¶ … Immigration
The target family immigrated to the United States of America (USA) in 2001 from Western part of Kenya in East Africa. Composed of two parents and three children, a ten-year-old girl, eight-year-old boy and a five-year-old girl, the family's move to the U.S.A. was not an easy one. The man of the family, Oyot, before immigrating to the U.S., worked as a primary school teacher in a small township of Rongo in Nyanza province of Kenya. Life in Kenya was unbearable for him as his monthly salary was insufficient for his family.
Oyot had always wanted to leave Kenya in search of a better life for his family; there were issues that motivated his immigration to The U.S.A. First, in Africa, families are extended and some members of Oyot's family mocked him continually. They claimed that he was cursed and that he would never amount to anything. Oyot belongs to the Luo community in Kenya. And as a first born son of the family, he was expected to leave his father's home where he lived in a "simba" (Pabaris Paradise, 2012), to esablish his own homestead. The Luo's believe that it is improper for a younger brother to leave the family home before the elder one. Oyot's younger brother who was working in Nairobi had a better paying job; he put pressure on him to leave their father's home so that he could also leave. These continual remarks from his family and the pressure from his younger brother, tortured him mentally. Second, Oyot had taken a small cash loan from the school Saving and Credit Co-operative Society (SACCO)....
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