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Korean American

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A Korean-American (Korean: 한국계 미국인, Hanja: 韓國系美國人, hangukgye migugin) is an American of Korean descent.

Although there were earlier immigrants to the U.S., Korean immigration to the U.S. is widely accepted as having begun January 13, 1903, when laborers arrived in Hawaii to work on sugar plantations. More began arriving after the passage of the Immigration Act of 1965.

As of 2000, ethnic Koreans living in the United States numbered some 1.3 million, with large concentrations in California, New York, Texas, Washington, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia. Los Angeles, with its Koreatown district, is home to the largest concentration of Koreans outside of Asia. The 2000 Census counted 1,076,872 Korean-Americans, up from 798,849 in 1990. About one-tenth of these are adoptees who are or have been raised mainly by white families; they may be found anywhere in the country, and in most cases they do not have Korean names. The 2000 Census also recorded an additional 151,555 Americans of part-Korean ancestry.

Korean-Americans remain one of the most religious ethnic groups in the United States, with around 75% attending church regularly [1]. Most Korean-Americans are affiliated with evangelical Christian and Protestant churches, outnumbering Korean-American Buddhists by about a 10-to-1 margin[2]. There is a significant presence of Korean-American leaders in university Christian groups, such as the Campus Crusade for Christ. According to a book written by Heerak Christian Kim, Korean-American Experience in the United States: Initial Thoughts (The Hermit Kingdom Press, 2004), a typical university gathering of Korean students will have 100 percent of the group members having attended a Christian church in their youth.

However, the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade counted 2,157,498 ethnic Koreans living in the U. S. in 2003; a large number of these are students or temporary workers and hence do not have permanent residence status.

In 1993, Jay Kim became the first Korean American to be elected to the U. S. Congress, while Chang-Rae Lee became the first Korean American writer to receive the PEN/Hemingway Award in 1995.

For other notable Korean Americans, see the list.

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Asian Americans Image:Flag of the United States.svg
East Asian American: Chinese American | Japanese American | Korean American | Mongolian American | Taiwanese American
Southeast Asian American: Burmese American | Cambodian American | Filipino American | Hmong American | Indonesian American | Laotian American | Thai American | Vietnamese American | Singaporean American | Malaysian American | Timorese American | Bruneian American
South Asian American: Bangladeshi American | Bhutanese American | Indian American | Indo-Caribbean American | Maldivian American | Nepalese American | Pakistani American | Sri Lankan American | Tibetan American
additionally: Asian-Latino Americans
ko:한국계 미국인

ja:韓国系アメリカ人 zh:韓裔美國人

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