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Ethnic enclaves
Immigrants often maintain their culture while becoming a part of a new country by gathering in areas with other immigrants from their home country. These small communities allow immigrants to feel at home while still becoming a part of a new country.
Immigrants in cities responded to prohibition in various ways. Some immigrants may have continued to consume alcohol illegally, while others supported and participated in the bootlegging industry. Additionally, immigrant communities often formed social clubs and organizations that provided spaces for the production and consumption of alcohol outside the reach of law enforcement.
Polish immigrants often chose their location based on factors such as job opportunities, existing Polish communities, family connections, and the availability of affordable housing. They also selected areas that offered familiar cultural and religious institutions to help ease the transition to a new country.
People who move out of a country are often referred to as expatriates or emigrants.
Ethnic enclaves
This has changed over the years. Today most settle in Urban centres, usually within communities having large numbers of people from their homeland.
German
Legal immigrants are often not as impoverished as illegal immigrants, but are certainly not wealthy, the majority constituting the lower middle class and not ever becoming more than middle class. Most immigrants end up living simple lives in ethnic communities or in general society. Illegal immigrants tend to remain in the lower class because their illegality serves as an impediment to finding better work.
Immigrants from Germany usually arrived with some money and were most often skilled workers or educated people, such as writers and politicians.
Many immigrants brought their problems to America. They often worked for less wage and took more valueable jobs.
Both immigrants and indentured servants arrived in a new country seeking better opportunities and were often subject to poor living conditions and mistreatment. They both faced challenges adapting to a new culture and were vulnerable to exploitation by employers or landowners.