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Local Community Overview
The 2000 federal
census counted over 18,000 Pakistanis in metropolitan Chicago, one
of the largest concentrations of Pakistanis in the United States.
Community estimates in the late 1990s, however, ranged from 80,000
to 100,000, most of whom were either Urdu- or Punjabi-speaking
Muslims. Like other South Asians, Pakistanis have commonly tended to
settle in and around major urban areas, especially on the two coasts
near New York and Los Angeles. Chicago and other inland cities such
as Houston have also developed large and visible Pakistani
communities.
Although Pakistani
immigration to the United States dates back to Pakistan's
independence in 1947, the greatest influx of Pakistanis occurred
after the mid-1960s, when U.S. immigration policy toward South Asia
became more relaxed. These early immigrants were generally
well-educated and financially comfortable graduate students and
professionals, such as doctors, engineers, and scientists, who
emigrated for educational and economic opportunities. The political
instability of Pakistan at the time and the rise of anti–South Asian
sentiment in the United Kingdom accelerated the migration of
Pakistanis to the United States. The decades of the 1980s and 1990s
continued to bring educated Pakistani professionals to the United
States, but a growing number of less-educated, middle-class
immigrants also arrived, taking jobs as taxi drivers and small
business owners.
Although Pakistanis
apparently have dispersed across Chicago's suburbs rather than
concentrating in any single neighborhood, Pakistani presence has
been most visible along Devon Avenue, the cultural and commercial
center of Chicago's South Asian communities. Along this North Side
street—where dozens of Pakistani restaurants and shops have nestled
among other South Asian businesses—Pakistanis have celebrated their
national independence day, August 14, with an annual parade.
Pakistanis generally parade along the portion of Devon just east of
Western Avenue that has been designated “Mohammed Ali Jinnah Way,”
in honor of Pakistan's founder and first head of state.
Chicago's
Pakistanis have established a number of social and cultural
institutions. Together with the city's greater Islamic community,
Pakistanis have helped establish mosques and Islamic schools in and
around Chicago, including the Islamic Foundation. Social and
cultural associations have included the Pakistan Federation of
America in Chicago and the Indus Society.
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