9 visionaries you didn't know were refugees who changed America

Why we shouldn't let fear trump compassion.

Not Available Lead
Image via Complex Original
Not Available Lead

In times of heightened terror threats, it’s easy to keep our guards up.

Following last month's deadly attacks in Paris, the current Syrian refugee crisis has stirred a global debate between those willing to help asylum-seekers, and those who are quick to close their doors over fears that extremists are taking advantage of the crisis to infiltrate Europe.

But if the United States hadn’t offered a home to the following refugees, we may have never reaped the benefits of their human potential. 

NTRSCTN compiled a list of 10 influential refugees who found asylum in the U.S., and made incredible contributions to various fields, ranging from science to the arts. Their stories prove that when we invest in humanity, people can rise above their circumstances, and achieve great things. 

1. Andy Garcia

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: Cuba

Career: Actor

Best known for: The Godfather Part III, Ocean’s Eleven and its sequels Ocean’s Twelve and Ocean’s Thirteen, and The Lost City

Born in Havana, Cuba, Andy Garcia and his family fled the country after the United States' Bay of Pigs Invasion, a failed attempt to topple Fidel Castro's regime, when he was 5 years old.

Although Garcia is best known for his role as Vincent Mancini in The Godfather Part III, for which he received Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations for best supporting actor, he also sought to celebrate his roots and challenge Latino stereotypes in Hollywood. Garcia eventually came full circle in 2005 with The Lost City, a film that explores the Cuban Revolution and Castro’s rise to power. 

2. Nadia Comaneci

Not Available Interstitial

3. Albert Einstein

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: Germany

Career: Physicist

Best known for: E = mc2

Celebrated as the world’s most influential physicist, "Einstein" has become synonymous with “genius.”

Born in Germany to a Jewish family, Albert Einstein emigrated to the United States in 1933 after Adolf Hitler and the Nazis rose to power. Throughout his lifetime, he published more than 300 scientific papers. In addition, last year, universities and archives announced the release of more than 30,000 unique documents from Einstein’s papers.

Einstein holds many awards and honors, including the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics.

 

4. Madeleine Albright

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: Czechoslovakia

Career: Politician and diplomat

Best known for: Being the first female United States Secretary of State  

Born Marie Jana Korbelova, Madeleine Albright and her family fled political turmoil twice. The first time, they escaped to England after the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia during World War II. Soon after, they returned to Prague when the country was liberated from the Germans. But after Czechoslovakia's Communist takeover in 1948, Albright’s family fled to the United States when she was 11, and settled in Denver, Colorado.

Albright pursued a successful career in politics, and eventually became the first female Secretary of State by unanimous vote and the highest-ranking woman in the history of the United States government.

5. Mahnaz Afkhami

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: Iran

Career: Writer and women's rights activist

Best known for: Her books, Women in Exile and Claiming Our Rights

During pre-revolutionary Iran, Mahnaz Afkhami served as Minister for Women’s Affairs (one of two female cabinet ministers at the time) and secretary-general of the Women’s Organization of Iran. In 1978, Afkhami traveled to the United Nations in New York to help establish an international research institute for women in Tehran, Iran's capital. Her husband then warned Afkhami that Islamic revolutionaries had condemned her feminist activities, and that she would likely get arrested if she returned home. Afkhami ultimately stayed in the United States, where she continued a life of activism.

In addition to publishing numerous books, Afkhami has served as president of international feminist think tank, The Sisterhood Is Global Institute, and is now president and CEO of an NGO called the Women's Learning Partnership for Rights, Development, and Peace.

6. Theanvy Kuoch

Not Available Interstitial

7. Li Lu

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: China (exiled after participating in 1989 Tiananmen Square protests)

Career: Businessman

Best known for: Founding hedge fund Himalaya Capital

When Li Lu was a baby, his parents were sent to the labor camps for "re-education" during China’s Cultural Revolution. Lu became an active leader of the student-democracy movement, which eventually led to his exile after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. He fled to Hong Kong after Chinese authorities launched a two-month manhunt, and eventually made his way to the United States.

In the U.S., Lu pursued three undergraduate degrees simultaneously at Columbia University, and became the first student there to receive three separate degrees in a day. After college, he embraced capitalism as an investment banker. His biggest career success was founding the high-profile Manhattan hedge fund Himalaya Capital in 1997.

Lu also continues to fight for human rights and democracy in China.

8. Bao Phi

Not Available Interstitial

Fled: Vietnam

Career: Spoken word artist and community activist

Best known for: Being the first Vietnamese-American man on Def Poetry Jam 

Born in Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City), Vietnam, Bao Phi fled the country during the Vietnam War in 1975, and resettled in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He first started doing performance-based poetry on his high school speech team.

Phi’s passion for spoken word grew, leading him to win the Minnesota Grand Poetry Slam twice, as well as two poetry slams at the legendary Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City. He was also the first Vietnamese-American man to appear on HBO's Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry.

Phi's first book, 2011's Song I Sing, received a favorable review in The New York Times. 

9. Carl Djerassi

Not Available Interstitial

Latest in Life