Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh’s Asian community fears harassment, violence

- By Bill Schackner Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Christina Ong, a doctoral student at the University of Pittsburgh, has never been harassed on the street herself, but reading about the rise of anti-Asian incidents nationally made her nervous in recent months to leave her Bloomfield apartment alone.

“I left my house maybe once every two weeks, and that really impacted my physical and mental health,” she said Thursday.

“I generally think I am a really optimistic person and enjoy being around people, but I have these underlying worries that people are perceiving me in a certain way. I am wearing a mask, but they still can tell I’m Asian. So is there going to be retributio­n?”

Even before a deadly mass shooting Tuesday in Atlanta drew public outrage, fear had been quietly building for months in cities, including Pittsburgh, where thousands of Asians and Asian Americans live, work and study on its campuses.

Irrational rhetoric blaming them for the COVID-19 pandemic, some spread on social media, has added to what some see as a more deeply rooted bias against Asians.

The suspect in the Atlanta attacks told investigat­ors he wanted to eliminate a source of

his sexual addiction, police said. But after months of escalating incidents, some violent, it was not lost on many in the general public that six of the eight people killed in multiple massage parlor attacks were women of Asian descent.

Agencies, including the FBI and Pennsylvan­ia Human Relations Commission, to lawmakers and advocacy groups around the country say they are monitoring the string of incidents.

“The lethal wave of xenophobia and racism towards the [Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders] community calls the ‘Beloved Community’ to lock arms in unity to denounce these acts,” commission Executive Director Chad Dion Lassiter said.

Moved by mounting incidents, Penn State University officials this month reiterated earlier assurances from school President Eric Barron to internatio­nal students and others, including those of Asian descent.

“You are welcome here,” he wrote. “Your presence enriches our university and the educationa­l experience of all of our students.”

A daily fear

Ms. Ong, 28, whose grandparen­ts are from China, is from Sacramento, Calif. She is studying sociology and also works as a researcher for the Asian American Pacific Islander COVID-19 project. As such, she has heard firsthand stories of Asian Americans who have been the victims of harassment. She said women are more likely than men to be harassed in the street, while blue-collar and older individual­s are more visible and thus vulnerable.

The problem is affecting behaviors as routine as grocery shopping.

“In conducting interviews with people across the country for this project, I’ve heard stories of people saying like, ‘ Yeah, well, when I’m in the grocery store, I, like, have to run to an aisle that’s empty because I don’t want to cough or sneeze around other people,’ ” Ms. Ong said.

She shares an apartment in Bloomfield but moved home to Sacramento in August, in part because she did not own a car and did not want to rely on a bus or walking, especially these days.

According to U.S. census data, 57,000 Asians reside in the eight counties surroundin­g Pittsburgh, all but about 10,000 of them in Allegheny County.

Not a new problem

A little over a year ago, there were just 12 confirmed coronaviru­s cases in the U.S., according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. None of those was in Pennsylvan­ia.

Even so, Asian and Asian American students were already facing xenophobia and racism, Marian Lien, president of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Organizati­on of Chinese Americans, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette at the time. She could not immediatel­y be reached Thursday.

Classmates asked one college student to put on a mask to attend class, even though the student had not recently been to China. Another said dormmates had asked her to move to a single room, Ms. Lien said.

Businesses were affected, too, including one Chinese restaurant owner who said profits at the time were 50% below normal.

Following the Atlanta attack earlier this week, Pitt’s Asian Studies Center posted to its website a strong condemnati­on:

“Because the victims are Asian, this act of violence, following on other acts in different parts of the country, produces a threat that is profoundly serious and deeply felt by our community of students, faculty and staff,” it read in part.

Joseph Alter, the center’s director, said he has not heard of any high-profile cases of harassment in Pittsburgh. But he said social media vitriol against Asians and cases of violence against Asians in other parts of the country has led to a general sense of anxiety.

“There’s a palpable sense of fear and anxiety amongst the community that we represent,” he said.

“If you are driving to a neighborho­od that is new and unfamiliar, and you stop at a red light and a car pulls up next to you, you don’t know what they’re thinking. But you think that they may be thinking about everything that is circulatin­g through social media,” he explained.

“And so it’s incredibly demoralizi­ng. And it produces this kind of pervasive sense of stress.”

Ms. Ong said Asian men and women are often discrimina­ted against in distinct ways.

“Asian men are racialized as emasculate­d, and that’s super harmful to their psyche,” she said. “Asian women are racialized generally as like exotic or like sexual objects, essentiall­y, which is what the Atlanta shooting really exemplifie­s.”

She added, “I think there might be this misconcept­ion that once everyone’s vaccinated, when things are back to in person, like all that hate rhetoric will go away. But we know that’s not true.”

 ?? Chang W. Lee/The New York Times ?? Woojin Kang, 27, a priest, cries Thursday at the makeshift memorial outside Gold Spa near Acworth, Ga., one of three massage businesses where eight people — six of them women of Asian descent — were killed and another injured by a shooter two days earlier.
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Woojin Kang, 27, a priest, cries Thursday at the makeshift memorial outside Gold Spa near Acworth, Ga., one of three massage businesses where eight people — six of them women of Asian descent — were killed and another injured by a shooter two days earlier.

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