The New Colossus Essay

626 Words3 Pages

States of America was challenged by the cruelty that almost tore the United States of America apart. For a long time, African Americans have struggled for freedom, full involvement, and dignity in the American society. Their struggles have transformed the American nation because at the moment there is no life facet that has not been affected by African American experience (Library of Congress, par. 3).
The hopes promised in the poem were rarely experienced by most of the immigrants. As we read through the history, it is clear that there were some immigrants who enjoyed what the poem expresses. However, in some situations, there were some immigrants who were preferred over others.
The America lived up to the promises of the Lazarus’ poem by …show more content…

The poem guarantees the immigrants promises when they come to the United States. Nonetheless, in different stories of the immigrants, there were favors. There were immigrants who were treated well while others were subjected to exploitation. In some of these stories, at one point of the immigrants’ lives, there were instances of suffering and later on, there were signs of relief. The poem represents America as a country which does not like war, but it is a country of compassion, freedom, and enlightenment. If this is the case, then why did African Americans struggle for freedom and dignity? Maybe Lazarus was thinking as an American and that is why she was praising the United States of America in her poem. Since what the immigrants and their forefather endured is in contrary to the poem’s message. Russian immigrants were subjected kind of war, for example, their political parties, social clubs, and many other things were raided. Is this not what the poem rebukes in the first stanza and second stanza? It is! As stated earlier, the message of the poem was not treated equally among the immigrants. This bias might have occurred as a result of the leaders during these times had their way of ruling the country. Some were racists. Therefore, if the immigrants did not belong to a class of people the leader needed, they would be sceptically welcomed in the United