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This American Latino Theme Study essay explores actions taken by the United States government during and after the Cuban Revolution of and in response to upheavals in several Central American countries, most notably El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua during the s, that resulted in significant increases in immigrants from those countries to the United States.
This essay illuminates the often dramatic differences in political perspective and general "visibility" in U. It also reveals the hidden challenges that many survivors of Cold War violence faced upon arrival in the United States as they and their children struggled to make sense of their experiences and find their place in a society that frequently denied, confused, or ignored their reasons for being here.
Although most Central American refugees arrived as undocumented refugees in the s and subsequently spent years legalizing their status in order to improve their economic standing and gain greater political representation, Cubans who arrived in the s and early s became known for their unprecedented economic success compared with other Latinos and presumed unity behind unchanging U.
However, even though Cubans have continuously benefitted from U. Differences in U. Yet with or without this support, it is clear that refugees of the Cold War have successfully forged distinctive Latino identities based on historically meaningful memories of trauma, survival, and resilience that continue to transform political institutions, federal policies toward disadvantaged groups, urban landscapes, and cultural understandings of what it means to be "American" in countless ways.
Ironically, however, many foreign policies ultimately responsible for the creation of new Latino communities from Central America and the Caribbean in the U. One of the best illustrations of this can be found in President Ronald Reagan's famous nationally televised address on U. Portraying the emergence of revolutionary movements across Central America as the result of Cuban-Soviet machinations rather than any homegrown political or economic factors, Reagan warned that "Cuban-supported aggression" had already "forced more than , men, women, and children to flee their homes.