- Title:
- Pandemic in Her Baby Sling: The Iranian American Women's Story of Migration Traumas and Labor Hardship During 2020's COVID-19 Pandemic
- Date Created:
- 2020
- Description:
- Since COVID-19 started to become a global pandemic, it has caused personal and public traumas. Increase in unemployment rate, bankruptcy of small businesses, financial stress to the middle and working-class and the closure of many businesses which relied on people’s social activities, including the gig industry, tourism industry and restaurants, are additional traumas to the issues of health and life threats people face by the contingency of the virus. By the end of May 2020, more than 2 million Americans were confirmed COVID-19 positive, 113 thousand of whom could not survive. Amongst the most affected populations, the people of color, especially Black Americans and immigrants have been suffering most. This research focuses on immigrant working women from the Middle East, whose life journeys are filled in with several traumas, some intensified during the pandemic. This paper provides two oral history records of two Iranian American working mothers, Aida Mohajer and Mrs. Ebrahimi, who carry historical traumas experienced in two different countries with two different cultures, i.e. Iran, and the USA. The interviewees’ stories show how the experience of trauma is related to the social class and what imposed social factors beyond choice can determine the class and different approaches to traumas.
- Subjects:
- COVID-19 (Disease) Iranian American women single mothers immigrants precarious employment oral history
- Location:
- United States—Washington (State)—Tacoma; United States—Washington (State)—Seattle; United States—Washington (State)—Kirkland
- Source:
- University of Washington Tacoma Community History Project
- Source Identifier:
- chp2020-03
- Format:
- cpd
- :
- http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en