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Immigrants from Africa, Caribbean changing the make up of black population of Massachusetts - Metro http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/20...ssachusetts/hYhp23NSlxyCDobXeHBD7L/story.html
Standing together in Faneuil Hall, they raised their right hands: a nurse’s aide from Haiti, a National Guardsman from Cape Verde, and a giddy couple from Nigeria who later twirled outside with joy.
“We are citizens of the United States,” exulted Ted Onuoha, 33, looking to the sky earlier this month as his wife, Uchenna, 35, shivered next to him.
On the hard road to US citizenship, black immigrants are increasingly gaining ground in Massachusetts and the United States, expanding the possibilities for political power and changing what it means to be black in America. Though still small, the number of new black citizens in Massachusetts has more than doubled, to 76,000 since 2000, census estimates show, fueled by transplants from the Caribbean and, increasingly, fast-growing groups from Africa. Nationwide, the number of new black citizens has nearly doubled, to 1.8 million.
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Rising black immigration is rapidly reshaping Massachusetts, where the black community is already one of the most diverse in the nation. A third of the roughly 470,000 black people in Massachusetts are immigrants, compared with nearly 9 percent nationwide.
Birth rates mirror the shift: For the first time in Massachusetts history, a majority of black babies born since 2008 have an immigrant mother, according to the figures from the state Department of Public Health. The single largest group of mothers of black children, since 2006, have been from Africa.
“It’s not just Jamaicans, Trinidadians and Tobagans, and Panamanians anymore,” said James Jennings, professor of urban studies and planning at Tufts University.
Though becoming a citizen gives them the right to vote, many immigrants said the surge toward citizenship is more personal than political. US citizens can bring relatives to America faster, qualify for more scholarships and financial aid, and are protected from deportation. For many, US citizenship is a point of pride.
“We love to become citizens of this great country,” said Grace Anderson, an immigrant from Ghana who lives in Roslindale and plans to apply for citizenship when she becomes eligible. “It’s prestigious to us to be a citizen. It’s one thing that’s on every African’s mind.”
At the citizenship ceremony in Faneuil Hall, some immigrants said they had put off becoming a citizen, while others said they had applied as soon as they legally could. Legal immigrants do not have to apply for citizenship, but in general, immigrants cannot apply until they have been legal permanent residents for five years.
Marie Rose Antoine, 65, a nurse’s aide from Boston, said her husband had pressed her to apply as they got older. Pedro DaCruz, 27, a National Guardsman from Cape Verde who lives in Brockton, had also been here for years, but applied after serving in Afghanistan.
Henok Terefe, a 28-year-old accountant from Ethiopia, said he applied as soon as he was eligible, because he just wanted “to be part of it.”
“Right away,” Terefe said. “That’s what I wanted.”
Compared with Asians and Latin Americans, black immigrants are still a relatively small group, accounting for less than 10 percent of 40 million immigrants nationwide and 15 percent of nearly 1 million foreign-born residents in Massachusetts.
Haitians are the single largest group of black immigrants, with long roots in the Bay State, and other Caribbean immigrants include Jamaicans and Trinidadians. Another large group are Cape Verdeans, who come from an island off West Africa with long ties to Massachusetts. Newer African immigrants are from Ghana, Kenya, and Nigeria.
They are coming for work or study, to reunite with family, or as refugees fleeing famine and war. Researchers say one major pipeline for black immigrants over the past two decades is the federal visa lottery, which grants green cards to people from countries that historically did not have a significant presence in the United States. Since the program began in the 1990s, African immigrants have soared from a relatively small group, 40 percent of whom were white, to more than 1 million people, 74 percent of whom are black.
Katherine Taylor for The Boston Globe