登陆注册
26282800000019

第19章 CHAPTER III:FAILURE TO UTILIZE IMMIGRANTS IN CITY

But the statesman shuts himself away from the possibility of using these great reservoirs of human ability and motive power because he considers it patriotic to hold to governmental lines and ideals laid down a century and a quarter ago. Because of a military inheritance, we as a nation stoutly ( 71) contend that all this varied and suggestive life has nothing to do with government nor patriotism, and that we perform the full duty of American citizens when the provisions of the statutes on naturalization are carried out. In the meantime, in the interests of our theory that commercial and governmental powers should have no connection with each other, we carefully ignore the one million false naturalization papers in the United States issued and concealed by commercialized politics. Although we have an uneasy knowledge that these powers are curiously allied, we profess that the latter has no connection with the former and no control over it. We steadily refuse to recognize the fact that our age is swayed by industrial forces.

Fortunately, life is much bigger and finer than our theories about it, and, among all the immi- grants in the great cities, there is slowly developing the beginnings of self-government on the lines of their daily experiences.

The man who really knows immigrants and undertakes to naturalize them, makes no pretense of the lack of connection between their desire to earn their daily bread and their citizenship. The petty and often corrupt politician who is first kind to immigrants, realizes perfectly well that the force pushing them to this country has been industrial need and that ( 72) recognition of this need is legitimate. He follows the natural course of events when he promises to get the immigrant "a job,"for that is undoubtedly what the immigrant most needs in all the world.

If the politician nearest to him were really interested in the immigrant and were to work out a scheme of naturalization fitted to the situation, the immigrant would proceed from the street-cleaning and sewer-digging in which he first engages, to an understanding of the relation of these ****** offices to city government. Through them he would understand the obligation of his alderman to secure cleanliness for the streets in which his children play and for the tenement in which he lives. The notion of representative government could be made quite clear and concrete to him.

He could demand his rights and use his vote in order to secure them. His very ***** demands might easily become a restraint, a purifying check upon the alderman, instead of a source of constant corruption and exploitation.

But when the politician attempts to naturalize the bewildered immigrant, he must perforce accept the doctrinaire standard imposed by men who held a theory totally unattached to experience, and he must, therefore, begin with the remote Constitution of the United States. At the Cook County Court-House only a short time ago a can-( 73)-didate for naturalization, who was asked the usual question as to what the Constitution of the United States was, replied:

"The Illinois Central." His mind naturally turned to his work, to the one bit of contribution he had genuinely made to the new country, and his reply might well offer a valuable suggestion to the student of educational method.

Some of our most ad vanced schools are even now ****** industrial construction and evolution a natural basis for all future acquisition of knowledge, and they claim that anything less vital and creative is inadequate.

It is surprising how a ****** experience, if it be but genuine, gives an opening into citizenship altogether lacking to the more grandiose attempts.

A Greek-American, slaughtering sheep in a tenement- house yard, reminiscent of the Homeric tradition, can be made to see the effect of the improvised shambles on his neighbor's health and the right of the city to prohibit the slaughtering, only as he perceives the development of city government upon its most modern basis.

The enforcement of adequate child labor laws offers unending opportunity to better citizenship founded, not upon theory but on action, as does the compulsory education law, which makes clear that education is a matter of vital importance to the American city and to the State which has ( 74) enacted definite, well-considered legislation in r yard to it. Some of the most enthusiastic sup- porters of child-labor legislation and of compul- very education laws are those parents who sacri-fice old-world tradition, as well as the much needed earnings of their young children, because of loyalty to the laws of their adopted country Certainly genuine sacrifice for the nation's law i a good foundation for patriotism, and as this again is not a doctrinaire question, women are not debarred, and mothers who wash and scrub for the meagre support of their children say: sturdily, sometimes: "It will be a year before he can go to work without breaking the law, but we came to this country to give the young ones a chance, and we are not going to begin by having them do what's not right."Upon some such basis as this the Hebrew Alliance and the Charity Organization of New York, which are putting forth desperate energy in the enormous task of ministering to the suffering which immigration entails, are developing understanding and respect for the alien through their mutual efforts to secure more adequate tenement-house regulation and to control the spread of tuberculosis; both these undertakings being perfectly hopeless without the intelligent co-operation of the immigrants them-( 75)-selves. Through such humble doors, perchance, the immigrant will at last enter into his heritage in a new nation. Democratic government has ever been the result of spiritual travail and moral effort.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 半岛晴天

