The
Denver metropolitan area was one of the early focal points for the new wave of
Mongolian immigrants.
Colorado The Mongolian community in Denver originated in 1989, when Djab Burchinow, a
Kalmyk American engineer, arranged for three junior engineers from Mongolia to study at the
Colorado School of Mines. They were followed by four more students the following year; in 1991, Burchinow also began to urge the Economics Institute at the
University of Colorado to admit Mongolian
international students. By 1996, the
Denver campus of the University of Colorado had set up a program specifically aimed at bringing Mongolian students to the state. The rising number of students coincided with an economic boom and labor shortage in and around Denver, influencing many Mongolian students to stay in Colorado after their graduation, though a significant number did return to Mongolia—and in 2003 formed a Mongolian association of former Coloradan students (their influence may be seen in the name of the street on which the United States embassy in
Ulaanbaatar stands: "Denver Street"). ,
Colorado's Mongolian population was believed to be about 2,000 people, according to the director of a community-run
Mongolian language school established by parents worried about the increasing Americanization of their children. In one major incident, a Mongolian immigrant girl was shot dead in a confrontation between Southeast Asian and Mongolian youths in an
Alameda park on Halloween night in 2007. Four members of the former group were convicted of first-degree murder: three of the boys were tried in juvenile court and sentenced to seven years in prison in 2008, while the shooter was
tried as an adult and sentenced to 50 years to life in state prison in 2010. The Mongolian immigrant population in Los Angeles is estimated at 2,000 people , according to local community leader Batbold Galsansanjaa (1964–2012). He had immigrated to America in 1999, with his wife and two children. In 2000, Galsansanjaa established the first Los Angeles Mongolian Community, a nonprofit organization, and later guided over 2,000 Mongolian immigrants with advice on obtaining
Social Security numbers,
driver's licenses, housing, and other concerns. These Mongolians have close ties to the
Korean American community in Los Angeles. Most of the Mongolian immigrants live and work in "
Koreatown". A
Korean who had been a missionary in Mongolia established Los Angeles's only Mongolian-speaking church in Koreatown. A Mongolian Buddhist congregation also gathers for worship at the nearby Korean Buddhist Kwan-Um Temple.
Maryland Prior to the passage of the
Fair Housing Act of 1968, restrictive covenants were used in the Washington, D.C. suburb of
Bethesda, Maryland, to exclude racial and ethnic minorities, including Mongolian Americans and other Asian Americans. A 1938 restrictive covenant in the Bradley Woods subdivision of Bethesda states: "No part of the land hereby conveyed, shall ever be used, or occupied by or sold, demised, transferred, conveyed, unto, or in trust for, leased, or rented, or given to negroes, or any person or persons of negro blood or extraction or to any person of the Semitic Race, blood, or origin, which racial description shall be deemed to include Armenians, Jews, Hebrews, Persians, Syrians, Greeks and Turks, or to any person of the Mongolian Race, blood, or origin, which racial description shall be deemed to include Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Mongolians, except that this paragraph shall not be held to exclude partial occupancy of the premises by domestic servants of the purchaser or purchasers."
Virginia The Mongolian embassy to the United States estimated the Mongolian population in nearby
Arlington, Virginia, at 2,600 ; reportedly, they were attracted to the area by the high quality of public education—resulting in Mongolian becoming the school system's third-most spoken language, after
English and
Spanish; 219 students of Mongolian origin are enrolled in the local school system, making up 1.2% of all students, but often forming a majority in
ESL classes. Members of the first generation largely come from university-educated backgrounds in Mongolia, but work at jobs below such qualifications after moving to the United States. Community institutions include an annual children's festival and a weekly newspaper. As of 2010, nearly 200 Mongolians lived in
Skokie, Illinois. ==Demographics==