Sharon Orlopp's Blog - Posts Tagged "immigrants"

Immigrants and Innovation

Recently I had the great fortune to listen to Olympian Michelle Kwan speak at our shared alma mater, the University of Denver. Kwan’s parents immigrated from Hong Kong to the United States. Her parents sacrificed tremendously and worked multiple jobs to ensure Michelle and her siblings could pursue their interests. Her brother played hockey and her sister was also an ice skater.

Michelle spoke about grit, discipline, and determination. She said she learned to quickly recover and smile broadly after falling while skating. She emphasized that she kept practicing and applying herself over and over and continually learning from her mistakes.

Heidi Grant, author of a Harvard Business Review article titled Nine Thing Successful People Do Differently, indicates that grit is one of the key components of successful people. Grant describes grit as the willingness to commit to long-term goals while persisting in the face of difficulty. Research has demonstrated that people with grit obtain more education and have higher college GPAs.

Forbes reported that 40% of the current Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or children of immigrants. Some of America’s greatest brands—Apple, Google, AT&T, Budweiser, Colgate, General Electric, IBM and others were started by immigrants or their children according to The Partnership for a New American Economy. The National Foundation for American Policy reported that 44 of the 87 startup companies valued at more than $1 billion in 2015 have immigrant founders.

Glenn Llopis, author of The Innovation Mentality, describes the perspective of immigrants that allows them to seize opportunities in the global market:
• Inspiration to see opportunity in
everything
• Flexibility to anticipate the unexpected
• Freedom to unleash passionate pursuits
• Room to live with an entrepreneurial
spirit
• Trust to work with a generous purpose
• Respect to lead to leave a legacy

Llopis is a successful entrepreneur who knows that our thinking evolves when we associate with people who think differently than we do. Cultivating an entrepreneurial mindset to see opportunities others might miss requires each of us to explore, actively listen, and open our hearts and minds to those who bring unique experiences and perspectives.

Through a combination of grit, determination, grace after falling, passion, anticipating the unexpected, and having an innovation and entrepreneurial mindset, we can create significant change in our personal and professional lives as well as our communities and the world.
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Published on May 23, 2018 12:08 Tags: asian, athletes, autobiography, immigrants, memoir, vietnamese, women

Fathers and Daughters

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeRZS...

Highlights three memoirs with strong father and daughter bonds:

Standing Up After Saigon

Generally Speaking

Muslim Girl
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Published on June 08, 2018 15:12 Tags: asian, athletes, autobiography, immigrants, memoir, vietnamese, women

Polio Vaccine Developed by Immigrants

Excellent, timely article in Forbes about how the polio vaccination was developed by an immigrant and the son of an immigrant.

Immigrant innovation helps all of us.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartan...

The book, Standing Up After Saigon, shares Thuhang Tran's challenges with polio, war, poverty, family separation, and immigration.


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...
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Published on June 22, 2018 09:20 Tags: asian, autobiography, disability, immigrants, memoir, polio, vietnamese, women

Celebrating Our Freedoms on the Fourth of July

As we approach the celebration of U.S. Independence, it is a great opportunity to thank those who have served and our currently serving in the military. It is also a time to recognize immigrant entrepreneurs who have made a difference in America.

Martin Greenfield’s memoir, Measure of a Man: From Auschwitz to President’s Tailor, is an amazing story of survival in the Holocaust, immigration to the States, and then success as a tailor. At age fifteen, Martin and his family were sent to Auschwitz. At the concentration camp, Martin’s father told him, “We must separate. If you survive, you must honor us by living.”

The book starts with a description of the boots and clothing worn by Dr. Josef Mengele, the Nazi physician nicknamed the Angel of Death. It foreshadows the role clothing played in Martin’s life.

The sign over the Auschwitz concentration camp said, “Work Makes You Free.” Martin concentrated on remaining as healthy as he could so that he could perform work and survive.

Martin’s descriptions of events at Auschwitz are horrific. He interjects humor and faith. He often asked, “Where is God?” while at the camp. Sometimes he would tell himself that God was really busy. When the war ended, Martin said that instead of manna, God dropped munitions.

