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In 1998, Master guitarmaker William R. Cumpiano and his colleagues wrote, directed and produced "Un Canto en Otra Montaña: Música Puertorriqueña en Hawaii" (A Song Heard in Another Mountain: Puerto Rican Music in Hawaii), a short-feature video documentary on the music and social history of the century-old Puerto Rican Diaspora in Hawaii. [30]
At the time Puerto Rico and Hawaii were unincorporated and incorporated territories of the United States respectively; however, the passage of the Jones-Shafroth Act of 1917, same year that the U.S. entered World War I, granted U.S. citizenship to the Puerto Rican residents in Puerto Rico and excluded those who resided in Hawaii. Even though ...
People living or raised in Hawaii of full or partial Puerto Rican ancestry. Pages in category "Hawaii people of Puerto Rican descent" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Cachi cachi music is what the people in Hawaii, who heard the Puerto Ricans playing their own music, called it. It needed a name and the people of Hawaii, specifically the Japanese plantation workers called it cachi cachi according to oral tradition- video recordings by Onetake2012 and research done by Ted Solis, an ethnomusicologist.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Puerto_Rican_migration_to_Hawaii&oldid=274217607"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Puerto_Rican
Congress made Puerto Ricans U.S. citizens in 1917, about 19 years after taking control of the island. Later, when the island passed its 1952 constitution, Congress decided to make Puerto Rico a ...
Pages in category "History of immigration to Hawaii" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. ... Puerto Rican immigration to Hawaii; S.
CHICAGO — Marisel Vera always knew she was a writer. Growing up in Humboldt Park, the daughter of Puerto Rican immigrants said before she was a writer, she was a reader who didn't feel ...