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We’re Americans, not ‘ others’ to abuse

Atlanta- area killings unsettling amid COVID

- Clayton Park Clayton Park is business editor of The Daytona Beach News- Journal.

The Atlanta- area shootings where eight people were killed, including six women of Asian descent, hit close to home for me. At least four victims were of Korean origin. While I was born in this country and I’m proud to be an American, I am half Korean and half Japanese.

It is unclear whether the shooting victims were targeted because of their race. Cherokee County Sheriff Frank Reynolds said Wednesday that the suspect, Robert Aaron Long, 21, of Woodstock, Georgia, claimed that his actions weren’t racially motivated and that he had a sexual addiction.

I find it unsettling, neverthele­ss, because it comes at a time when antiAsian sentiment and violence are on the rise in our country. Some blame people who look like me of being responsibl­e for the so- called China virus, more accurately known as the novel coronaviru­s that causes COVID- 19.

In the early months of the pandemic last year, one woman on Facebook, commenting on an article I wrote as business editor of The Daytona Beach News- Journal, told me that I was a nothing who should go back to China. And I am not the only one.

I recently interviewe­d a Daytona Beach, Florida, area family that runs a Korean restaurant. They told me they were being similarly harassed on nearly a daily basis, both by people showing up in person to place orders and then refusing to pay for them, as well as those calling them on the phone during their busy dinner rush.

‘ I’m afraid’

SaeHee Martin, who owns the Chop Chop Korean Restaurant in South Daytona, told me on Wednesday that she was frightened to learn about the Atlanta- area spa shootings: “I’m afraid. I don’t know what some crazy people are going to do.”

It doesn’t help that the shooter told police that he intended to drive to Florida to kill more people at spas.

When I read the national news reports about anti- Asian hate crimes, most seem to be happening in large cities that have a bigger percentage of Asian Americans. In King County, Washington, for example, where I was born and raised, those of Asian heritage account for nearly 20% of the population, according to the latest Census Bureau statistics.

Here in Volusia County, where Daytona Beach is located, Asians account for 2% of the population.

The Atlanta- area attacks show that anti- Asian hate crimes, if in fact that’s what motivated the shooter, can also happen in communitie­s where there are fewer Asians.

In Cherokee County, Georgia, where the first of the three spa shootings occurred, Asians account for 2.1% of the population.

Even some people I consider friends persist in referring to COVID- 19 as the China virus. When I confront them about it, I am told, that’s where it started. True, but to blame all Asians, or even all Chinese, for the pandemic is flat out wrong. It suggests that we are all alike, as if we were the Borg from “Star Trek.”

Growing up in a mostly white neighborho­od in Seattle, I was constantly told Asians are good in math ( not true, for me) and not so good in English or when it came to matters involving creativity and innovation.

I am not a stereotype

For the record, I double majored in English Lit and Journalism with a minor in art. I also played for many years in rock bands and won a local songwriter contest in the Daytona Beach area a few years ago. Conversely, I am not skilled in kung fu or any of the martial arts, and I am not particular­ly adept at using chopsticks, although I try. Alike, we Asian Americans are not. And as far as what country I pledge my allegiance to, I am as proud as any of you to be an American.

I have an uncle who fought in World War II in, not against, the United States Army as a member of the highly decorated 442nd infantry unit made up of Japanese Americans. He fought the Germans while one of his brothers was interned in a relocation camp for those of Japanese descent in California.

My wife and I have three sons, all of whom have served in the U. S. military, including one still in the Air Force.

Stop viewing us as “others.” We are Americans, and we are human beings who don’t deserve to be vilified or, as in the apparent case of the Atlanta spa shooter, objectified.

Much less targeted.

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 ?? BY NADIA ZAMARODIAN ?? Business editor Clayton Park
BY NADIA ZAMARODIAN Business editor Clayton Park

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