64.2 F
Los Angeles
Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Why 2 N.B.A. Teams Stand Above the Rest

• Part II of a five-part series ahead of...

Why Brock Purdy Is One of the N.F.L.’s Best Quarterbacks

This isn’t shaping up to be the year to...

Jets Trade for Davante Adams, Reuniting Receiver With Aaron Rodgers

By Dianna Russini, Zack Rosenblatt, Tashan Reed, Vic Tafur...

Asian American Identity Is Complex, as Bhutanese Americans Show

U.S.Asian American Identity Is Complex, as Bhutanese Americans Show

When Dinesh Nepal first arrived in the United States in 2010, he had never heard of the term “Asian American.”

He knew that he was of Asian descent. He grew up in a refugee camp in Nepal after his parents were expelled from Bhutan, a landlocked Himalayan nation. And after he moved to Pittsburgh and became a United States citizen, he began calling himself an American.

But it never occurred to him to put those two labels together, even after he and his wife opened a shop selling bubble tea — a Taiwanese specialty that is iconic for Asian Americans.

“It never really mattered,” Mr. Nepal, 26, said at his restaurant, D’s Bubble Tea and Cafe, in Pittsburgh.

Since 2008, about 85,000 Nepali-speaking Bhutanese refugees have resettled in the United States and now live in cities like Pittsburgh, Columbus, Ohio, and Rochester, N.Y. Most have become American citizens, making up the newest group of Asian descent.

source

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles