Margarida Xavier

Lucy Oliveira of the New Bedford Immigrants' Assistance Center sits with 86-year-old Margarida Xavier, who moved to the US from Portugal in the 1960s. Oliveira visits Xavier's home every month and often helps Xavier read her mail.

Some Portuguese immigrants feel isolated as they grow old in their adopted home

October 29, 2014
Lifestyle

Margarida Xavier came to Massachusetts in the 1960s, when the Portuguese community in New Bedford was a booming microcosm of life back home. As younger generations integrate, life for the most elderly immigrants, who still maintain the culture and language of their home, are feeling isolated.

Some Portuguese immigrants feel isolated as they grow old in their adopted home

Latest Headlines

Pork paradigm shift: This high-end São Paulo restaurant features pig ears and tails
LGBTQ Russians are fleeing to Central Asia
Warsaw Ghetto’s defiant Jewish doctors secretly documented the medical effects of Nazi starvation policies
Blocking BBC documentary on Gujarat riots goes against India's democratic values, journalist says
Big tobacco is forced to pay for cigarette butt pollution in Spain, but smokers may soon be on the hook
Peru protests reveal ethnic and regional divides
Court orders Canada to take back its citizens from camps in Syria
Random rules: Part II
In Turkey, refugee children face hurdles to school enrollment
Taiwan and China celebrate Lunar New Year amid vastly different COVID levels
More stories

The World is a public radio program that crosses borders and time zones to bring home the stories that matter.

Produced by

Major funding provided by

  1. Carnegie Corporation of New York
  2. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Ford Foundation
  4. Corporation for Public Broadcasting

  1. About
  2. Contact
  3. Donate
  4. Meet the Team
  5. Privacy Policy
  6. Terms of Use

©2023 The World from PRX

PRX is a 501(c)(3) organization recognized by the IRS: #263347402.