The Columbus Dispatch

Asian American residents call for community action

- Earl Hopkins

Enraged by the killing of eight people – including six Asian American women – in three Atlanta-area massage businesses on Tuesday, Columbus residents Linh Ta, Miki Gotoh and others have called for community action and shared solidarity.

Suspect Robert Aaron Long, a 21year-old from Woodstock, Georgia, has been charged with multiple counts of murder and a charge of aggravated assault. Authoritie­s are still looking into whether this was a hate crime.

Following the shootings, Gotoh, 45, and Ta, 44, have organized a rally to

mourn the lives of those involved in the massacre and highlight the targeting of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The COMMUNITY Collective, #Stopasianh­ate event will start at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Bicentenni­al Park along the Scioto Mile. The Asian Pacific Islander American Public Affairs Associatio­n (APAPA) and the Ohio Chinese American Associatio­n have partnered with Ta and Gotoh for the initiative.

Ta said the hope is to forge various community members for the rally, not just members of the Asian community.

“It’s not just about Asians, we want

“It’s a real fear that because I look the way I do I can be hunted because of that.” Miki Gotoh Columbus resident who is part of a rally to mourn the lives of those involved in the Tuesday massacre and highlight the targeting of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) during the COVID-19 pandemic.

solidarity in Columbus,” she said.

Gotoh said Tuesday’s shootings are reflective of the increase in anti-asian acts.

“It’s a real fear that because I look the way I do I can be hunted because of that,” she said.

On Tuesday, Stop AAPI Hate, a nonprofit organizati­on that tracks incidents of hate and discrimina­tion against AAPI members, released data revealing nearly 3,800 anti-asian hate incidents have been reported from March 19, 2020, to Feb. 28. Women made up roughly 68%, compared to men, who made up 29% of respondent­s. And since the start of 2021, the organizati­on has reported more than 500 racially-motivated hate attacks.

When asked about local increases in Asian American attacks earlier this month, a Columbus police spokespers­on said the department isn’t aware of an uptick in incidents.

Sam Shim, founder of the AAPI Caucus of the Ohio Democratic Party and the Asian and Pacific Islander Alumni Society at Ohio State University, said these attacks have been largely perpetuate­d by the country’s political leaders.

For the past several weeks, Asian Americans have questioned how to deal with a recent wave of assaults – many on the elderly – that have coincided with the pandemic. The virus was first identified in China, and former President Donald Trump and others have used racial terms to describe it.

With the use of such rhetoric, Shim said it’s led to an uptick in these targeted attacks.

“A lot of people aren’t aware of the level of anti-asian hate and xenophobia going on in the country,” he said. “It’s important to let our entire community know that these acts are happening everywhere.”

While anti-asian attacks have increased during the pandemic, Dublin resident Dr. Anita Somani said they have been happening long before the outbreak.

Somani, 58, originally from India, reflected on past hate crimes such as the Emanuel AME Church shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, and the increase of xenophobia after the 9/11 attacks in 2001, among other incidents.

The Dublin resident also criticized authoritie­s investigat­ing the Atlanta massacre, citing a comment from Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office Capt. Jay Baker, who said about the gunman, “It was a really bad day for him.” The comment appeared to be a “pass,” she said, one that could lead to similar occurrence­s in the future. Baker is no longer a spokesman for the case.

“It implicitly gives permission for people to continue to hate,” Somani said. “It gives them the idea that it’s OK

to do these things because I’m white.”

Given the damage white supremacis­ts and other hate groups have caused in this country, Somani said these tragedies call for minority groups to come together.

“When you start to divide groups up, it becomes more prevalent,” she said. “I think that as people of color, we all need to come together as a bigger community to effectively protest or come up with solutions to end racism.”

With the overwhelmi­ng wave of racism and hate crimes Black, Latino and other minority groups have faced, Vincent Wang, who serves as national president of the APAPA and chair of the OCAA, said they need to come together to push messages of peace and hope.

“At this moment we should condemn the violence and increase the understand­ing of each other’s pain,” Wang said. “We are in this challenge together and we need to stand together, rather than tear down each other.”

Shim said the forming of events such as the COMMUNITY Collective and others are important in forging this widespread effort, which will lead to the ending of these race-driven attacks.

“We need to find ways we can help people feel safe in any community they live in; feel reassured that we’re being vigilant and that it will not be tolerated here,” he said.

“Silence is not an option. we need our allies to speak up everywhere,” Shim said. “It shouldn’t come from just the Asian community, it should come from all Americans.”

While still planning Saturday’s rally, Ta and Gotoh said the assembling of community members and public officials will be needed in order to achieve action items and long-term progressio­n.

“It’s not a one-and-done event, this conversati­on has to continue,” Ta said. “So we’re opening up dialogue for it to continue.” ehopkins@dispatch.com @Earl_hopkins

The Associated Press contribute­d to this story

 ?? ANDREW SPEAR/FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Linh Ta, left, and Miki Gotoh are calling for community action and solidarity. They are helping to coordinate an event that will start at 10:30 a.m. today in Bicentenni­al Park along the Scioto Mile.
ANDREW SPEAR/FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Linh Ta, left, and Miki Gotoh are calling for community action and solidarity. They are helping to coordinate an event that will start at 10:30 a.m. today in Bicentenni­al Park along the Scioto Mile.
 ?? ANDREW SPEAR ?? Miki Gotoh wears a T-shirt with the phrase “racism is a virus.”
ANDREW SPEAR Miki Gotoh wears a T-shirt with the phrase “racism is a virus.”

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