Oroville Mercury-Register

Asian Americans have earned our respect

- Navarrette’s email address is crimscribe@icloud.com. His podcast, “Ruben in the Center,” is available through every podcast app.

SAN DIEGO » In America, confrontin­g racial hatred isn’t as simple as black and white.

Move over, bald eagle. The real symbol of America is a rainbow. There are groups that don’t fit into the narrow confines of a blackand-white paradigm, yet they still have to endure bigotry and violence. They deserve a hearing.

This year, let’s celebrate

Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month by paying our respects to the nation’s fastest-growing racial and ethnic group.

If you thought Latinos held that title, you’re mistaken.

According to the 2020 Census, Asians and Pacific Islanders now account for 6.1% of the U.S. population. That’s a 35.5% jump from 2010.

The number of Latinos — a group that accounts for 18.7% of the U.S. population — grew by 23% since 2010.

While parts of the country might miss the “Asian story” altogether, that’s not possible in California. In the nation’s most populous state, Asians and Pacific Islanders account for 20% of the population — or 1 in 5 California­ns.

African Americans make up just 6.5% of those in the state. Yet, in California — as in the United States at large — they usually headline any discussion about race.

Asian Americans get overlooked. In this country, when it comes to pursuing social justice, people have to speak up and fight to be heard. Asians don’t do that easily.

In March, I wrote a column marking the 80th anniversar­y of the start of the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and calling upon California to pay reparation­s. I noted that my home state, in a villainous fashion, profited from that abominatio­n by stealing the land of Japanese American farmers while they were unjustly incarcerat­ed behind barbed wire.

In response, a Japanese American friend from high school who I’ve known for almost 40 years thanked me for the column but waved off any talk of reparation­s.

I respect that. But take it from someone who has covered politics for more than 30 years: This is no way to get noticed in America — or get justice from Americans.

Meanwhile, in 2022, the Asian American experience in the United States remains a series of paradoxes.

On the one hand, Asian Americans have been a productive, entreprene­urial and hardworkin­g part of this country for more than 200 years. On the other, some Americans still treat them as if they all arrived last month.

On the one hand, Asian Americans are nearly invisible to much of the country because they keep such a low profile. On the other, the racists seem to constantly obsess over Asians — who they blame for the coronaviru­s and a variety of social ills.

Around the time that 18-yearold Payton Gendron was arrested at a Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, N.Y., for allegedly killing 10 people and wounding three others — almost all of whom were Black — Asian Americans were victims of two separate mass shootings.

In Dallas, Texas, police are investigat­ing as possible hate crimes a series of shootings that appear to target the local Korean community. Just a few days before the massacre in Buffalo, a gunman walked into the Hair World Salon and opened fire. Three Korean women were injured.

In Laguna Woods, California, in what authoritie­s are calling a “hate crime” driven by global politics, a Chinese man allegedly opened fire in a church congregati­on of Taiwanese worshipers on Sunday, May 15. One person died, and five were injured.

Back in 1815, who could have known that America would arrive here? That’s when a small number of Chinese migrants — mostly merchants and former sailors — first arrived on our shores. Larger waves followed.

In the 1850s, more Chinese immigrants came to California to seek their fortune in the Gold Rush. They got a rude reception. Robbed of their mining claims and victimized by violent assaults, they were frequently stereotype­d as inferior and dangerous foreigners who were too “exotic” to ever assimilate into western culture. They were also terrorized by “AntiChines­e Leagues” throughout the Southwest. In 1882, Congress made anti-Asian discrimina­tion official by passing the Chinese Exclusion Act to keep out additional Chinese immigrants.

In the 1900s, the population of Asian Americans expanded to include significan­t numbers of Japanese, Koreans, Vietnamese, Hmongs and Filipinos. Today, immigrants from South Asia such as Indians and Pakistanis are also sometimes included in the category.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are not new to America. For two centuries, they have made this country a better place. It’s time the country treated them better.

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