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Vos Iz Neias

Is Mamdani Saying: “All Immigrants Are Created Equal, But Some Immigrants Are More Equal Than Others”?

Jul 9, 2026·3 min read

New York (VINNEWS)

That is the unmistakable message emanating from City Hall, where Mayor Zohran Mamdani has unveiled a new map of New York City’s immigrant enclaves that manages the remarkable feat of erasing one of the oldest and most consequential immigrant communities the five boroughs have ever known. Little Italy is gone. The Italian-American neighborhoods that stitched themselves into the fabric of Brooklyn, the Bronx, Staten Island, Queens, and Manhattan have simply vanished from the official cartography of memory.

The City Council’s Italian Caucus is, understandably, furious. And it is right to be.

There is something both absurd and insulting about a map of immigrant New York that cannot find room for the very people who poured the concrete, laid the brick, and opened the storefronts of the modern city. To draw such a map and leave the Italians off it is not an oversight of ink. It is a statement of values — a quiet declaration about whose history counts and whose does not.

The Caucus put it plainly: Italian-Americans are not a footnote in the history of New York. They are one of its foundational immigrant communities. Their neighborhoods, their churches, their small businesses, their feast traditions, their civic institutions, and their sprawling family networks helped build the New York that Mamdani now presumes to govern and to catalog. To pretend otherwise is not merely careless. It is a rewriting of the past to suit the sensibilities of the present.

One wonders how such an omission survives even a cursory review. The San Gennaro feast still floods Mulberry Street every September. Italian parishes still ring their bells across the outer boroughs. Family names that arrived through Ellis Island still hang above butcher shops and bakeries and funeral homes in a dozen neighborhoods. None of this is hidden. None of it is obscure. It is hidden only from a mapmaker who did not wish to see it.

The Caucus has asked, with more grace than the moment demands, that the Mamdani administration consult historians and community groups before issuing the next version of the map so that Italian-Americans receive a fair accounting. That is a reasonable request. It should never have been necessary.

The deeper problem is what the map reveals about the administration that produced it. A government that sorts its immigrants into the remembered and the forgotten has already told the city something about how it thinks. Equality of immigrant heritage is a fine slogan. But a map is not a slogan. A map is a claim about reality — and this one claims that some New Yorkers, whose ancestors bled into the building of this city, were never really here at all.

They were here. They are here still. And no cartographer at City Hall, however ideologically tidy his vision of the city may be, has the authority to draw them out of existence.

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