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New York City

NYC Calpulli Mexican Dance Company in Battery Park City (Mira Agron/Dreamstime)

NYC Calpulli Mexican Dance Company in Battery Park City (Mira Agron/Dreamstime)

New York City, NYC, Nueva York, Nova York, The Big Apple, La Gran Manzana; whatever you call it, New York is the world capital of culture, finance, media, diplomacy, diversity ~ and the Latin world.


New York State is Right Up There


Thirty minutes out of The City is another world. Welcome to Amérika the beautiful!


New Jersey is El Otro Lado del Rio


New Yorkers like to tease New Jersey ~ until they move here to raise their families.

The Bergenline is another, another world. Union City is the home of Metro New York’s “Little Cuba.” Englewood has a “Little Colombia.”


Lenape Manahatta


Our city is built on Native American Lenape land. The First Nations arrived around 13,000 years ago. “Manahatta” is now Manhattan. The Lenape village was up in Inwood. Naturally, it’s the most beautiful spot on the island. The trail to the trading post at the southern tip of Manhattan is now called Broadway. The trading post later became the U.S. Customs House. It is now the National Museum of the American Indian. The Lenape sacred council elm tree was where Bowling Green Park is now.

We are still here. We have always been here, and the Great Spirit will be here when all the people are gone. In the Indigenous way of thinking, land is not owned by anyone. It belongs to all the people. New York’s cultural community gets it.


The City of Immigrants


We are the immigrant city, the gateway to the United States, a land of immigrants. When new communities arrive, the “natives” complain we are low-class, unskilled, uneducated, oversexed, and basically inhuman. Of course, that’s nonsense. We get to work, start marrying each other, and enter politics. We become New Yorkers.

People from the entire world come here to work and reinvent themselves ~ to create a better future for their children. Diversity, work and density have been the defining characteristics of New York City since the first immigrant, Juan Rodríguez (from what is now the Dominican Republic) established the city’s first bodega (store) at the Lenape trading post on the southern tip of Manahatta in 1613.

Everyone is here, but the communities that define New York City are:

New communities keep arriving in waves. New immigrants start in the lowest jobs and then move up. Today we are becoming more Mexican and South American, South Asian, and Chinese.


La Gran Manzana


La Gran Manzana (The Big Apple) is also the capital of the Latin world.

We acknowledge the Lenape First Nations on whose “Manahatta” New York City is built. The first settlers in the region arrived around 9,000 years ago. Archeologists think the area has been continuously settled for about the last 3,000 years.

The Lenape were farmers. After the First Nations, New York City has been Latin from its very first immigrant, Juan Rodríguez, arrived in 1613.

Rodríguez was a multilingual Portuguese African sailor on a Dutch ship from Santo Domingo, now the capital of the Dominican Republic. He decided to stay instead of shipping on to the Netherlands. 🇩🇴

Rodríguez set up NYC’s first bodega (corner store) where the National Museum of the American Indian is now.

The Dutch set up New Amsterdam in 1624. The English took it in 1664 and left in 1783.

New York has always been a city of immigrants. People come from all over the world to start their lives as Americans. Wherever you are from, when you are here, you’re a New Yorker.


This is New York


New York City (Tom Kaksztat/Dreamstime)

New York is a great diversity of interlocking purposes. We are not the biggest city, but we are the world’s most diverse city. Everyone from everywhere is here. The best and worst of every good and bad idea are here.

If you look at how people live around the world, New York City shouldn’t function at all. Humanity’s investment in petty differences is too great. But on most days, New York does work, and it works surprisingly well.

Perhaps the hurry that is necessary to survive here forces us to drop our differences and let go of our baggage. When you do that, the only thing left is our common humanity.

This is my city. This is your city. This is New York. We are glad you are here. ¡Bienvenidos!

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