My Family
History
By:
Jay Vyas
College Now Course - BSS 1
Like
many stories of American family history, mine is a tale of two peoples'
travels into the United States of America. They had to deal with different
hardships along the way as well as in the country. As they lived in
America, they found it not to be so easy. These people, my parents,
traveled from two different countries alone into the United States
to start a new life in a land where the sky was the limit.
My father, Mahesh Chotalal Vyas, came to the U.S. from Bombay, India.
He went to school in Bombay, India and had seen men from the U.S.
giving out applications for Visas to enter the U.S. My father had
seen this as an opportunity. Everyone talked of America as a promise
land. A land where any man had a chance to make it big. He took this
chance and applied.
Once my father received an approval he was on his way to America!
He was 28 years old when he had left India to make a new life for
himself. My father had come to Chicago to study and go into business.
It was a hard beginning for him though. He had come to the U.S. with
only 5 dollars in his pocket and some luggage. In order to get by,
he had to borrow money from friends and relatives that already resided
in the U.S. From here on it didn't get any easier.
My father went to North Eastern Business University. In order to pay
for living accommodations in an apartment, and other things, he had
to work. He worked as a cab driver some odd years to get by. He had
to go to school as well so, after school he would work. It was tough
times, but he knew he would get through it.
Money was not the only problem in coming here. It was a totally new
land, different people, new customs, and very different weather from
what he was used to. He had come from a land where it was usually
always hot. Chicago was very different to him and was hard to get
used to. Temperatures reached single digits at sometimes and this
was very new to him, as well as being a great hassle. Weather was
one of the many problems he had. He had to face being alone in a new
land as well as some prejudice. He knew some relatives and some friends
but he was still alone. It seemed like it was him verses the world
but he worked hard to get through it. After having many different
jobs such as a cab driver and Sears employee, he found his calling
in being an insurance and mortgage agent. In the end his hard work
paid off with a successful job and family.
My fathers story is almost similar to the one of my mothers, Nenita
Presas Yvas. She had lived in Pangsinan, Philippines for most of her
young life. Like many young kids she wanted to see the world. She
wanted to see America. Coming here was actually not very difficult
for her, for U.S. officials were giving passports to nurses in the
Philippines to enter America. My mother thought this was a good idea.
She had always wanted to see America, so she retrieved a passport.
My mother was 23 years of age when she left the Philippines. She never
thought she would have stayed. She thought it was just a temporary
thing, but everything changed. Like my father before, my mother arrived
in Chicago in 1979. She arrived with only two luggage and two hundred
dollars in cash. Unlike my father, she knew no one. The only person
she knew was a Mrs. Lydia in Chicago.
The change was very drastic for her. She knew no one, and knew none
of the customs. The weather was also a big change. The Philippines
was a very warm country, and to come to Chicago was a big difference.
She remembers the winter vividly. Having never seen snow my mother
lived through one of the biggest blizzards in the U.S. It was the
blizzard of January 20, 1079. It was very cold for her. She had cried
many nights for she was alone, in a different country and had no friends
but one relative. It took her three years to adjust to American customs,
weather, etc. All she had was her credentials of being a nurse.
It was especially hard for my mother for she could not drive. This
was very bad in Chicago for when the weather dropped drastically,
she had to walk to where she wanted to go. My mother also went through
some hard times when she was cheated from money and robbed. Not only
did she have to live in a new country, but she was also conned and
robbed of her things. At this point things were not looking so well,
but she stood strong.
In Chicago, she met my father at a train station. They became friends
but then he had moved to Staten Island, New York and my mother moved
to Texas for five months. She then moved to Staten Island and coincidentally
found my father. They later became married.
Her strength and courage to come to this country alone was phenomenal.
Her hard work of being a nurse brought her much success, she now works
at the Egger nursing home.
Coming to America was not easy for parents. My brother and I are the
first of my family to be born in America. Luckily, we have it much
easier than our parents. They had gone through much hardships just
to make the lives of their selves and mainly their family better.
I look up to them and have much respect for the courage they had shown
in coming to American, the land of dreams.

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