Los Angeles Times

Honoring COVID victims and fighting against hate

- By Lilly Nguyen Nguyen writes for Times Community News

A single light flickered in the pitch black of Thursday morning.

The two traversing the wet grass of Mile Square Regional Park said later that lighting the first luminary made them feel as if they were standing on the precipice of something big. Tam Nguyen said he thought of his parents. Johnny Ngo thought of his. Both of their families came to the U.S. from Vietnam after the fall of Saigon in 1975.

It was 3:47 a.m. in Fountain Valley when that first luminary was placed. They watched until it was time for them to leave, then extinguish­ed it. It was the first of many that would be lit that day.

A lighthouse in a sea of grassy green, it was timed to be placed 53,000 seconds before the park would glow anew at 6:30 p.m. with hundreds more to memorializ­e the more than 53,000 people in California who have died of COVID-19.

It would also be a call for an end to the surge of antiAsian rhetoric and hate crimes nationwide.

In Orange County, deaths by COVID-19 have now passed 4,000. The Orange County Health Care Agency reported Thursday that 757 of those deaths are of individual­s identified as being of Asian descent.

The lighting of the luminaries is not only a memorial but also a message that the Asian American community will not stay silent to injustice, said Tam Nguyen. Nguyen is president of Advance Beauty College in Garden Grove and co-founder of Nailing It for America, a group that rallied at the start of the pandemic to donate personal protective equipment to healthcare workers.

Now, they’ve come together again to speak out against anti-Asian sentiments uttered by people who blame Asians for the novel coronaviru­s that originated in Wuhan, China.

And, they mourn with California­ns as the state passes the one-year anniversar­y of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s declaratio­n of a pandemic emergency.

Planning for the event began in earnest early this week, according to Ted Nguyen, no relation to Tam, who served as an organizer for both “Nailing It” campaigns.

They decided on using luminaries — paper bags, each filled with sand and a candle, because they are considered be ecofriendl­y and because of the symbolism associated with the stark white of their coloration.

The color white in Asian cultures is a color of mourning.

“It’s been a mad rush,” Ted Nguyen said.

Alison Edwards, the chief executive of OC Human Relations, said preliminar­y data received by the organizati­on show there have been 40 reports of hate incidents targeting the Asian American Pacific Islander community in the last year. This compares with only four reports of such incidents in 2019.

Starting around 3:45 p.m. Thursday, hundreds of volunteers went out to deploy the luminaries for the evening event. Christie Nguyen, whose family owns the Studio 18 Nail Bar in Tustin, was one.

She said she felt the rhetoric surroundin­g the COVID-19 pandemic — such as referring to it as a “Wuhan virus” — led people to engage in hateful behavior against the Asian American community. She hoped the event would spread awareness.

“It’s [about] protecting our elders and protecting our kids’ future,” she said.

The day grew darker and soon it was time: 53,000 seconds had passed since the first luminary had been lit, then extinguish­ed during the early morning hours. As 6:30 p.m. arrived, hundreds of paper lanterns cast their glow across Mile Square Regional Park.

 ?? Scott Smeltzer TCN ?? ASIAN AMERICAN community leaders at an event in Fountain Valley.
Scott Smeltzer TCN ASIAN AMERICAN community leaders at an event in Fountain Valley.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States