Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Asian American churches plan acts beyond prayer for healing

- By Luis Andres Henao, Mariam Fam and Jessie Wardarski

Asian American Christian leaderssai­dThursdayt­heir congregati­ons are saddened and outraged after a white gunman killed eight people — most of them women of Asian descent — at three Atlanta-area massage parlors. And they’re calling for action beyond prayers.

Asian Americans were already rattled by a wave of racist attacks amid the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic across the United States. While the motive behind Tuesday’s rampage remains under investigat­ion, some see it as a wake-up call to stand up against a rise in violence against the community.

The lead pastor at Korean Central Presbyteri­an Church in Atlanta, located a few miles from two of the spas that were targeted, said he will ask congregant­s during his Sunday sermon to “not just pray, not just worry,” because “it’s time for us to act.”

“I’m going to urge people with love and peace that we need to step up and address this issue, so that ... our next generation should not be involved in tragic ... violence,” the Rev. Byeong Han said. “That’s what Christians need to do.”

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry says diplomats in Atlanta have confirmed with police that four of the dead were women of Korean descent, and are working to determine their nationalit­y.

Jane Yoon, a congregant at Korean Central Presbyteri­an and a 17-year-old high school junior in nearby Marietta, said she increasing­ly worries for her family, which is of Korean descent, and was shocked by the killings.

“I was definitely very outraged,” she said. “I was in shock at first of the news and just also how close it is to my community.”

It also hit home on a very personal level: Last week, she said, she was in a car accident and another driver punched her in the face and body before she was able to call 911. Yoon said the woman, who was arrested, did not make any racist comments during the assault, but she couldn’t help but think about rising attacks

against Asian Americans.

Following that incident, she has been getting spiritual guidance and counseling from the congregati­on.

In the Atlanta suburb of Roswell, the Rev. Jong Kim of Grace Korean Presbyteri­an Church said he found a glimmer of hope in the wake of the killings after a woman reached out to donate $100 to his church “to express her feelings of sorrow to the Asian community.”

Kim spoke to several other Korean pastors in the area Thursday, and they now plan to join the group Asian Americans Advancing Justice, through which they hope to have discussion­s about issues of race and ethnicity and provide funeral service assistance for the victims’ families.

The Atlanta chapter of Asian Americans Advancing Justice has said that while details of the shooting are still emerging, “the broader context cannot be ignored.” The attacks, it said, “happened under the trauma of increasing violence against Asian Americans nationwide, fueled by white supremacy and systemic racism.”

Ripples from the killings have been felt well beyond Atlanta.

In Chicago, Garden City Covenant Church invited Asian Americans “in need of a community who understand­s your pain” to join an online meeting in which they could “share, listen, lament and pray” together.

“Therewerea­lotoftears, and there were a lot of questions, and for many I think

there is a sense also of helplessne­ss,” said Gabriel J. Catanus, the lead pastor, who is Filipino American. The church’s diverse congregati­on includes about 60 percent Filipino Americans, he said, along with worshipper­s from Latino and other communitie­s.

“It’s an important Biblical practice, and Christian practice, to come before God honestly and to pour one’s own heart out before God,” he said. “God can handle even the rage and the devastatio­n that comes out of us at times.”

Catanus said he was glad to see that people are now “moreawaken­ed”totheexper­iences of Asian Americans. But he said much works remains to be done in faith communitie­s and called on religious leaders to denounce anti-Asian racism from their pulpits.

“In the Christian community and in our Christian institutio­ns, specifical­ly, we need to confess that we have in many ways failed to lead and to teach our people,” he said. “Our disciplesh­ip has failed in many ways to address these very powerful forces that have led to violence and death.”

Kevin Park, an associate pastor at Korean Central Presbyteri­an Church, said not only Asian Americans but the whole country needs to speak out against the violence, racism and “more subtle marginaliz­ation” that have been suffered for generation­s.

 ?? BEN GRAY — AP PHOTO ?? Mallory Rahman and her daughter Zara Rahman, 4, who live nearby, pause after bringing flowers to the Gold Spa massage parlor in Atlanta, the day after eight people were killed at three massage spas in the Atlanta area.
BEN GRAY — AP PHOTO Mallory Rahman and her daughter Zara Rahman, 4, who live nearby, pause after bringing flowers to the Gold Spa massage parlor in Atlanta, the day after eight people were killed at three massage spas in the Atlanta area.
 ?? JOE LAMBERTI - CAMDEN COURIER — POST VIA AP ?? Community members gather for a vigil to mourn and confront the rising violence against Asian Americans at the 10th Street Plaza in Philadelph­ia. The vigil was held following a mass shooting in Atlanta that killed eight people, six of them women of Asian decent.
JOE LAMBERTI - CAMDEN COURIER — POST VIA AP Community members gather for a vigil to mourn and confront the rising violence against Asian Americans at the 10th Street Plaza in Philadelph­ia. The vigil was held following a mass shooting in Atlanta that killed eight people, six of them women of Asian decent.

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