A Vietnamese American is a resident of the United States who is of ethnic Vietnamese descent. They make up the bulk of overseas Vietnamese and are also one group of Asian-Americans.

According to the 2000 Census, there are 1,122,528 people who identify themselves as Vietnamese alone or 1,223,736 in combination with other ethnicities. Of those, 447,032 (39.8%) live in California and 134,961 (12.0%) in Texas. The largest concentration of Vietnamese found outside of Vietnam is found in Orange County, California, where 135,548 can be found. Vietnamese-American businesses are ubiquitous in Little Saigon, located in Westminster and Garden Grove, where they constitute 30.7% and 21.4% of the population, respectively.

History


South Vietnamese civilians scramble to board the last US helicopter leaving the country at the end of the Vietnam War.

The history of Vietnamese-Americans is a fairly recent one. Prior to 1975, most Vietnamese residing in the United States were spouses and children of American servicemen in Vietnam. The fall of Saigon on April 30, 1975, which ended the Vietnam War, prompted the first wave of emigration. Many people who had close ties with the Americans feared communist reprisals, and 125,000 of them left Vietnam during Spring 1975. This group was generally highly skilled and educated and their leaving constituted a severe brain drain for Vietnam. They were airlifted by the US government to bases in the Philippines and Guam, and were subsequently transferred to various refugee centers in the United States. These refugees were initially unwelcomed by Americans, as a poll taken in 1975 showed only 36% in favor of Vietnamese immigration. Even so, President Gerald Ford and other officials strongly supported them and passed the Indochina Migration and Refugee Act in 1975, which allowed them to enter the United States under a special status. In order to prevent the refugees from forming ethnic enclaves and to minimize their impact on local communities, they were scattered all over the country. Within a few years, however, most resettled in California and Texas, giving those states the largest Vietnamese-American populations.

The year 1978 began a second wave of Vietnamese refugees that lasted until the mid-1980s. As people faced being sent to reeducation camps or being forced to evacuate to "new economic zones," about two million fled Vietnam in small, unsafe, and crowded boats. These "boat people" were generally less educated and skilled than the people in the first wave. If they escaped pirates, they usually ended up in asylum camps in Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, Hong Kong or the Philippines, where they might be allowed to enter countries that agreed to accept them. Congress passed the Refugee Act of 1980, reducing restrictions on entry, while the Vietnamese government established the Orderly Departure Program (ODP) under the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in response to world outcry, allowing people to leave Vietnam legally for family reunions and for humanitarian reasons. Additional American laws were passed to allow children of American servicemen and former political prisoners and their families to enter the United States. Between 1981 and 2000, the United States accepted 531,310 Vietnamese refugees and asylees.

Characteristics

As a relatively recent immigrant group, Vietnamese-Americans have the lowest distribution of people with more than one race among the major Asian-American groups. As many as 1,009,627 exclusively speak Vietnamese at home, making it the 7th most spoken language in the United States. As refugees, Vietnamese-Americans have some of the highest rates of naturalization. As refugees from a communist country, Vietnamese-Americans are vehemently anti-communist. They regularly stage protests against the Vietnamese government and those whom they perceive as sympathetic to it. For example, in 1999, protests against a video store owner in Westminster who displayed the Vietnamese communist flag and a picture of Ho Chi Minh peaked when 50,000 people held a vigil in front of the store in one night, causing severe disruptions in traffic. Membership in the Democratic Party was once considered anathema among Vietnamese-Americans because it was seen as friendly to communism, although support for the Republican Party had somewhat eroded in recent years as the Democratic Party is seen in a more favorable light. Notably, Vietnamese-Americans across the United States have recently lobbied many city governments to make the former South Vietnamese flag instead of the current flag of Vietnam the symbol of Vietnamese in the United States, a move that the Vietnamese government objected to.

A large fraction of Vietnamese-Americans consisted of ethnic overseas Chinese who immigrated to Vietnam centuries ago. Ethnic Chinese made up a large fraction of the commercial elite which left after the fall of Saigon, and the Sino-Vietnamese War of 1979 led to discrimination against ethnic Chinese which contributed to a large fraction of them becoming boat people. As a result, many Vietnamese-Americans also speak fluent Cantonese and serve somewhat as a bridge between Vietnamese-American and Chinese-American communities, which in turn helps create an Asian American identity. Interestingly, while ethnic Chinese Vietnamese-Americans are seen and see themselves as overseas Chinese (or hua-yi) they generally do not classify themselves or are seen as Chinese-American.

See also: Demographics of the United States

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