Friend,
I moved to the San Francisco Bay Area from Michigan over a decade ago because, as a Chinese American woman, I wanted to live somewhere where I would feel safer among greater numbers of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs). But white supremacy, misogyny, and the violence they fuel is everywhere. Today, I mourn the eight people -- six of whom were Asian American women -- who were shot and killed by a white man who targeted three Asian-run spas in the Atlanta area.
People like me and families like mine have experienced anti-Asian racism in the United States for centuries, and especially now with the rise in anti-Asian violence in the last year. The pandemic has become an excuse for people to outwardly direct their racism and hate towards AAPI communities, and it is a painful reminder that there is no amount of love or education I can instill in my children to protect them from this kind of harm or the reality of white supremacy.
So I dedicate myself to the fight for equity, justice, and accountability alongside my AAPI, Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and other allies, like you. The hope for better is sometimes about surviving the darkness of pain, trauma, and fear. Sometimes it is about more, but today, surviving is enough.
In the words of Grace Lee Boggs, the late Chinese American activist based in Michigan, “Movements are born of critical connections rather than critical mass.” I invite you to connect with some of our AAPI partner groups doing important work today:
18 Million Rising AAPIs for Civic Empowerment Asian Americans Advancing Justice Asian and Pacific Islander Equality - Los Angeles Asian and Pacific Islander Equality - Northern California Asian Pacific Environmental Network Filipino Advocates for Justice Hmong Innovating Politics Khmer Girls In Action
In solidarity,
Irene Kao, Executive Director |