- Source: Ryukyuan Americans
Ryukyuan Americans are Americans who are fully or partially of Ryukyuan descent. The vast majority of them trace their family history to the Okinawa Islands.
History
= Immigration
=The first Ryukyuans to migrate to the United States were 26 Okinawan contract laborers led by Kyuzo Toyama. They arrived at the Territory of Hawaii on January 8, 1900, in order to work on the sugar plantations there.
In the following years, more Ryukyuans (mainly Okinawans) started to settle in Hawaii. Some of them would end up migrating to the continental US, with higher concentrations of them living on the West Coast.
Culture
= Identity
=A lot of Ryukyuan Americans view themselves to be distinct from the Japanese. This is especially true in Hawaii, where there are numerous Okinawan organizations, the largest one being the Hawaii United Okinawa Association.
= Language
=The vast majority of Ryukyuan Americans speak English and Japanese as a first language. There are also some who can speak one of the many Ryukyuan languages, with the most common one being Okinawan. In Hawaii, many Okinawan locals speak an English-based creole language known as Hawaiian Pidgin.
Notable Ryukyuan Americans
Dave Roberts
David Ige
Kishi Bashi
Olivia Lufkin
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Orang Jepang
- Serangan bom atom Hiroshima dan Nagasaki
- Hubungan Jepang dengan Taiwan
- Ryukyuan Americans
- Ryukyuan people
- East Asian Americans
- Americans
- Ryukyuan languages
- Japanese Americans
- Telugu Americans
- Asian Americans
- White Americans
- Indian Americans