Overview back
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In this activity, students
will:
- Read about the historical
migration of the Honduran Garinagu
- Trace the migratory
patterns of the Garinagu with a map or globe
- Investigate and draw a map
of their relatives' immigration to the U.S. Present the map to the
class and share a cultural tradition rooted in their family
background.
- Discuss their personal
experiences of moving and adaptation to a foreign environment.
Interview local
immigrants about their experiences adapting to life in the
U.S.
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Learning Goals back
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Learning goals of this
activity include:
- To learn
about the migratory practices and ethnic origins of the Honduran
Garinagu
- To increase
students' cultural awareness and appreciation by investigating the
immigration of their family members to the U.S.
- To enhance
students' empathy towards immigrants living in the U.S. by
reflecting on students' personal experiences of moving and
adaptation and interviewing local immigrants
- To
understand the historical events that led up to the Garífuna "diaspora"
Why
study the Garífuna diaspora? |
Student Research back
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Students are
asked to answer the following questions about the Garífuna diaspora.
Click here for the student question
sheet and the teacher answer
sheet.
Students may begin learning about the Garífuna
diaspora by exploring the following links:
Additional
online resources include:
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Student Activities back
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After learning about the
Garífuna diaspora, you may now want your students to:
- Investigate their
families' own immigration to the U.S.
- Reflect on their own
experiences relocating and adapting to a foreign
environment
- Interview Garífuna
peoples living in the U.S. or local immigrant groups
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Family Heritage Map back
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Family Heritage Map
Students can draw a map of their relatives' immigration
to the U.S. They can draw arrows from 1). their ancestors'
country/countries of origin 2). to their point of entry in the U.S.
and 3). to their present-day location. Students may present their
maps to the class and share a tradition or cultural practice rooted
in their family background.
To create this map, students
may:
- Use photocopies of world maps
- Use world maps found on the Internet:
http://www.yahooligans.com/Around_the_World/Countries/
- Draw their own maps freehand or with a computer-aided drawing
program such as ClarisWorks or PowerPoint
To investigate their ancestors' immigration to the U.S., students
may:
- Record what they have
previously learned
- Ask their parents and other
knowledgeable family members
- Learn about their relatives'
countries of origin on the Internet: http://www.yahooligans.com/Around_the_World/Countries/
When presenting their maps to the class, students should answer
the following questions:
- From which country/countries where your ancestors originally
from? What was their ethnicity? What was their relationship to the
student (great-grandparents, parents, etc.)?
- When did your ancestors immigrate to the U.S.? Where did they
first arrive in the U.S.? Has your family since moved to another
location?
- Describe your relative's experience immigrating to the U.S.
and adapting to life in a foreign country. (Note: a response may
not be explicit and students may have to imagine their reactions.
They can gain insight into this experience by reading similar
accounts found in the school library, on the Web, or by talking
with family members.)
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Personal Experiences back
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Personal Experiences of Relocation and
Change Below are several questions to
initiate a group discussion about moving and adapting to a foreign
environment. By reflecting on their own experiences with relocation,
students may gain an increased empathy towards immigrant groups
living in the U.S.
Suggested
Questions:
- Have you moved in your lifetime? When? From what place to
what place?
- How did you feel leaving your town and saying goodbye to
your friends? What was it like arriving in a different town and
being new in school?
- Did you have a choice? If not, how did this make you
feel?
- Now think about the Garífuna peoples. How was their move
different or similar to what you experienced?
- Imagine that you are Garífuna
and recently arrived in the U.S. What
would life be like? How would you feel?
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Interviews back
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Interviews with Immigrant
Groups Another way for students
to understand the migration of the Garinagu and other ethnic groups
is by interviewing immigrant populations living in the U.S.
Students can enter the Garifuna World
or Garinet chat
room or post messages to their bulletin boards. They can also
research and talk to local immigrants in their neighborhood.
Students can present their findings to the class through a report or
presentation. Finally, students may want to invite a speaker to
their class to discuss their cultural heritage.
Suggested
questions (to be asked during the interview):
- Could you
please share with me your experience coming to the U.S.? Can you
help me understand what was it like first arriving in this
country? If you feel comfortable, would you mind telling me what
brought you to the U.S.?
