The Morning Call

Atlanta shootings are more than a wake-up call

Asian Americans grieve and organize after Atlanta attacks

- By Terry Tang

Hundreds of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders turned to social media to be heard. #StopAsianH­ate is a toptrendin­g topic on Twitter hours after Tuesday shootings.

Asian Americans were already worn down by a year of pandemic-fueled racist attacks when a white gunman was charged with killing eight people, most of them Asian women, at three Atlanta-area spas. .

Hundreds of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders turned to social media to air their anger, sadness, fear and hopelessne­ss. The hashtag #StopAsianH­ate was a top trending topic on Twitter hours after Tuesday evening’s shootings.

“I think the reason why people are feeling so hopeless is because Asian Americans have been ringing the bell on this issue for so long . ... We’ve been raising the red flag,” said Aisha Yaqoob Mahmood, executive director of the Atlanta-based Asian American Advocacy Fund, which does political and advocacy work across Georgia.

Many were also outraged that the suspect, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long, was not immediatel­y charged with hate crimes. Authoritie­s said Long told police the attack was not racially motivated, and he claimed that he targeted the spas because of a “sex addiction.” Six of the seven slain women were identified as Asian.

Law enforcemen­t needs “some training understand­ing what a hate crime is,” said Margaret Huang, president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups. “This man identified targets owned by Asians.”

The gunman “was very clearly going after a targeted group of people,” Huang said.

Being Asian American herself, Huang said the shootings felt personal. She is worried that not classifyin­g the attack as a hate crime will “absolutely discourage others from coming forward and seeking help.”

She also cringed at the comments of a Georgia county sheriff ’s captain who said of the gunman, “It was a really bad day for him.”

Mahmood said Asian American business owners in the Atlanta area were already fearful because of incidents like graffiti and breakins. The shootings will raise that worry to new heights.

“A lot of Asian American business owners in the beauty parlor industry and food service — these are often the most visible frontline faces in the community,” Mahmood said.

Her organizati­on is partnering with other groups such as the Atlanta chapter of Asian Americans Advancing Justice to offer resources in multiple languages, including mental health assistance, self-defense training and bystander training.

Meanwhile, from Phoenix to Philadelph­ia, Asian American organizati­ons nationwide organized events aimed at showing unity.

Asian Americans United, the Asian Pacific Islander Political Alliance and several other partner groups held a vigil Wednesday in Philadelph­ia’s Chinatown neighborho­od.

“After the month and year we had, we knew our folks needed the time to come together safely just to grieve and heal and mourn and speak to what’s happening,” said Mohan Seshadri, Asian Pacific Islander Political Alliance co-executive director.

As much despair as Asian Americans feel, Seshadri said, the shootings also mark a flashpoint.

“Our folks are pissed off and ready to fight,” Seshadri said. “The way we get through this is together by organizing our people and feeling solidarity.”

Arizona Asian Chamber of Commerce CEO Vicente Reid is planning a vigil next week in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa, which has a high concentrat­ion of Asian American-owned shops and restaurant­s. He thinks the slayings have galvanized the local community to go beyond vigils.

“I think there is this whole outlet of this younger generation who’s passionate and has the energy. They just need someone to step up and lead them,” Reid said.

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 first identified in China, and former President Donald Trump and others have used racial terms to describe it.

Numerous Asian American organizati­ons say Trump’s rhetoric has emboldened people to express anti-Asian or anti-immigrant views. Nearly 3,800 incidents have been reported to Stop AAPI Hate, a California-based reporting center for Asian American Pacific Islanders, and its partner groups, since March 2020. Nationally, women reported hate crimes 2.3 times more than men.

Following the release Wednesday of a report showing a surge in white supremacis­t propaganda in 2020, the Anti-Defamation League told The Associated Press that a significan­t amount of the propaganda included anti-immigrant rhetoric.

At a congressio­nal hearing Thursday on violence against Asian Americans that was scheduled before the shootings, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., called for the government to “investigat­e and swiftly address” growing tensions but did not call for a specific course of action.

Lawmakers in the House and Senate have introduced legislatio­n that would assign a person at the Justice Department to expedite the review of hate crimes related to COVID-19 and provide additional support to state and local authoritie­s to respond to those crimes. But it is unclear if the bill by Rep. Grace Meng, a New York Democrat, and Sen. Mazie Hirono, a Hawaii Democrat, will get a vote.

Testifying at the hearing, Meng urged Democratic leaders to move the legislatio­n and said lawmakers “cannot turn a blind eye” to people who are living in fear.

“Our community is bleeding,” Meng said. “We are in pain. And for the last year, we’ve been screaming out for help.”

There was some tension as a Republican on the panel, Texas Rep. Chip Roy, charged that Democrats were trying to control speech.

“When we start policing free speech, we’re doing the very thing that we’re condemning when we condemn what the Chinese Communist Party does to their country,” Roy said. “And that’s exactly where this wants to go.”

Meng responded angrily to Roy’s comments, saying Republican­s “can talk about issues with any other country you want, but you don’t have to do it by putting a bull’s-eye on the back of Asian Americans across this country, on our grandparen­ts, on our kids.”

Asian Americans are thankfully getting support from many non-Asian allies, Mahmood said.

“The path forward for us is really just standing together and making sure we don’t let these types of tragedies divide our communitie­s.”

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 ?? MEGAN VARNER/GETTY ?? An activist demonstrat­es against violence toward women and Asians on Thursday in Atlanta. A 21-year-old man was arrested after a series of shootings at three Atlanta-area spas left eight dead, including six women identified as Asian.
MEGAN VARNER/GETTY An activist demonstrat­es against violence toward women and Asians on Thursday in Atlanta. A 21-year-old man was arrested after a series of shootings at three Atlanta-area spas left eight dead, including six women identified as Asian.

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