Los Angeles Times

After racial unrest, groups preach unity

African American and Korean leaders mark anniversar­y with a message of progress.

- By Sarah Parvini and Victoria Kim

Jackie Broxton remembers the day the riots swept through her city, when the only way to get back to her car after church was to brave the flames and plumes of smoke that had engulfed the surroundin­g streets of South L.A.

She needed to get her daughter home to Ladera Heights, and for a moment she thought she would have to walk from the First African Methodist Episcopal Church down rubble-ridden West Adams Boulevard. Luckily, a fellow parishione­r offered to drive her around the corner.

“You came out of church with a sense of hope, but you got outside and it was chaos,” she said.

Broxton, 69, was among about 100 others who gathered across the street from the church at the Allen House gardens Saturday afternoon to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the 1992 riots. City officials and members of the African American and Korean communitie­s gathered at the home of the oldest black congregati­on in L.A. to promote a single message: unity.

“If we don’t find a way to work together, it could happen again,” Broxton said.

Leaders from both communitie­s pledged to work together in what they described as a special day — the event marked the first

time the two groups came together to commemorat­e the riots, said Laura Jeon, president of the Korean American Federation of Los Angeles.

“Twenty-five years ago, Koreatown was in chaos, its buildings charred and its community in ruins,” Jeon told the crowd. “If the Korean community and the African American community had been communicat­ing back in 1992, the pain, agony, anger felt by both communitie­s might have been avoided.”

The riots are considered the “greatest injury and tragedy to the Korean community” in the history of Korean immigratio­n, she added.

The event was among many in a week recalling the riots, which left 63 people dead, another 2,000 people injured and roughly $1 billion in property damage across the city.

In an unschedule­d moment Saturday at another event at a Koreatown church, L.A. City Councilman David Ryu enthusiast­ically dragged a man by his arm up to the stage.

Ryu, the first Korean American to serve on the council, recounted how he and the man, Nathan Redfern, had worked together more than 20 years ago following the riots. Ryu, then a fresh college graduate, and Redfern, a former Crips gang member, worked at a Koreatown nonprofit’s dispute resolution center.

Ryu recalled how the two would go out to businesses in East and South L.A. to help resolve conflicts between Korean store owners and their customers, defusing the types of tense situations that led to the riots.

Later, they worked on a citizenshi­p project, Ryu teaching classes in English as a second language and Redfern giving mock citizenshi­p exams at the Korean American Coalition, the councilman said.

“We used to go out together, arm in arm,” Ryu said at the event organized by the Korean Churches for Community Developmen­t. “The L.A. riots was not a black-Korean issue. It was a poverty issue; it was an issue of language barriers.”

The day’s program included a joint choir performanc­e of Korean, black and Latino groups singing “We Shall Overcome.” Congressio­nal candidate Robert Lee Ahn, former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang — the latter two poised for the governor’s race — also made an appearance.

On the afternoon of April 29, 1992, a jury in Ventura County acquitted four white Los Angeles police officers in the beating of Rodney King, a black motorist, after a high-speed pursuit. The incident, caught on amateur videotape, had sparked national debate about police brutality and racial injustice. The verdict stunned L.A., where angry crowds gathered on street corners across the city.

The flashpoint was a single intersecti­on in South L.A. — Florence and Normandie avenues — but it was a scene eerily repeated in many parts of the city in the hours that followed.

Mayor Tom Bradley called a local state of emergency later that day, and Gov. Pete Wilson, at Bradley’s request, ordered the National Guard to activate 2,000 reserve soldiers.

The riots had causes beyond the not-guilty verdicts — including grinding poverty and hopelessne­ss in South L.A., and a police force with a reputation for treating minorities poorly.

City officials who spoke at the First AME Church event Saturday lauded the progress Los Angeles institutio­ns have made since 1992, including a more diverse police force and a City Council that is more representa­tive of the city it serves.

“In some ways we are much better and stronger, more resilient,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti told the audience. “We’re not cocky anymore; we know what our faults are.”

“We still have a long way to go,” he added.

Still, he said, L.A.’s progress in the last 25 years points to the city’s resilience.

“We survive,” Garcetti said. “We always do get through the most difficult of days.”

Some at the commemorat­ion acknowledg­ed that the relationsh­ip between African Americans and Korean Americans in South L.A. has gotten better but still needs work.

Meanwhile, the Latino community keeps growing, forming the majority in most of the area’s neighborho­ods. Although there’s black and Latino tension, diversity is a strength, they said.

The Rev. Barbara Brooks, associate minister at First AME Church, said rememberin­g the civil unrest together serves as a vehicle to better relations and fight “complacenc­y.”

“It’s like when you have a goal of losing 50 pounds, and when you reach your goal you say, ‘OK, I don’t have to do to do this anymore,’ ” Brooks said. “But to maintain what you’ve lost, you’ve got to do something different.”

For the African American and Korean communitie­s, Brooks said, that “something different” is teamwork.

Kieja Kim, president of the Victor Valley Korean American Assn., wasn’t in Los Angeles during the riots, but she came Saturday to show solidarity and support.

“Community relationsh­ips are important,” said Kim, 60. “We aren’t different. Black, Korean, Asian — we’re human.”

As the event came to a close following afternoon prayers, the crowd made their way inside, where they sat down for that other common symbol of unity: breaking bread.

 ?? Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? THE EVENT AT South L.A.’s First African Methodist Episcopal Church marked the first time the black and Korean communitie­s came together to commemorat­e the L.A. riots, according to one community leader.
Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times THE EVENT AT South L.A.’s First African Methodist Episcopal Church marked the first time the black and Korean communitie­s came together to commemorat­e the L.A. riots, according to one community leader.
 ??  ?? FORMER First AME pastor and noted civil rights leader Cecil “Chip” Murray greets the officiants.
FORMER First AME pastor and noted civil rights leader Cecil “Chip” Murray greets the officiants.
 ??  ?? THE REV. Barbara Brooks, left, associate minister of First AME Church, chats with Grace Oh at the event.
THE REV. Barbara Brooks, left, associate minister of First AME Church, chats with Grace Oh at the event.

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