In the days since he first heard about the mass shootings in Atlanta in which six Asian American women died, 17-year-old Michael Fu has been thinking a lot about something that happened to him when he was about 8.
He and his younger brother were in an Atlanta park when a group of boys started throwing rocks at them and yelling a racial epithet directed toward Asian people. Michael went to a nearby police officer, who just happened to be Asian American and was sympathetic.
“He told me things like this will happen,” recalls Michael, whose parents are both immigrants from China. “As an Asian in this nation, you’ll have to develop a thick skin.”
Incidents like that have become more common over the past year, fueled in part by false claims about the coronavirus pandemic and racist language by some public officials. Then came this week’s fatal shootings at Atlanta-area massage parlors of eight people, six of them women of Asian descent. Amid fear, sadness, and pain, the carnage has evoked another emotion among some Asian Americans: anger over the country’s longstanding failure to take discrimination against them seriously.
“I do think that what we’ve seen in the past year is very significant and different than what we’ve seen before,” says John C. Yang, president and executive director of the nonprofit Asian Americans Advancing Justice. “The level of fear and hate that the Asian American community is facing right now is very real.”
The suspect in the Atlanta-area shootings, Robert Aaron Long, 21, has been arrested and charged with eight counts of murder. Authorities say it’s not yet clear whether the shooting spree will be designated a hate crime—Long himself told police that the attacks were not motivated by racism. But many say the race of most of the victims can’t be overlooked.
“While we’re relieved the suspect was quickly apprehended, we’re certainly not at peace, as this attack still points to an escalating threat many in the Asian American community feel today,” says Margaret Huang, president and chief executive of the Southern Poverty Law Center, a group that tracks hate crimes.
Indeed, the Atlanta shootings were just the latest example of a surge in violence against Asian Americans. In January, an 84-year-old man from Thailand was slammed to the ground in San Francisco and died two days later from his injuries. In February, a Chinese man walking near Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood was stabbed in the back. And many instances of Asian Americans being spat at and accused of spreading Covid-19 have been caught on video and posted on social media.
Reports of hate crimes against people of Asian descent in the U.S. increased 150 percent in 2020, according to a report by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University at San Bernardino, which examined police records in 16 of the country’s largest cities. That spike is all the more startling because, overall, reports of hate crimes were down 7 percent nationally.