    半岛晴天

    在终年没有多少个下雨天的伊比利亚半岛,再遇见那个羁绊十年的人,好像昨天,前天,好几年前,历历在目,她只说:“喂,那时候你还欠我一张同学录哦,该不会是想让我们再不联络吧?”在终年没有多少个下雨天的伊比利亚半岛,遇见那个像阳光一样的人,他笑着走向你,用蹩脚的中文说:“我们回家吧。”她忽然间想起来那首歌,大致唱的是:“下一处蓝天白云,下一次草坪再绿,我爱的人,我愿再次见到你。”又是另一首歌,用西班牙语宣告着心中真挚的热爱,好像安达卢西亚的阳光,强烈却不刺眼地在告白。
  • 灾祸的降临上

    灾祸的降临上

    本书丛书向读者展示了人类在时空长廊里考证历史的回响、发掘生命的秘密、探寻太空的谜团、破解文明的神秘,所揭示的神奇绚丽的壮阔画卷,将让我们的视野更加开阔,将使我们的心灵感震颤。
  • 管理基础与实务

    管理基础与实务

    《管理基础与实务》是一本着眼于培养高职高专类院校学生的管理素质与管理技能的教材。本书以管理的四项职能——计划、组织、领导、控制为主线,系统地介绍了管理活动的基本规律、原理和方法。本书设三篇,共九章。第一篇管理内涵篇,主要介绍管理和管理学的基本概念和理论知识;第二篇阐述了管理的基本职能,是全书的重点部分,比较系统地介绍了管理的一般职能以及相关的理论与方法;第三篇是管理的改革与创新篇,主要介绍创新、组织的变革和发展,目的是拓展学生的思路,开阔学生的视野。
  • 王者归来:天才少女

    王者归来:天才少女

    上天既然让我雪菲重生那么我就让这些欠我的,誓要全部给我还回来,欧阳雪倩,上官晨蓝,呵呵呵呵!你没想到我再回来吧,这个大陆有许多未知的领域是你们这些奸佞小人永远也无法触及到的,你们以为除去我就可以得到所有吗?那么我现在就敲碎你们所有的幻想,让你你们彻底沦为这个大陆中最底层的存在。
  • 道家师尊

    道家师尊

    两千年一轮回的阴年阴盛阳衰,许多妖魔鬼怪趁机出来兴风作浪残害生灵,狼妖、水蛭精、嗜血蚊魔、千年树妖相继出现残害生灵为祸人间,从南疆到北国从中国到美国从印度到泰国,从百慕大死亡游轮到亚马逊原始森林,从埃及法老王不死僵尸到马来西亚恐怖邪灵,看李宝杰如何斩妖除魔拯救苍生,更多精彩尽在《道家师尊》中。
  • 懵逼王爷之蛮妃难惹

    懵逼王爷之蛮妃难惹

    这是一个黑碰黑,黑出翔的故事。她是相府小幺,有位高权重的相爷老爹;有手握重兵的大将军外公;有盖世无双的少将军表哥;一不小心捞得一个便宜郡主当当,不知羡煞多少人;她本应嫁与当朝太子爷,坐等当这天下最尊贵的女子,然一朝圣旨下,她嫁与他。本想着草包王爷听话,好控制,自己好翻墙,好拍拍屁股跑路,不曾想碰到个装界的祖师爷,妥妥的坑她一脸血。他,皇上最厌恶的儿子,一朝借势,问鼎皇位,却是个懦弱无能的傀儡皇帝;后来朝臣惧他,万民敬他,外地臣服。她从来不曾是他的皇后,后来却是这天下最尊贵的女人,没有之一。
  • TFboys之懵懂少年

    TFboys之懵懂少年

    他们是天生这么好吗?不是的,是有故事的。故事很短么?不是的,故事很长。那么,入梦吧......
  • 兽灵纪之兽神觉醒

    兽灵纪之兽神觉醒

    世间万物皆有灵吸灵,转灵,异灵,斗灵,融灵,还有至高无上的化灵
  • 我的青春里只有你

    我的青春里只有你

    夏迟暖第一次看到如此妖孽邪肆的美人!不对,,,是妖孽的美男!从此夏迟暖就被迫走向了宠妻之路,当然宠她的就是她身旁这个妖孽!某日夏迟暖:”你的笑容得这么祸国殃民,以后不能对其他异性这么笑!同性也不行!“男子邪魅地看着霸道的夏迟暖:”我只对你笑,老婆!“说完,某妖孽抱着自己老婆回房间。。。(嗯,应该是笑笑去了/(ㄒ-ㄒ)/~~。装作什么都不懂)本文1vs1,男女以大宠为主,绝对妖孽!女主不是傻白甜!无小三狗血!配角也是很有故事的哦!
  • 异世陌路人

    异世陌路人

    男儿生如铁,傲骨铮铮,必当君临天下,踏上异世之巅。称为陌路人。。。。