Luso American
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Luso-Americans, or Lusitanic Americans are people living in the United States whose cultural background derives in part from Portuguese language roots or traditions.
Luso-Americans include Portuguese-Americans, whose roots are directly Portuguese; Brazilian-Americans; and those from other parts of the Lusophone world, such as Cape Verde, Angola or Mozambique. Because of the wide range of national origins of Luso-Americans, the group is considered a cultural one, rather than a homogeneous ethnic group. People of African, Macanese, Portuguese Jewish, and many other origins may be, under certain circumstances, considered Luso-Americans.
A Portuguese American, in contrast, denotes any person born in the United States whose family came to the USA from Portugal.
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[edit] History
Luso-Americans can be found in all states and there are sizable Luso-American communities in California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island, New York, Hawaii, and Florida. In total, the members of this community may be more than 3.5 million Americans. Two United States counties, namely Bristol County, Rhode Island and Bristol County, Massachusetts, are home to pluralities of people of Portuguese ancestry.
[edit] Jewish Luso-Americans
In September, 1654, shortly before the Jewish New Year, twenty-three Jews of Portuguese ancestry from Recife, Brazil, arrived in New York, which at the time was under Dutch rule and known as New Amsterdam. This arrival was the beginning of Jewish-American history. Sephardic Portuguese Jews were also the early settlers of Newport (where the country's first synagogue was founded), Charleston, Philadelphia and Baltimore.
[edit] Language
Portuguese has been spoken in the United States by small communities of immigrants, especially in Fall River, Massachusetts; Miami; Pompano Beach; Orlando; Ludlow, Massachusetts; New Bedford, Massachusetts; Framingham, Massachusetts; Elizabeth, New Jersey; Bristol, Rhode Island; East Providence, Rhode Island; San Francisco, California; San Jose, California; Cranston, Rhode Island; Gustine, California; Tulare, California; San Pedro, California and the metropolitan New York City area. The Ironbound section of Newark, New Jersey is also called "Little Portugal", and 46th Street in Manhattan is also named "Little Brazil Street". Portuguese is also spoken by some Chinese and Macanese immigrants from Macau, especially in California.
Luso-Americans also include speakers of Portuguese-based creoles, such as Macanese (Patuá or Macaista Chapado) and Papiamento. Elements of the Portuguese language can also be found in other former colonies such as Goa and Timor.
In the Luso-American community, there is a significant difference between European Portuguese and other regional variations, notably Brazilian Portuguese. Language schools (especially in the U.S.) classes often teach the Brazilian dialect.[citation needed]
[edit] Famous Luso-Americans
Brazilian
- Paula Abdul - Syrian-Brazilian father
- Janeth Arcain - professional basketball player (WNBA) with the Houston Comets
- Morena Baccarin - actress (Brazilian born)
- Camilla Belle (1986 - ) television/film actress (When a Stranger Calls)[1]
- Blondfire - band
- Sonia Braga - Actress
- Jordana Brewster (1980 - ) film actress[2]
- Bob Burnquist - Brazilian born skateboarder
- Bruno Campos - actor
- Phil Chroniger - Political and social columnist
- Flavia Colgan, political strategist
- Jane Engelhard philanthropist
- Bebel Gilberto - Songwriter/singer
- Ryan Hollweg - hockey player
- Joe Madureira - comic book artist
- Sergio Mendes - singer
- Carmen Miranda - Portuguese/Brazilian/American actress
- Nancy Randall - model
- Robert Rey Plastic surgeon and TV host
- Bidu Sayão - opera singer
Angolan
Cape-Verdean
- Michael Beach
- Horace Silver
- Paul Gonsalves - musician
- Paul Pena - musician
Guinea-Bissauan
Indian
- Dinesh D'Souza
- Sid D'Souza
- Leon D'Souza
Chinese
Mozambican
São Tomean
Sephardic
- Jacob Lumbrozo - colonist
- Judah P. Benjamin - politician and lawyer
- Albert Cardozo - jurist
- Benjamin Cardozo - a Sephardi Supreme Court Justice.
- Emma Lazarus - a Sephardi New Yorker poet
- Mordecai Manuel Noah - playwright, diplomat, journalist, and utopian
- Judah Monis - Hebrew scholar
- Vic Seixas - tennis player and champion
Caribbean
[edit] External links
- Igreja Portuguesa de Nossa Senhora de Fátima — Church of Our Lady of Fatima, Yonkers, New York
- Portuguese American Community Center, Yonkers, New York
- Portuguese-American Historical & Research Foundation Franklin, North Carolina
- Congregation Shearith Israel — the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue (New York, NY, USA)
- Kahal Kadosh Mikveh Israel (Philadelphia, PA, USA)
- Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island
- [1]
- Distinguished Americans & Canadians of Portuguese Descent