
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To: Fintan
My grandmother came here from Italy and taught her kids how to speak English. She wanted no part of the past when she came here(except for the food, thank God). She knew the secret to success was assimilation. She wanted to be American and I can still hear her yelling at people who weren't speaking English. She would yell"Speak English you stinking foreigners" in her really rotten broken English.
7 posted on 05/30/2006 5:49:27 AM PDT by satchmodog9 (Most people stand on the tracks and never even hear the train coming)
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To: Lunatic Fringe

I'm a Pat's fan however, I think I may have to lend some support to Geno for standing up for what he believes which happens to fall in line with my views too.


8 posted on 05/30/2006 5:51:56 AM PDT by kx9088
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To: Fintan

Sounds like a great place to eat.

However, money is green and doesn't care about language. And the customer is always right (except when he's wrong!).

If he can't understand Spanish, thats fine, but that's why you have "specials" or "combos" that are numbered... Even a language-challenged individual like me can understand "uno, dos, tres, quatro..."

And God and Heaven help him if he tries to keep employees from speaking Spanish - the EEOC will be all over him.


9 posted on 05/30/2006 5:52:41 AM PDT by Little Ray (If you want to be a martyr, we want to martyr you.)
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To: Fintan

Bump


10 posted on 05/30/2006 6:01:40 AM PDT by Valin (Purple Fingers Rule!)
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To: Malacoda

I hate this propaganda. Expect it to come loud and thick. Yes, the first paragraph is great -- this guy says 'English spoken here.' Then they go on to talk about the 'nativists' in the past who ALSO didn't like immigration (but it happened anyway, and now we are better off for it). I've seen 'nativists' tossed around quite a bit lately. And I think there is a huge push to make US the bad guys.


11 posted on 05/30/2006 6:09:47 AM PDT by bboop (Stealth Tutor)
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To: bboop
And I think there is a huge push to make US the bad guys.

Yes, the Washington insider talking points.

Us folks out here in fly over Land are just a bunch of rubes, that don't make enough to have a gardener and maid. I think you are 200% correct.

12 posted on 05/30/2006 6:15:35 AM PDT by org.whodat (Never let the facts get in the way of a good assumption.)
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To: gubamyster

ping


13 posted on 05/30/2006 6:16:02 AM PDT by DumpsterDiver
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To: Fintan

I'd like to get about a million of those "Speak English" stickers he has in his window and paste them all over Silicon Valley.


14 posted on 05/30/2006 6:23:29 AM PDT by jiggyboy (Ten per cent of poll respondents are either lying or insane)
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To: Fintan

genos!


15 posted on 05/30/2006 6:46:20 AM PDT by philsfan24
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To: philsfan24

 

Yep. Click on the pic.

16 posted on 05/30/2006 6:49:12 AM PDT by Fintan (One day we'll look back on this and plow into a parked car.)
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To: Fintan

FYI, Vento is also a huge supporter of the cause of P/O Danny Faulkner, who was murdered by Wesely Cook, AKA Mumia Abul Jamal. Many events and fund raisers have been helped by him and his establishment.


17 posted on 05/30/2006 6:52:11 AM PDT by FreeperinRATcage (I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for every thing I do. - R. A. Heinlein)
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To: FreeperinRATcage

Darn right. Check the site.

18 posted on 05/30/2006 6:56:26 AM PDT by Fintan (One day we'll look back on this and plow into a parked car.)
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To: Fintan

Just clicked on the pic, and sent an e-mail thanking him for his ability to say what others do not have the courage to!


19 posted on 05/30/2006 6:59:44 AM PDT by GreenEggsNHam (Hey... what if the hokey pokey really IS what it's all about?)
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To: Fintan
Speak English signs also poster his Hummer. He has driven through South Philadelphia blaring through the SUV's P.A. system denunciations of neighborhood business owners who hire illegal immigrants.

:-0 That is a riot.

20 posted on 05/30/2006 7:01:07 AM PDT by Tired of Taxes (That's taxes, not Texas. I have no beef with TX. NJ has the highest property taxes in the nation.)
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