The Korea Times

Older Korean Americans in LA fearful amid anti-Asian attacks

Fear creeps in, alters daily life of vulnerable Asian seniors

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— Kim Yong-sin, an 85-year-old Korean immigrant living in a senior apartment complex in downtown Los Angeles, says he rarely leaves home these days. When he does, he carries a whistle with him; at least he could call for help if he’s attacked.

Three floors up in the same building, Kim Hyang-ran, 74, waits for her daughter to pick her up. She is temporaril­y moving into her daughter’s place in a quieter neighborho­od in the suburbs. Kim says her daughter is worried about her safety.

Amid a surge of anti-Asian violence, fear creeps in and alters the daily life of vulnerable Asian seniors.

Asian Americans have been targets of discrimina­tion, threats and violence that have escalated in the past year because the coronaviru­s pandemic originated in Wuhan, China. Some have blamed former President Donald Trump for fanning flames of intoleranc­e by calling COVID-19 the “China virus” and “kung flu.”

People of Asian descent have been spit on, beaten and told to go back to where they came from. Reports of violence have been on the rise, most notably when a white gunman killed eight people — six of them Asian women — in a string of shootings at Atlanta area spas in mid-March. Four of the women were of Korean descent.

While police haven’t said that was a hate crime, overt examples of racism have surfaced, such as a surveillan­ce video showing a man in New York City kicking an Asian American

woman and stomping on her face while shouting anti-Asian slurs.

In LA’s Koreatown, Denny Kim, a U.S. Air Force veteran said he was beaten in February by two men who shouted slurs such as “ching chong” and “China virus.” Police were investigat­ing it as a hate crime.

Discrimina­tion against Asian groups has a long and ugly history

dating back to California’s origins — from Chinese laborers exploited during constructi­on of the transconti­nental railroad to the large number of Japanese immigrants and their American-born children herded into internment camps during World War II.

Korean Americans in Los Angeles found themselves under siege three

decades ago during the 1992 riots that broke out following the acquittal of the police officers who beat Black motorist Rodney King. Anger over the verdict merged with tensions that had been brewing in the Black community over Korean ownership of mom-and-pop shops in their neighborho­ods.

Arsons and looting spread from

South Los Angeles into Koreatown, where merchants guarded their shops with guns. Despite the defense, much of the $1 billion in the city’s economic losses from the riots were in Koreatown.

For Kim Yong-sin and his wife, who were quarantine­d in their small apartment for days after they tested positive for COVID-19, their confinemen­t continues to avoid another virus — violence.

“We don’t go out at all. We stay home all day as if we are locked up,” said Kim. “I can’t even think of going for a walk.” For 74-year-old Chae Sung-hee in Koreatown, it’s about a 6-minute walk to the nearest Korean grocery market. Chae said she doesn’t go there alone anymore. Her son accompanie­s her to the market these days. Her daughter in South Korea urges her not to go out at all.

“I was terrified,” said Chae about the recent shooting in Atlanta. “It was horrifying.” The bloodshed led to an outpouring of support for Asian Americans and rallies condemning hatred against any group.

“I wish all of us could get along fine regardless of the color of skin. I feel sad. I have mistreated no one,” Chae said.

Lee Jen-ho, 76, has a faint heart. She is weak. She needs her walker to get around. She also limits her outings for the same reason as other Korean seniors.

But, the series of recent attacks against Asian people brought a different change for Lee.

Lee took a trip to Koreatown to attend a recent protest against antiAsian hate crimes. It took her two buses to get there and two buses back to her home.

With signs that say “Stop Asian hate,” and “I’m not a virus” taped around her walker, she chanted slogans.

“We should be united. We Asians can’t stay silent,” said Lee. “I didn’t go to the rally because I had plenty of time or because I was healthy.”

“It is wrong to think these attacks have nothing to do with me. This could happen to me or my family one day,” Lee added.

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 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Kim Yong-sin, an 85-year-old Korean immigrant, pauses for photos in his apartment in downtown Los Angeles, March 25.
AP-Yonhap Kim Yong-sin, an 85-year-old Korean immigrant, pauses for photos in his apartment in downtown Los Angeles, March 25.
 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? South Korean immigrant Chae Sung-hee, 74, pauses for photos in her home in the Koreatown neighborho­od of Los Angeles, March 29.
AP-Yonhap South Korean immigrant Chae Sung-hee, 74, pauses for photos in her home in the Koreatown neighborho­od of Los Angeles, March 29.
 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Kim Hyang-ran, a 74-year-old immigrant from South Korea, pauses for photos in her apartment in downtown Los Angeles, March 25.
AP-Yonhap Kim Hyang-ran, a 74-year-old immigrant from South Korea, pauses for photos in her apartment in downtown Los Angeles, March 25.
 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Lee Jen-ho, a 76-year-old Korean immigrant, pauses for photos in her apartment in Los Angeles, March 31.
AP-Yonhap Lee Jen-ho, a 76-year-old Korean immigrant, pauses for photos in her apartment in Los Angeles, March 31.

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