首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Why They Came Not many decisions could have been more difficult for a family to make them to say farewell to a community whe
Why They Came Not many decisions could have been more difficult for a family to make them to say farewell to a community whe
admin
2010-07-24
41
问题
Why They Came
Not many decisions could have been more difficult for a family to make them to say farewell to a community where it had lived for centuries, to abandon old ties and familiar landmarks, and to sail across dark seas to a strange land. Today, when mass communications tell one part of the world all about another, it is quite easy to understand how poverty or tyranny might force people to exchange an old nation for a new one. But centuries ago migration was a leap into the unknown. It was an enormous intellectual and emotional commitment. The forces that moved early immigrants to their great decision — the decision to leave their homes and begin an adventure filled with uncertainty, risk and hardship — must have been of overpowering proportions. As Oscar Handlin states, the early immigrants of America "would collide with unaccustomed problems, learn to understand alien ways and alien languages, manage to survive in a very foreign environment".
Despite the obstacles and uncertainties that lay ahead of them, millions did migrate to "the promised land" — America. But what was it that moved so many to migrate against such overwhelming odds? There were probably as many reasons for coming to America as there were people who came. It was a highly individual decision. Yet it can be said that three large forces—religious persecution, political oppression and economic hardship-provided the chief motives for the mass migrations to America. They were responding in their own way to the pledge of the Declaration of Independence: the promise of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness".
The search for freedom of worship has brought people to America from the days of the pilgrims to modern times. In 1620, for example, the Mayflower carried a cargo of 102 passengers who "welcomed the opportunity to advance the gospel of Christ in these remote parts". A number of other groups such as the Jews and Quakers came to America after the Pilgrims, all seeking religious freedom. In more recent times, anti-Semitic persecution in Hitler’s Germany has driven people from their homes to seek refuge in America. However, not all religious sects have received the tolerance and understanding for which they came. The Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony showed as little tolerance for dissention beliefs as the Anglicans of England had shown them. They quickly expelled other religious groups from their society. Minority religious sects, from the Quakers and Shakers through the Catholics and Jews to the Mormons, have at various times suffered both discrimination and hostility in the United States.
But the diversity of religious belief has made for religious toleration. In demanding freedom for itself, each sect had to permit freedom for others. The insistence of each successive wave of immigrants upon its right to practice its religion helped make freedom of worship a central part of the American Creed. People who gambled their lives on the right to believe in their own God would not easily surrender that right in a new society.
The second great force behind immigration has been political oppression. America has always been a refuge from tyranny. As a nation conceived in liberty, it has help out to the world the promise of respect for the rights of man. Every time a revolution has failed in Europe, every time a nation has succumbed to tyranny, men and women who love freedom have assembled their families and their belongings and set sail across the seas. This process has not come to an end in our own day. The terrors of Hitler’s Germany and Mussolini’s Italy, the terrible wars of Southeast Asia — all have brought new thousands seeking safety in the United States.
The economic factor has been more complex than the religious and political factors. From the very beginning, some have come to America in search of riches, some in flight from poverty, and some because they were bought and sold and had no choice.
And the various reasons are intertwined. Thus some early arrivals were lured to these shores by dreams of amassing great wealth, like the Spanish in Mexico and Peru. These adventurers, expecting quick profits in gold, soon found that real wealth lay in such crops as tobacco and cotton. AS they built up the plantation, economy in states like Virginia and the Carolinas, they needed cheap labor, So they began to import indentured servants from England (men and Women who agreed to labor a term of years in exchange for eventual freedom), and slaves from Africa.
The process of industrialization in America increased the demand for cheap labor, and chaotic economic conditions in Europe increased the supply. If some immigrants continued to believe that the streets of New York were paved with gold, more were driven by the hunger and hardship of their native lands. The Irish potato famine of 1845 brought almost a million people to America in five years. American manufacturers advertised in European newspapers, offering to pay the passage of any man willing to come to America to work for them.
The immigrants who came for economic reasons contributed to the strength of the new society in several ways. Those who came from countries with advanced political and economic institutions brought with them faith in those institutions and experience in making them work. They also brought technical and managerial skills which contributed greatly to economic growth in the new land. Above all, they helped give America the extraordinary social mobility which is the essence of an open society.
