Ecuadorians in the Streets of New York City
- 1. Working 24/7 rain or shine–this is not her weekend job
- 2. Guinea pigs share people’s kitchen floors in Canar and Azuay, south of Ecuador, before they’re roasted
- 3. Ana Maria sells mexican fried bread–her son-in-law introduced her into this bussiness
- 4. Baloon sellers are as popular as sugar candy in every Ecuadorian fair
- 5. At twenty, she doesn’t know what ‘email’ is
- 6. His smile is a row of golden stars
- 7. These Ecuadorian empanadas are served white sugar on top. The only thing they lack is cheese
- 8. She doesn’t actually “buy your gold.” She’ll give you a phone number
- 9. Coming from Imababura, a province populated mostly by indigenous communities, she now advertises English classes in Queens
- 10. GUayaquileno is the gentilice for those born in Ecuador’s largest city, Guayaquil, a port in the coast of Ecuador.
- 11. Lucia attends “EL Guayaquileno,” a truck specializing in fish and seafood dishes
- 12. Came with her mother
- 13. Coupple listens to Christinne Quin’s speech
- 14. Bilingual posters were written on site, others were provided by Latino and GLBT associations
- 15. The victims of recent hate crimes
- 16. An injury to all
- 17. Bushwick neighbors joined ecuadorians in their march toward the site where jose Sucuzhanay lsot his life
- 18. Fliers, newspapers and political pamphlets found their way through the crowd’s hands
- 19. Daysies were distributed among those headed to the vigil in honor to Sucuzhanay
- 20. Public marchs like this are typical in Ecuador–a country with an average of 1 president every year since the 1990’s. This crowd is headed to Kossuth Place in Bushwick, Brooklyn
What do people in NYC picture when they hear about “Ecuadorians”? Whose images would I capture if I began to approach people that resembled my idea of Ecuadorians? Because of an economic crisis in the late 1990s, more than 600,000 Ecuadorians emigrated to the U.S. and Europe from 2000 to 2001 (5). Including undocumented migrants, it is unofficially estimated that there are approximately one million Ecuadorians currently residing in the U.S. (5). But even in Ecuador, a country whose officers adamantly call “multicultural,” citizens are not supposed to be easily categorized, and discussions about the right image to represent its population are endless.
Besides mestizos, in Ecuador there still remain over 1000 (1) indigenous cultures that have managed to preserve their own language, followed by smaller percentages of Afro-Ecuadorians and European descendent criollos. And after one has acknowledged the language and ethnic differences, one must consider the importance of yet another layer: Class.
Being an immigrant in Ecuador, although almost 15% (2) of the population has moved to the US and to European countries, is an open declaration that one is poor. Further than that, amongst the middle class that has not left the country, immigrants are stigmatized as uneducated, lower class citizens. A fact that statistics somewhat justify. More than half of the Ecuadorian immigrant community in the US and Spain have only finished grade school (3).
Among the people in power, immigration has been addressed trough a double discourse. On the one hand, immigration is referred to as a problem, and its decrease often has been one of the visible “goals” of the government. On the other hand, 6.9% (4) of Ecuador’s annual budget depends on the money that immigrants pump into the economy each year. This is, astonishingly, more or less half of the revenue that Ecuador obtains through oil drilling.
Although Ecuadorians were heavily concentrated in the mountainous central highland region a few decades ago, migration toward larger cities in all regions—coast, andes, amazon and Galapagos—has increased the urban population to over 60% (5). From migrating to big Ecuadorian cities to taking a further step and migrate to the US or Spain, there is a small distance. More »



















































