The Mercury News

Hundreds rally in S.F. against anti-Asian American violence.

Friday’s march in San Francisco kicks off a weekend of rallies planned throughout the Bay Area

- By Leonardo Castañeda and Marisa Kendall

Spurred to action by recent violent attacks in Atlanta and the Bay Area, hundreds of protesters gathered in San Francisco on Friday to rally against anti-Asian American hate.

The crowd marched from Union Square to the Embarcader­o, shouting “Rise up, people, rise up!” and “The people united will never be defeated!” while waving signs that demanded “Stop Asian Hate.” The event kicked off a weekend of rallies planned throughout the Bay Area in response to what many say has become a troubling surge in violence against local Asian Americans.

Anna Verzosa, one of the organizers of the youth-led San Francisco rally, said it’s important to educate people about the history of racism and discrimina­tion in the U.S.

“It can’t just be a trend; it has to be a long-lasting story of: How did we get to this place?” said Verzosa, the community and political affairs chair of San Jose State’s Akbayan Pilipinx-American Organizati­on. “It’s disappoint­ing it had to get to mass shootings and violence to get attention.”

The march is part of a growing cry to stamp out violence against Asian Americans following a shooting last week that left eight people — six of them Asian American women — dead at spas in and around Atlanta. Violence victimizin­g Asian Americans appears to have increased during the pandemic, including in the Bay Area, where recent violent attacks and robberies have shaken local Chinatowns.

COVID-19 first was reported

in Wuhan, China, and many say racist messaging from former President Donald Trump about the pandemic contribute­d to the surge in violence.

Flanked by San Francisco Supervisor­s Matt Haney and Shamann Walton, former Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer — a fourth-generation Chinese American — praised the youth leaders who had organized Friday’s rally. As a child, Lee Fewer said, she watched a White woman push her mother down on a Muni bus, leaving her with a “slow, seething anger.” She also recounted being yelled at to leave the country when she was in a grocery store parking lot.

“These incidents are not new,” she said. “These incidents have always happened.”

But Lee Fewer said she had a message for the people who attacked her and her mom: “I say to them, we are going to stay,” she told a cheering crowd.

People up and down the Bay Area have been protesting anti-Asian American hatred for weeks. Several hundred people gathered in San Mateo’s Central Park last month. People rallied in front of San Jose City Hall in mid-March, and again last Sunday — when more than 1,000 people converged to draw attention to the cause.

California Congresswo­man Judy Chu dubbed Friday a national day to speak out against anti-Asian American and Pacific Islander hate. South San Francisco Councilwom­an Buenaflor Nicolas, who is Filipino American, joined other city leaders on the steps of City Hall to say “enough is enough.”

“I want to ensure that my grandchild­ren will grow up to be proud and comfortabl­e of who they are — Americans who happen to be Asians,” she said, according to a news release after the event.

Santa Clara County’s Hate Crimes Task Force heard presentati­ons from a variety of groups Friday, including Stop AAPI Hate. Between March 2020 and February 2021, the organizati­on received reports of 3,795 hate incidents throughout the country — including 1,691 in California and 142 in Santa Clara County, said Co-Executive Director Cynthia Choi.

“Parents are very concerned about their children returning to school,” she said. “Many are afraid to ride public transit.”

In San Francisco, the crowd gathered at Embarcader­o Plaza, where speakers included the family of Angelo Quinto, who died after an altercatio­n with Antioch police in December.

San Francisco residents Kat Escudero and Isabell Delacruz said they came to the rally out of frustratio­n with the continued attacks against Asian Americans.

“Our elders have been abused and discrimina­ted against and people are not listening,” Delacruz said. “This is a problem.”

They brought their dogs, Hiccup and Loaf the Pup, sporting “Stop Asian Hate” and “I Poop On Racists” signs, respective­ly. Escudero, who said she now worries for the safety of her parents and grandparen­ts amid the recent attacks, drew a parallel to summer protests over police killings of Black people and growing frustratio­n with racist violence. Her sign said “Black Lives Matter” on one side and “Listen to my Dog” on the other.

“Why do we have to keep reusing the same signs?” she asked. “Why are we constantly out here?”

Upcoming rallies

Several rallies are planned for this weekend around the Bay Area. Here are a few:

Today:

• Stop Asian Hate rally at 11 a.m. Meet at San Francisco City Hall and march to Union Square.

• Stop Anti-Asian Violence rally at 11 a.m. Meet at St. Mary’s Square, San Francisco for a vigil for the victims of the Atlanta attacks. Noon march to Union Square.

• #Stop Asian Hate rally at 11 a.m., Saratoga City Hall.

• Stand up and Stop Violence Against Asian Americans rally at 12:30 p.m., El Camino Real and Jefferson Avenue, Redwood City.

• Skate Against Violence at 2 p.m. Aquatic Park, San Francisco.

• Candleligh­t Vigil & Remembranc­e #StopAAPIHa­te at 3 p.m., Santa Cruz County building.

Sunday:

• Asian American Pacific Islander Youth Rising 2-4 p.m., Aquatic Park, 84 Bolivar Dr., Berkeley

• Stop Asian Hate! Stop Anti-Asian Violence! 3-4:30 p.m., Emerald Glen Park (in front of the Wave), Glynnis Rose Drive, Dublin

• Heal our Communitie­s: A Community Care Space for Asian Americans 4-5:30 p.m., Lake Elizabeth, Fremont

Friday:

• #Stop Asian Hate at 2:30 p.m. Meet at Oakland City Hall, march through Chinatown to Lake Merritt Amphitheat­er for a rally.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Hundreds of people march in San Francisco on Friday to protest recent attacks against Asian Americans.
PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Hundreds of people march in San Francisco on Friday to protest recent attacks against Asian Americans.
 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors march along Powell Street in Union Square to protest a rise in attacks against Asian and Pacific Islander residents in the Bay Area and nationwide.
Demonstrat­ors march along Powell Street in Union Square to protest a rise in attacks against Asian and Pacific Islander residents in the Bay Area and nationwide.
 ?? DAI SUGANO STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Jonathan Wong, of Daly City, and his partner, Venice, of San Francisco, observe a moment of silence in San Francisco on Friday during a rally to protest a rise in attacks against Asian and Pacific Islander residents.
DAI SUGANO STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Jonathan Wong, of Daly City, and his partner, Venice, of San Francisco, observe a moment of silence in San Francisco on Friday during a rally to protest a rise in attacks against Asian and Pacific Islander residents.

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