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AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill

RACISM REMAINS. It was five years ago that pandemic-fuelled abuse of
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders became so frequent — reports
spiked 35% from March 2020 to the end of 2021 — that a reporting center
was formed. Stop AAPI Hate legitimized fears of a concurrent pandemic of
xenophobia. The group’s data prompted national legislative action,
including the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, and galvanized advocacy among
young people within the Asian American community. Pictured is William
Diep, who was 16 in 2020, in Las Vegas. Disturbed by attacks he heard
about in New York City, Diep started a campaign called "Virus: Racism."
(AP Photo/Ty O’Neil)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #5 (May 5, 2025), page 16.
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are still
targets of hatred 5 years after pandemic surge
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill
Up until 2020, Anna Wong had gone her entire adulthood in Los Angeles
without ever facing blatantly racist abuse for being Asian. After
COVID-19 hit, she was accosted twice in six months.
The first time, she was browsing an aisle in Bed Bath & Beyond when a
white, 30-something woman suddenly yelled: "Six feet away from me, you
Chinese witch!" A shaken Wong left the store, the woman still yelling
after her. The second time, Wong was walking her dog when a passenger in
a car — a young Hispanic man — screamed at her, "Thanks for ruining the
world," followed by an ethnic slur.
"The first, second year of the pandemic, I do distinctly remember
thinking ... I was very nervous to go out," said Wong, who did not
report the incidents to police. "Am I going to draw attention to the
fact that I’m Asian?"
It seemed unfathomable she was facing such anti-Asian vitriol nearly
a century after her aunt, pioneering movie star Anna May Wong, dealt
with constant racial discrimination.
It was five years ago that pandemic-fuelled abuse of Asian Americans
and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) became so frequent — reports spiked 35%
from March 2020 to the end of 2021 — that a reporting center was formed.
Stop AAPI Hate legitimized fears of a concurrent pandemic of xenophobia.
The group’s data prompted national legislative action, including the
COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, and galvanized advocacy among young people
within the Asian American community.
New concerns five years on
Five years later, Stop AAPI Hate is receiving fewer incident reports
yearly but they’re still happening by the hundreds and are likely an
undercount. Now, those still fighting anti-Asian hate are worried it
will only intensify in a political climate of immigration crackdowns,
English-only mandates, and bans on DEI initiatives.
During President Donald Trump’s first term, many partially blamed him
for framing COVID-19 with racist language. Trump said his remarks were
"not racist at all." Now, there is concern not just about hate but
erasure of Asian American and Pacific Islander history and culture. For
example, in April, the Pentagon mistakenly took down web pages honoring
Japanese American servicemen.
"What’s the opposite of diversity? It’s segregation or
re-segregation," Manjusha Kulkarni, Stop AAPI Hate co-founder, said,
referring to Trump’s policies so far. "They want to put us — people of
color, women, LGBTQ — sort of back in our ‘place,’ which means not with
access to jobs or housing or ability to celebrate our holidays."
The genesis of Stop AAPI Hate
Kulkarni, executive director of the AAPI Equity Alliance, Cynthia
Choi of Chinese for Affirmative Action, and San Francisco State
University professor Russell Jeung came together in 2020 after a Los
Angeles teen of Asian descent was assaulted at school. They solicited
accounts of hate acts from victims, even those not legally hate crimes.
They received a barrage.
"We said, ‘Well, the first thing we need to know and understand is
how big of a problem is this,’" Kulkarni said, adding that she will be
eternally grateful that people responded. "That helped us to know what
was going on."
Besides federal hate crimes legislation, Stop AAPI Hate’s data led to
the passing of three California bills. These included expanding civil
rights protection in public spaces and studying hate-driven harassment
on public transit. They’ve also attempted social media campaigns like
"Spread AAPI Love," the opposite of their moniker.
Even though the pandemic has abated, their data shows racism
prevails. From March 2020 to the end of 2023, Stop AAPI Hate collected
more than 12,000 reports though they believe it’s likely an undercount.
Over 700 occurred in 2023. Figures for 2024 will be released soon.
Also in 2023, an AAPI Data and Associated Press-NORC poll found a
third of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders say they have experienced
an act of abuse based on their race or ethnicity in the last year.
An FBI analysis from that year found out of 7,049 reported hate crime
offenses motivated by race, ethnicity, or ancestry, 6.6% involved
anti-Asian bias. Kash Patel, the first person of color and Asian
American to be agency director, talked about being subjected to racism
during his confirmation hearing.
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders activated
There was a groundswell of Asian American activism after 2020,
according to Stop AAPI Hate. Their 2023 report found nearly 3 in 4 Asian
American and Pacific Islander adults participated in activities to
reduce or resist racism.
William Diep, who was 16 in 2020, was disturbed by attacks he heard
about in New York City. So he started a campaign, "Virus: Racism." He
virtually gathered testimonies from young people about anti-Asian
encounters. The project deeply affected him.
"I learned to stick up for people," said Diep, now a senior at
Columbia University.
He wonders how advocates can navigate the current political climate
and if government resources such as translations or race-based census
research will be eliminated.
"I’m scared that there’s no one to protect Asian Americans," Diep
said. "I think Asian Americans protect each other, but I question the
infrastructure that exists to protect our rights and our heritage."
Stop AAPI Hate does rely on some federal funding. Ideally, neither
the government nor any other outside force will be able to dictate or
hamper the organization’s work.
"We hope not. I mean, we’re fighting as hard as we can," Kulkarni
said.
Now, the coalition’s focus has expanded to include educating people
about issues like birthright citizenship, cultural school curriculum,
and immigrants’ rights. Some Asian legal U.S. residents say they are
being targeted for deportation.
"I hope and strongly believe that our communities are stronger, that
we’re more equipped to handle the challenges of today, which are even
more significant than they were in 2020," Kulkarni said. "We were built
for this and our values remain the same."
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