The
International Express:
Around The World On The 7 Train
How
can you travel around the world for the price of a subway ride?
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The International Express, which details the
cultures along the route of the 7 train, is available through the
Queens Council on the Arts. For more information,
call 647-3377 or log
on to www.queenscouncil.org.
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Get
On Board.
The
International Express. The 7 train bursts from the subway tunnel onto
the elevated tracks in Queens, on its way from Times Square to
Flushing, and rumbles into a seemingly unremarkable industrial urban
scene. But beneath the tracks, the streets abound with cultures from
around the world – a wealth of nations in neighborhoods. The 7 train
passes above so many ethnic and immigrant communities on its
seven-mile route through northwest Queens, that it was dubbed “The
International Express” by the Department of City Planning.
Experience
it for yourself. Get off in Sunnyside, spend an evening at a Spanish
theater or a Romanian night club; get off in Woodside, rent a Thai
video or hear traditional music at an Irish pub; get off in Jackson
Heights, visit an Indian sari shop or dance at a Colombian night club;
get off in Corona, watch the Italian game of bocce being played or buy
fresh tortillas at a Mexican bakery; get off in Flushing, eat in an
Afghan restaurant or take classes in Korean drumming.
Why
Is The International Express So International?
The
7 train and immigrant settlement patterns are historically linked. Its
tracks, built mostly by immigrant laborers in the early 1900s, were
intended, in part, to redistribute the large number of immigrants
living in Manhattan more evenly throughout the City. Although Queens
is the largest of New York City’s boroughs, and the City’s
geographic center, in 1900 it was home to only a tiny percent of the
population. It was a rural borough of meadows and marshes, colonial
estates and small villages, such as Flushing, inaccessible to most
Manhattanites. The IRT (Interborough Rapid Transit) 7 train, which
began running to Queensboro Plaza in 1915, was extended to 103rd
Street, Corona in 1917, and finally reached Flushing in 1928. Although
ferry boats, and eventually the Queensborough bridge, linked Manhattan
and Queens, it was the train that provided the quickest and most
inexpensive mode of transport. Without this expansion of the New York
City subway system, the neighborhoods in Queens would not be as
diverse as they are. Many immigrants who moved out of crowded
tenements on the Lower East Side of Manhattan for a better quality of
life in Queens, actually settled along the route of the train. Today,
a high percentage of immigrants to Queens still settle in the
northwest section of the borough. The IRT was also responsible for the
urbanization of Queens since it prompted the development of businesses
to serve the borough’s increasing population. Now, many of those who
live alongside the 7 line also work near it. Some immigrants
eventually relocate in pursuit of the more suburban lifestyle that led
immigrants living in Manhattan to move to Queens in the early 1900s.
They often return, however, for the specialty shops and restaurants of
their old neighborhoods.
Who
Lives And Works Along
The International Express?
Queens
is the most ethnically diverse county in the nation. The International
Express is simultaneously a trip around the world and a voyage to
quintessential Queens. People from approximately 150 nations have
immigrated to Queens and established communities here. Communal
memories permeate the streets: store and restaurant names, as well as
their architecture and patrons, recall a variety of native lands.
Community is a sense of ‘us’-ness, a collective identity as a
group, which arises from shared experience, traditions and values.
Community members gather in social clubs and in restaurants to be with
others who share their culture and history. As a lonely Irish
immigrant put it as he sat in an Irish pub in Woodside, talking
against the sounds of clanking glasses and hearty laughter, he had
come to the pub to be comforted by “Irish accents and familiar
sounds.” The train route is dotted with cultural oases such as
Turkish grocery stores, Korean calligraphy associations and Hindu
temples, which provide similar social and cultural fortification.
Community
institutions such as ethnic restaurants, parades and festivals serve
the needs of their members; they also provide outsiders with
opportunities to experience cultures beyond their own, since they are
ways in which communities can present their cultures to others. As the
owner of one of the first Mexican restaurants in Jackson Heights
expressed it, when he arrived in Queens he saw that “a lot of other
communities had their own restaurants and there was no Mexican
restaurant at all. There was only one…but it wasn’t a real Mexico
place. People think Mexican food is only tacos. Mexican food has a lot
of things. And that’s how we decided to open a restaurant – for
our community – not just for the money. It was to put a special name
for the community. People could come and see the things that we really
have.”
When
immigrants arrive in the United States they must decide which parts of
mainstream American culture to adopt as their own, which of their
traditions to maintain, and which to adapt to their new home. Many
parents send their American born children to Saturday schools where
they learn the language and culture of their heritage; Afghan,
Armenian, Korean, Thai, Turkish and Uruguayan schools are among those
which exist along the 7 line. People keep connected to their
communities at the broadest level through the media; foreign and
ethnic newspapers, radio and television programs which inform them of
relevant news and social events both in the United States and their
homelands. Some people keep connected to their communities at a more
intimate level by forming cultural associations with fellow immigrants
from their native regions or cities. Many such groups hold annual
dinner dances, as well as organize cultural and charitable events.
Communities
exist in shared social space, not necessarily shared physical space.
We become members of New York City’s multicultural community not
just by virtue of living here, but by choosing to participate in it;
by interacting with our neighbors, learning about their lives and
traditions and by sharing our lives and traditions with them.
Why
Is The Train’s Route
A National Trail?
In
1999, the Queens Council on the Arts successfully nominated The
International Express for the designation of National Millennium
Trail. It was selected as representative of the American immigrant
experience by the White House Millennium Council, the United States
Department of Transportation, and the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy.
Indeed, the relationship between transportation, immigrant settlement
patterns, and commerce, evident along The International Express is a
present-day echo of similar, albeit grander-scale, schemes which built
our nation such as the Trans-Continental Railroad. And the immigrants
who opened the first Mexican bakery or Indian sari shop, for example,
were certainly pioneers of sorts. The International Express is a
living heritage trail. Its route may be set in steel but its
destinations are ever-changing. New sites of interest are constantly
emerging as new New Yorkers settle alongside it.
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