Elie Wiesel was a teenager in the same camp as Martin. When the Holocaust ended, General Dwight D. Eisenhower had his troops personally tour the concentration camps, meet prisoners, and take pictures. After Martin immigrated to the US, he worked in a suit factory. A suit was being created for President Eisenhower during the same time as the Suez Canal Crisis. Martin wrote a note to the President expressing his opinion on what Eisenhower should do regarding the Suez Canal Crisis and tucked it into a pocket before the suit was delivered. Martin wanted to make sure that his “little guy’s” voice was heard.

Martin is extremely grateful that America is a nation of infinite possibilities. He rose from sweeping the floors of a suit company to founding a premier suit company. He and his sons have dressed Presidents Eisenhower, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama. They have also dressed celebrities and athletes.

Martin’s memoir is a reminder that anything is possible if you apply yourself, dream big, and work hard.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...
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Published on July 02, 2018 07:50 Tags: autobiography, holocaust, immigrants, memoir

My Favorite Book for 2022: Go Back to Where You Came From

OMG! This is my favorite book of 2022 and I highly recommend it.

I listened to it on audiobook and it is read by the author, Wajahat Ali. I highly recommend listening to the book rather than reading it. Wajahat has done a TED talk, been a successful playwright and director of The Domestic Crusaders, and is a writer, activist, and recovering attorney.

Wajahat's parents immigrated to the US in 1965 and he was born in CA in 1980. He describes he and his family's journey over 40 decades with humor and self-awareness interwoven with the harsh realities of being a person of color while trying to achieve the American dream.

He kicks off his book with actual hate emails that he receives. His responses are humorous, but it is along the lines of "I laugh to keep from crying" because there is so much hate and vitriol in the emails.

His father was almost deported when his father was studying in the US. The random act of kindness by a stranger prevented his father from being deported the following day. Other people who were involved in the situation did not offer to help and had racist views toward immigrants. Wajahat's father was approved for an "Einstein" visa which is typically given to immigrants with "extraordinary ability" and those who are highly acclaimed in their field, such as academic researchers, Pulitzer, Oscar and Olympic winners. It is the same type of visa that was granted to Melania Knauss (Trump) in 2001 when she was a Slovenian model dating Donald Trump.

Wajahat grew up with a "healthy" build which required him to wear Husky jeans with a Husky label on the back that was in "92 font and visible from outer space."

Wajahat is also left-handed and he humorously describes being a lefty in a "right supremacy" world.

One of Wajahat's aunts visited from Pakistan and became extremely concerned when she saw a Black man when they were getting gas at a gas station. When Wajahat asked her about her unwarranted concerns, she mentioned that in Pakistan the television information from America typically shows Blacks as criminals and people to be feared.

Wajahat also shares his perspective on the "model minority" that is often used to describe Asian/Pacific Islanders. He stated, "We don't rock the boat, we row the boat." Then he shares why that approach and perspective can be damaging.

While he was attending college, his parents were arrested as part of Operation Cyberstorm---the FBI and Microsoft partnered together to locate individuals who were suspected of selling and distributing counterfeit software, laundering money, and committing credit card fraud. Forty-seven people were arrested.

When his parents were arrested, the US government confiscated all property belonging to the family. Wajahat was in his 20's and had to figure out how to help his parents get an attorney, where he and his two grandmothers would live, how he would earn money to pay expenses, etc. It was a tremendous ordeal to handle. Many of their friends and people in their community turned on them.

After many years of investigation and legal appeals, 4 people of the 27 arrested were sentenced. His parents were sentenced to 5 years in jail and ordered to pay restitution of $20 million to Microsoft.

At age 30, Wajahat and his mom were sharing a bedroom in his uncle's home with a few boxes of belongings prior to the date when his mom reported to prison.

His book is filled with the peaks and valleys of life, but the peaks are more jagged and shorter and the valleys are deep, almost unnavigable troughs due to how immigrants and people of color are viewed and treated in America---even when children of immigrants are born in America and are American citizens.

Despite the various challenges he has faced, including his two-year old daughter's battle with stage 4 cancer, he is optimistic and creates a rallying call to invest in hope. He asks readers/listeners to imagine they have a bi-racial grandchild whom they love dearly. What would each reader/listener do differently to ensure their bi-racial grandchild was safe and able to reach their fullest potential.

This is one of the most memorable, poignant, humorous memoirs that I have read that bear testimony to the resilience of the human spirit.

Highly, highly recommend! Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American
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Published on August 07, 2022 12:14 Tags: autobiography, immigrants, memoir, social-justice