Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

House Resolution Commemorates 1958 Azorean Refugee Act

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • House Resolution Commemorates 1958 Azorean Refugee Act

    HOUSE RESOLUTION COMMEMORATES 1958 AZOREAN REFUGEE ACT
    By Michael Doyle

    McClatchy Washington Bureau
    August 12, 2008
    DC

    WASHINGTON -- John F. Kennedy helped populate the San Joaquin Valley
    with Azoreans. Now, the Valley's lawmakers offer a belated thanks.

    In a commemoration that's also a rich political lesson, six House
    members are honoring long-ago congressional efforts on behalf of
    Azoreans displaced by a 1950s volcano. The volcano subsided, but the
    consequences of Kennedy's efforts can still be felt today.

    "We understand the 50th anniversary is an important milestone,"
    Rep. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, said Tuesday.

    Costa recently introduced a resolution commemorating the
    half-century-old Azorean Refugee Act. The legislation and its
    successors welcomed thousands of refugees fleeing the Capelhinos
    volcano, which boiled the island of Faial between September 1957 and
    October 1958.

    "Everywhere within a four-mile radius the lava and ash spread fear and
    destruction," Kennedy declared on the Senate floor on June 30, 1958.

    The new commemorative resolution, in turn, is the kind of symbolic
    shout-out that proliferates in a Congress highly attuned to ethnic
    voting blocs.

    Costa and his Valley co-authors, Reps. Devin Nunes, R-Visalia, and
    Dennis Cardoza, D-Merced, all represent sizable Portuguese-American
    constituencies. Costa himself had one grandfather who emigrated from
    Portugal in 1899, and another who came in 1904.

    The three other Democratic co-sponsors come from Rhode Island
    and Massachusetts, which are likewise well-populated by
    Portuguese-Americans.

    In a similar expression of all-politics-is-local, Fresno-area
    lawmakers whose districts include tens of thousands of
    Armenian-American constituents have long championed an Armenian
    genocide resolution. The Valley's politically vocal Hmong refugees
    convinced Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa, to denounce the socialist
    Laotian government. The Valley's significant Sikh population persuaded
    former Rep. Gary Condit of Ceres to opine on internal Indian politics.

    The 2000 census identified 1.1 million Portuguese-Americans living in
    the United States, including about 330,000 in California. Many are
    concentrated in certain regions, a trend that typically amplifies
    business and political clout. The new resolution, for instance,
    asserts that roughly half of the San Joaquin Valley's dairy farms by
    the 1970s were owned by Portuguese-Americans.

    "There are still a lot of living immigrants who came as a result of
    that (1958) legislation," noted Nunes' chief of staff, Johnny Amaral,
    whose own grandparents and father immigrated from Faial.

    Costa and his colleagues introduced the Azorean Refugee Act
    commemoration July 31. Costa and Nunes shortly thereafter departed
    for the Azores, a cluster of islands 900 miles west of Portugal,
    where they visited relatives and helped island residents commemorate
    the volcanic eruption.

    "The eruption of the Capelhinos volcano led to a wave of Portuguese
    immigration that brought more than 175,000 Azoreans to the United
    States between 1960 and 1980," the resolution states.

    The resolution glosses over some politically instructive details.

    The initial moving force behind the Azorean Refugee Act was Sen. John
    O. Pastore, a Rhode Island Democrat who introduced the measure June 4,
    1958. The legislation authorized 1,500 visas for Azoreans affected
    by the volcano.

    Kennedy, a Massachusetts senator still two years away from his 1960
    presidential bid, came on board three weeks later. So did others
    attentive to Portuguese-American voters.

    "In the district which I represent in California are a great many
    families of Portuguese extraction," then-Rep. John McFall, a Democrat
    from Manteca, declared Aug. 22, 1958 House. "These people have earned
    the reputation as fine, hardworking, law-abiding citizens."

    The 1958 political maneuvering took some familiar-sounding turns.

    Other senators including New York Democrat Jacob Javits said they
    wanted "comprehensive" immigration legislation. Senate leaders,
    though, warned the Azorean refugee bill would die if anyone hijacked
    it as a vehicle for broader immigration reform.

    "I know it is not an idle threat," a frustrated Javits declared, adding
    that "it should be made clear that far more inclusive immigration
    action in the interest of the United States is urgently required."

    But in the kind of side deal that often lubricates legislation,
    lawmakers did add several thousand additional visas for Dutch
    nationals. The initially limited Azorean visa program then expanded
    in future years, until quotas were lifted altogether.
Working...
X