Woodrow Wilson vetoed the 1917 Immigration Act only because of its Literacy mandate.. |
On
February 5, 1917 Congress overrode President Woodrow Wilson’s veto
making the Immigration Act of 1917,
also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone
Act, the law of the land. It was the
most restrictive legislation yet
enacted and banned immigration from
most of Asia and the Pacific Islands.
China was not included only because
the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882
already barred entry from that country and the Gentlemen’s Agreement with Japan
in 1907 restricted immigration from there.
The act was aimed at potential new
reservoirs of immigrants like Korea and
especially India which was then exporting cheap labor to every corner
of the British Empire and which was
beginning to trickle into the States.
A scare headline and article in a California newspaper about a feared influx of South Asian Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs.
Wilson,
not known for his racial enlightenment,
had vetoed the measure not over its sweeping anti-oriental provisions, but
because it also required immigrants
to be literate. He feared that would choke the supply of cheap labor to American industry.
Besides
illiterates, the act banned a laundry
list of other undesirables
including “idiots, feeble-minded persons, criminals, epileptics, insane persons,
alcoholics, professional beggars, the mentally
or physically defective, polygamists, and anarchists.
The Asiatic Barred Zone in the 1917 act somewhat mirror the countriess in Trumps would-be travel bans.
Widely
derided as racist by most
historians, today the Act is held up as model
legislation by those few Trump supporters
literate in history.
Of
course American xenophobia and anti-immigration
zeal did not end there. Decades of American industrial strife—virtual open
class warfare—in which waves of Old
World immigrants including Jews,
Italians and other Mediterranean peoples, Poles, Slavs, and other Eastern
Europeans—played prominent parts—contributed
to a rise in nativism. The Russian
Revolution and the post-World War I
Red Scare threw American oligarchs into
a panic.
Anti-Semitism in particular was on the rise because many leading labor militants, Socialists, and
anarchists were Jews.
The
inevitable result was the Immigration
Act of 1924 which limited the
number of immigrants allowed entry into the United States through a national origins quota. The quota
provided immigration visas to just two percent of the total number of
people of each nationality in the United States as of the 1890 Census. The effect was
to suddenly lop off the stream of
mostly “swarthy” European
immigration which had flooded American shores since the Civil War.
More than 900 Jews trying to escape Nazi Germany aboard the liner
St. Louis like these loofing out of portholes in Havana were denied enterance to the U.S. in 1939, Most died in the Holocaust.
The
Act was working exactly as intended when
most Jews fleeing Nazism and the Holocaust were turned away. Tens of thousands of those who were refused visas and entry permits or who were actually turned away including the famous
case of a ship carrying 937 Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution turned
away from Havana, Cuba and denied entry to the US in 1939
eventually died in Nazi death
camps.
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