- Can you
recall your initial impression of U.S. culture and way of life?
Did you find it different from where you grew up? What differences
did you see in customs and beliefs?
- Did you face
challenges as an immigrant living in the U.S.? If so, would you be
willing to share your experiences with me and and how you managed
to cope with these difficulties?
- Do you feel
that you have been welcomed and treated fairly by other people in
the U.S.? If not, how would you suggest to change these behaviors?
- May I ask
how many years you have now lived in the U.S.? Do you feel that
you have adapted to life in the U.S.? May I ask if living in the
U.S. has changed your family and your cultural traditions?
- Is there
anything else that you would you want people to know about your
experience? That of other immigrants?
Please note
that students should ask permission before conducting this interview
and should be sensitive to their informant's
background. They should use wise judgement and avoid asking
questions that may be painful to answer. For example,
first-generation immigrants may be political refugees and may not
want to discuss their departure from their home countries.
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Glossary back
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| ancestor |
One from whom a person is
descended. Frequently, this person is more remote in the line
of descent than a grandparent. |
| deportation |
The act of expelling a person from
his/her country of origin. |
| diaspora |
The breaking up and dispersion of a
people, often far from their ancestral homelands. The word
comes from the Greek word - diasperein -"to scatter."
When it is capitalized as Diaspora it often refers to
the settling of scattered colonies of Jews outside Palestine
after the Babylonian exile. |
| Garinagu |
The Africanized version
of the word, "Garífuna," which many Garífuna people prefer to
be called. This term is typically used when talking about two
or more Garífuna peoples (plural version). |
| Garífuna |
The term applies to one person of
Garífuna heritage (singular version of the word, Garinagu). It
can also be used as an adjective such as "Garífuna peoples,"
"Garífuna culture, foods... etc." |
| migration |
The act of moving from
one country or physical location to another. The term
migrate sometimes implies a lack of permanent
settlement, particularly as a result of seasonal or periodic
movement. The words emigrate and immigrate imply
a permanent move, generally across a political
boundary. | |
Rationale back
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Why study the Garífuna diaspora?
Did you know that nearly 90,000 Garinagu live in the U.S.? Were
you aware that this number nearly equals the 100,000 Garinagu living
in Honduras - the largest concentration of Garinagu in Central
America? Therefore, one compelling reason to study the Garifuna
diaspora is to gain a greater understanding and appreciation for a
growing ethnic group within our own borders!
Students can gain a heightened respect for the resilience of the
Garinagu by learning of the historical injustices suffered by one of
Central America's underrepresented ethnic groups. For example,
students will learn of the inhumane treatment and forced exile of
African and Amerindian populations with the slave trade and European
colonization of the New World.
Students can gain an increased sensitivity towards immigrant
groups living in the U.S. by understanding how poverty, unequal
distribution of resources and opportunities, and political
marginalization have forced many Garinagu to find work abroad to
maintain their families. Students will glimpse the complexity of
immigration - the benefits of economic prosperity and the costs to
family cohesion, cultural preservation, and community leadership.
By studying the Garífuna diaspora, students will see how banana
corporations headquarted in the U.S. have exploited Garífuna cheap
labor. Students can explore how these unethical business practices
have been backed by U.S. military intervention and foreign policy
and have harmed Central America. Students can learn how their
consumer choices and political voice can impact their Central
American neighbors.
The Garífuna diaspora teaches students
that history is fundamental in shaping cultural norms and values.
Students will see how forced expulsions from Africa and Saint
Vincent set in motion a pattern of historical migration, which is
characteristic of the Garinagu today. They will also learn how this
movement brought the Garinagu in contact with different peoples and
how they blended European, Amerindian, and African customs and
beliefs into a rich, hybrid culture.
Finally, studying the Garífuna diaspora can serve as a
springboard for students to examine their own ethnic roots, family
history, cultural values, and practices. It can foster students'
recognition of and appreciation for the cultural diversity which
characterizes the U.S. And it can be used to help bridge cultural
barriers and misunderstandings that may separate students in your
classroom.
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Credit: lesson plan developed by Wendy Morris, Learning, Design &
Technology Program, Stanford School of Education, 6/5/00. Revised by K.
Stevens, Stanford Center for Latin American Studies. |
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