"A Melting Pot Becomes Multiculturalism"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“A Melting Pot Becomes Multiculturalism”
March 23, 2015
E
Pluribus Unum (out of many, one) is the phrase on the Great Seal of the United States .
It was adopted (appropriately), by Congress in 1782 as the fledgling nation’s de
facto motto. It held that position until 1956 when Congress enacted a law that
designated “In God We Trust” to be the official motto for the U.S.
While
we are a God-trusting people, in my opinion E Pluribus Unum more accurately
reflects our citizens. We are a nation of immigrants – a pluralistic country –
a people that have arrived from all over the world. In 1664, when the British
acquired Manhattan from the Dutch, there were 18
languages spoken on the Island . In 1776, when
colonists first met in Philadelphia , there were
over 40 languages spoken in Pennsylvania .
The Founders, all of whom spoke English, avoided any reference to language in
the Constitution. It was only in 1906 that English-speaking ability became a
requirement for naturalization. (It still is, unless one gets an exemption or
waiver.) Nevertheless, immigrants continue to arrive. At the Julian Curtis
Magnet School in Greenwich , which four of my grandchildren
either attend or have attended, over 50 languages are spoken. More than 200
languages are spoken in New York City
today, and half the households in the City speak a language other than English.
Collectively we are a polyglot nation.
Yet,
despite these ethnic, cultural and linguistic differences the United States
became a melting pot. Importantly, it was civil society, not government that
made that determination. The term “melting pot” derived from the concept that,
as a heterogeneous people, we were to be dumped into a giant crucible, to be
stirred and then fused until we reappeared as homogeneous, with a distinctive
American character.
Multiculturalism
emerged for a number of reasons. There are those who felt we had surrendered too
much individuality. Instead of a melting pot, the preferred metaphor became a
salad bowl or a mosaic. In part, this emergence
reflects a natural desire for people to hang onto the customs, heritage and
language of the country of their birth – a healthy habit, within reason. But it
also allows politicians to use identity politics, in which differing sectors –
African-Americans, Hispanics, Asians, Italian-Americans, etc. – become
compartmentalized, classifying them as minorities, so eligible for benefits and
preferences. Multiculturalism is favored by the sanctimonious who believe in
relativism – rather than a universal moral sense – that it is wrong for society
to impose on new Americans values that could be alien to those they had known
in their home countries. The consequences, intended or otherwise, include a loss
of patriotism, a return to a segregated “separate but equal” system, an
increase in divisiveness, dependency, and a (generally) growing distrust of
government. Not only are we divided by ethnicity, but also by race, religion,
age and sexual orientation. We are no longer “unum;” we have become “pluribus.”
What
prompted these musings was an article in the March/April edition of “Foreign
Affairs,” entitled, “The Failure of Multiculturalism.” While the author Kenan
Malik of The International New York Times focused principally on Europe,
some of what he wrote had applicability to the United States . “An ideal policy,”
Mr. Malik writes, would be to “marry multiculturalism’s embrace of actual
diversity, [with] assimilation’s resolve to treat everyone as citizens…” The “guiding
assumption throughout Europe” (as it is in the United States ), Mr. Malik wrote, is
that “immigration and integration must be managed through state policies.” Yet,
he noted: “Integration is shaped primarily by civil society, by the individual
bonds that people form.”
As
a nation, diversity has strengthened us. Most of us are ethnically diversified.
We have ancestors that go back to multiple countries. Our integration, as Mr.
Malik observed, has been a function of civil society, not a consequence of government
mandate. We should acknowledge with pride the strength of our common heritage – not only the genetic
portion, but the forces of history that have helped mold us all. Our language
is English. Not knowing English usually condemns one to destitution. New
arrivals need understand we are a nation of laws, based on English law but ones
which are dynamic and evolving. Our legal system has served us well for over
two hundred years. There are other legal systems, and it is not to say that
ours is perfect. But it would be a serious mistake to incorporate Sharia Law
into ours. When people come to this country they do so in large part because of
our system of justice, not despite it.
It
is important that all citizens understand our government: the Constitution, federalism,
our system of checks and balances, and the responsibilities of citizenship.
They should know the names of our nation’s institutions, the Founders and their
roles. I weep when I see interviews with college students who are clueless
about civic affairs and know little of our nation’s history. As Americans, that
history is all our history, regardless of when we or our ancestors arrived.
Metaphors
can be limiting. America
is not a crucible that spits out robots, and we wouldn’t want it to be.
However, we are a melting pot in the sense that we are a place where a German
may marry a Scot, a Muslim a Buddhist, a Vietnamese an Italian, a Jew a
Catholic or an African-American a Dane. America is also a mosaic, but one where
the emphasis should be on the whole, not the parts. While we should respect our
myriad cultures, multiculturalism can be socially disruptive, as can be seen in
the ascendancy of radical Islam around the world. At home, multiculturalism can
be narcissistic, and it does promote politics of identity, rather than ones of
ideas. Our diversities are important, but they should not be used to divide us,
as politicians and elitists are wont to do, but should serve to unite.
Labels: TOTD
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