Eritrea regained its independence from Ethiopia on May 24, 1991, after the
Eritrean War of Independence. Since the inception of the war in the 1960s, many immigrants from Eritrea left for the United States. By 2000, the Eritrean community in the U.S. had grown to around 30,000 members.[6]
Eritrean Americans have since established ethnic enclaves in various places around the country, particularly in the
Washington D.C. area.
Fairfax Avenue in
Los Angeles, California has come to be known as
Little Ethiopia, owing to its many Ethiopian and Eritrean businesses and restaurants. The
Temescal neighborhood of
Oakland, California has many Ethiopian and Eritrean businesses and restaurants.[7] Additionally, Eritreans have opened a number of garages and auto repair shops.[6] They also run several taxi establishments, including the Eritrean Cab company based in
San Diego.[8] Also the 100% Eritrean owned
Indy Airport Taxi located in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Demographics
The exact number of Eritrean residents in the United States is unknown because Eritreans were listed as Ethiopian nationals prior to Eritrea's
independence in the early 1990s.[6] According to the
U.S. Census Bureau, approximately 18,917 people reported Eritrean ancestry in 2000.[4] Between 2007 and 2011, there were approximately 25,848 Eritrea-born residents in the country.[3]California had the most Eritrean-born people, at 4,782 residents, followed by
Virginia (3,417),
Texas (2,693), and
Maryland (1,902).[9]
The Eritrean community in the United States is represented by various Eritrean-run organizations. Among these are the Eritrean American Community Association of Georgia, Eritrean American Community in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area,[11] Eritrean Community Center of Greater New York,[12] Eritrean American Community in Dallas,[13] Eritrean Community Association in Chicago,[14] Eritrean Community Center of Minnesota,[15] Eritrean Association in Greater Seattle,[16] and Eritrean American Community in Sacramento.[17]
In 2001, a chapter of the
Eritrean Liberation Front–Revolutionary Council was also established in Chicago. The National Union of Eritrean Women likewise routinely holds meetings and activities in the city.[6]
Additionally, the
Virginia-based Eritrean Sports Federation in North America (ERSFNA) annually hosts a soccer tournament for Eritrean residents. It also organizes adult and youth sports community programs in various U.S. cities.[18]
Nipsey Hussle (1985-2019)- Ermias Joseph Asghedom, known professionally as Nipsey Hussle, was partially Eritrean and an American rapper, songwriter, entrepreneur, community activist, philanthropist, and actor.
Semhar Araia - Eritrean political activist, professor and international lawyer.
Bereket Habteslassie - Eritrean American & Leading African scholar, freedom fighter, professor, international lawyer and political activist.
Selamawi Asgedom - Eritrean-Ethiopian author and public speaker.
^"Haile Debas". University of California San Francisco Profiles.
Further reading
Hepner, Tricia Redeker. “Eritrean Immigrants.” Multicultural America: An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans. Ed. Ronald H. Bayor, (Greenwood, 2001) pp 617–47. .
Sorenson, John. “Discourses on Eritrean Nationalism and Identity.” Journal of Modern African Studies 29, no. 2 (1991): 301–17.
Tesfagiorgis, Mussie G. Eritrea (Africa in Focus). (ABC-CLIO, 2011).
Ockerstrom, Lolly. "Eritrean Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 87–96.
online