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Video Editor: Mohd Irshad
This video is being reposted from The Quint’s archives after a former employee of FedEx gunned down eight people at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis, four of whom were members of the Sikh community. The Indianapolis shooting comes as another blow to the Asian American community, a month after six people of Asian descent were killed in a mass shooting in the Atlanta area amid ongoing attacks against Asian Americans in the coronavirus pandemic.
On 29 March, just minutes away from Times Square, 65-year-old Vilma Kari was brutally attacked on her way to church. Kari, who emigrated from the Philippines to the US decades ago, was repeatedly kicked and stomped on by her attacker, resulting in serious injuries, including a fractured pelvis.
The attack was among the latest in an increasing spate of anti-Asian hate crimes since the beginning of the pandemic. A week earlier, eight people were killed in a deadly shooting at the Atlanta spas, six of whom were Asian American.
According to a recent report by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at San Bernardino's California State University, crimes against Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) surged by nearly 150% even though overall hate crimes in the United States had fallen slightly in 2020.
These attacks are getting increasingly common in cities as cosmopolitan as New York and Los Angeles, besides a host of well-known American cities – Boston, Seattle, San Jose and Dallas. Between March and May 2020, over 800 COVID-related hate incidents were reported from 34 counties in California alone, according to the Asian Pacific Policy Planning Council.
In New York City, incidents of anti-Asian hate crime increased from three in 2019 to 28 in 2020, with the New York Police Department investigation 35 crimes this year, according to The New York Times.
A vast majority of attacks were linked to the beginning of the pandemic, with Asian Americans often being subjected to racial slurs, like "Chink" and "Chinaman". The rise in anti-Asian sentiments can be attributed to the stigma over the Chinese origin of the coronavirus and the xenophobic rhetoric propelled by former US president Donald Trump.
Using terms like "Kung Flu" and "the Chinese virus" to denote COVID-19, Trump has time and again defended his stance, even openly claiming this was "not racist" at a press briefing at the White House in early 2020.
“There’s a clear correlation between President Trump’s incendiary comments, his insistence on using the term ‘Chinese virus’ and the subsequent hate speech spread on social media and the hate violence directed towards us,” Russell Jeung, a co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate and a professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University, was quoted as saying by the TIME Magazine.
A survey by AAPI data in March 2021 indicated that while anti-Asian hate crimes were significantly higher than general hate crimes, Asians are least likely to report these crimes to authorities.
This hesitancy has its roots in the model minority myth. First coined by sociologist William Pettersen in a 1966 New York Times article, the model minority myth is a belief that all Asians are hard-working and intelligent – a 'model' for others – have both class privilege and higher socio-economic status and, therefore, have no reason to complain.
The Biden administration has introduced some measures, including setting aside $49.5 million from COVID-relief funds for survivors and setting up a task force to address xenophobia, deeming the attacks "un-American".
According to Reuters, New York has deployed a team of undercover Asian police officers. Other major cities, from San Jose to Chicago, have boosted patrols in Asian neighbourhoods in a bid to foster closer ties in the community. But whether these measures are enough to curb the hate sentiments, remains to be seen.
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