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Jose Aguilar

Oral history interview conducted by Lucia Rodriguez

February 11, 1989

Call number: 1989.004.23

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0:06 - Introducciones, migración a NY a través de México, encontrar empleo - Introductions, migrating to NY through Mexico, finding employment

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3:01 - Centro de detención de inmigrantes, ayuda de la iglesia para pagar fianza y encontrar hogar - Immigration detention center, aid from church to post bail and find housing

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11:13 - Aprender inglés, calidad de vida en NY, razones para quedarse en Brooklyn - Learning English, quality of life in NY, reasons for staying in Brooklyn

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16:58 - Crianza en El Salvador, razones para irse - Growing up in El Salvador, reasons for leaving

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21:36 - Razones por las cuales la esposa se fue de El Salvador, abuso sexual - Wife's reasons for leaving El Salvador, sexual abuse

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27:26 - Malas condiciones para inmigrantes, racismo en otros estados - Hardships endured by immigrants, racism in other states

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32:27 - Diferencia entre vivir en Queens y Brooklyn, comunidad salvadoreña en Brooklyn - Differences between living in Queens and Brooklyn, Salvadoran community in Brooklyn

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37:31 - Actividades caritativas de la Iglesia de la Transfiguración dentro de la comunidad hispánica - Charitable undertakings of the Transfiguration Church among the Hispanic community

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40:37 - Cambios en la composición étnica de Los Sures, bodegas salvadoreñas, reducción en criminalidad - Changes in ethnic composition of Los Sures neighborhood, Salvadoran bodegas, reduced crime

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49:17 - Divisiones raciales y étnicas en Williamsburg - Racial and ethnic divisions within Williamsburg

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Interview Description

Oral History Interview with José Aguilar

José Aguilar left El Salvador in 1980, when a relative was killed in the civil war and he began to fear for his own safety. He came to New York City via Mexico, and lived first in the Far Rockaway neighborhood of Queens. Aguilar found work in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn, but was picked up by immigration authorities and jailed. His fine was paid by a sister of the Church of the Transfiguration, and he was released. The church helped him find work, and his first job was at a summer camp in Upstate New York. Aguilar found an apartment in "Los Sures'' in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, not far from the Church of the Transfiguration.

In the interview, José Aguilar examines the difficulties of attending school to learn English while working and trying to survive economically. He speaks of the illusions that many Salvadorans have that they will live in the Manhattan skyscrapers they have seen in pictures, but end up in poor areas of Brooklyn. But in spite of difficulties, he feels that the community of Salvadorans that has fully formed near the church provides a support system that makes life more bearable for him. Aguilar observes that the Church of the Transfiguration has helped so many Central Americans, and as a result, many people arriving from there head directly to the church. Interview in Spanish conducted by Lucia Rodriguez.

Brooklyn Historical Society initiated the Hispanic Communities Documentation Project in 1988. Over fifty interviews were conducted to document the experiences of Brooklyn residents who arrived from Puerto Rico, Panama, Ecuador, and several other Central and South American nations in the latter half of the twentieth century. This collection includes recordings and transcripts of interviews conducted between 1988 and 1989. The oral histories often contain descriptions of immigration, living arrangements, neighborhood demographics, discrimination, employment, community development, and political leadership. Also included are photographs and printed ephemera.

Citation

Aguilar, Jose, Oral history interview conducted by Lucia Rodriguez, February 11, 1989, Hispanic Communities Documentation Project records and oral histories, 1989.004.23; Brooklyn Historical Society.

People

  • Aguilar, Jose
  • Church of the Transfiguration

Topics

  • Churches
  • Dominican Americans
  • Emigration and immigration
  • Ethnic relations
  • Hispanic Americans
  • Immigrants
  • Mexican Americans
  • Puerto Ricans
  • Salvadorans

Places

  • Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
  • El Salvador
  • Far Rockaway (New York, N.Y.)
  • Williamsburg (New York, N.Y.)

Finding Aid

Hispanic Communities Documentation Project records and oral histories