Invisible Immigrants, Old and Left With ‘Nobody to Talk To’

Older immigrants, cut off from society by language and culture differences, now make up America’s fastest-growing immigrant group. Full Story »

Posted by Subramanya Sastry - via New York Times (Most Emailed)

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Review

Lynn Caporale
4.7
by Lynn Caporale - Aug. 31, 2009

“In India there is a favorable bias toward the elders,” Mr. Singh said, sitting amid Hindu religious posters and a photograph of his late wife Mr. Singh… grew up in a boisterous Indian household with 14 family members. In Fremont, he moved in with his son’s family and devoted himself to his grandchildren, picking them up from school and ferrying them to soccer practice. Then his son and daughter-in-law decided “they wanted their privacy,” said Mr. Singh, an undertone of sadness in his voice. He reluctantly concluded he should move out. … Mr. Singh drives to the rented room in a house he found on Craigslist. His could be a dorm room, except for the arthritis heat wraps packed neatly in plastic bins.

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Lynn's Rating

Overall
4.7

Very good
from 11 answers
Quality
4.8
Facts
5.0
Fairness
5.0
Sourcing
4.0
Style
5.0
Context
5.0
Depth
4.0
Enterprise
5.0
Relevance
5.0
Popularity
4.5
Recommendation
5.0
Credibility
4.0
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