In the community he had left, the immigrant usually had a fixed place. He would carry on his father’s craft of trade; he would farm his father’s land or that small portion of it that was left him after it was divided with his brothers. Only with the most exceptional talent and enterprise could break out of the circumstances in life into which he had been born. There were no such circumstances for him in the New World. Once having broken with the past, except for sentimental ties and cultural inheritance, he had to rely on his own abilities. It was the future and not the past which he had to face. Except for the Negro slave, the immigrant could go anywhere and do anything his talents permitted. A large, virgin continent lay before him, and he had only to join it together by canals, railroads and roads. If he failed to achieve the dream of a better life for himself, he could still retain it for his children.
These were the major forces that started this massive migration to America. Every immigrant served to reinforce and strengthen those elements in American society that had attracted him in the first place. The motives of some immigrants were commonplace. The motives of others were noble. Taken together they add up to the strengths and weaknesses of America.
In the community he had left, the immigrant usually had ______.
选项
答案
a fixed place
解析
原文意思为:在移民前,他们一般都遵循固定的生活模式。由此可得答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/RYN7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Wecanseehowtheproductlifecycleworksbylookingattheintroductionofinstantcoffee.Whenitwasintroduced,mostpeopl
Iaskedsuccessfulpeoplewhatthesecretoftheirsuccesswas.I【B1】______anearlydiscussionwithavicepresidentofalarge
Faces,likefingerprints,areunique.Didyou【C1】______wonderhowitispossibleforusto【C2】______people?Evenaskilledwrite
Somepeoplearguethatthepressuresoninternationalsportsmenandsportswomenkilltheessenceofsport--thepursuitofperson
Software(ofcomputers),isalsocalledcomputerprograms,whichreferstoinstructionsthatcausethehardware—themachines—to
A、Thisclassisparticularlyimportant.B、Theprofessorinthisclasslecturesalot.C、It’snecessarytocometoclassandbea
TheAmericaneconomicsystemisorganizedaroundabasicallyprivate-enterprise,market-orientedeconomyinwhichconsumerslarg
A、Gototheshoppingcenteroncampus.B、Walktoshoppingcenter.C、Takeataxi.D、Waitforthebus.B
A、ThemanisalwaysabsentinMrs.Lee’sclass.B、Thewomanlikessleepingintheclass.C、NeitherofthemlikesMrs.Lee’sclas
Lowlevelsofliteracy(读写能力)andnumeracy(计算能力)haveadamagingimpactonalmosteveryaspectofadultlife.Testsandintervi
随机试题
阅读《往事》(一之十四)中的一段文字,然后回答下列小题。不是说做女神,我希望我们都做个“海化”的青年。像涵说的,海是温柔而沉静。杰说的,海是超绝而威严。楫说得更好了,海是神秘而有容,也是虚怀,也是广博……“‘海化’的青年”的内涵指的是什么?
垂直一体化
(2009年10月)加快资本周转速度对剩余价值生产有什么影响?
患者,男,40岁。门静脉高压症,急性大出血,应用三腔二囊管压迫止血。当三腔二囊管压迫无效时,应进行
按照FIDIC施工分包合同条件对索赔管理的规定,下列表述正确的有()。
“开始”菜单中的“程序”选项中的“附件”中的“记事本”软件是windows下的()。
证券交易所设立会员大会、理事会和专门委员会。会员大会是证券交易所的权力机构,理事会是证券交易所的决策机构。( )
巴塞尔委员会认为,操作风险是银行面临的一项重要风险,商业银行应为抵御操作风险造成的损失安排()。
数据流图可用于抽象描述一个软件的逻辑模型,并由若干种基本的图形符号组成,下述图名 Ⅰ.加工 Ⅱ.数据流 Ⅲ.数据存储 Ⅳ.外部实体 构成数据流图的基本图形有
排列顺序。例如:A可是今天起晚了B平时我骑自行车上下班C所以就打车来公司BACA每天上下班的时候,路上经常堵车B就很容易迟到C如果早上上班不早点儿出门的话
最新回复
(
0
)