Dear NRDC Activist,
We here at NRDC are disturbed, enraged, and heartbroken to hear about the
most recent incidents of anti-Asian hate crimes. At the same time, we
recognize that they are not anomalies and they fit within a troubling and
escalating pattern.
NRDC stands in solidarity with the Asian community across the country and
abroad. We condemn all xenophobia and hate crimes.
Our colleague Kimi Narita [ [link removed] ]published a very personal blog about her own
process of coming to grips with — and continuing to work through — these
very disturbing incidents. We hope you'll read an excerpt from her
impactful blog below.
I'm Asian, I'm Angry, and I Count
By Kimi Narita
Senor Strategic Advisor, American Cities Climate Challenge
As the violence against Asians continues to rise across America, it is
crucial that our community be seen and heard — including in the
environmental space.
I'm supposed to be working on a slide deck on how cities can advocate on
climate change at the federal government. But I need to share a burden
that I — and many others at NRDC — have been silently facing since the
beginning of the pandemic. It came to a breaking point for me two nights
ago: Asian and Asian American hate in our country.
Three nights ago, eight people were murdered in the Atlanta metro area at
three Asian spas. Six are Asian women. A single murderer with a history of
hate speech online against Asian people. When I first heard the news, I
doom-scrolled for two hours and finally needed to write this out.
Kimi goes on to say:
Immediately before the murders in the Atlanta metro area, [ [link removed] ]Stop AAPI
Hate issued a report stating that 3,795 incidents were received by the
organization between March 19, 2020, and February 28, 2021. While there
has rightfully been a lot of — but still not enough — media coverage about
Asian elders attacked and killed on the street (the most recent this week
in Oakland), the Stop AAPI Hate report revealed that 65 percent of
reported attacks were of people between the ages of 26 and 60, and 68
percent were female.
[ [link removed] ]Kimi Narita at the L.A. Women's March
Kimi Narita at the L.A. Women's March
But these are just the reported attacks. And we know that most violence
goes unreported, especially when it intersects with immigration, leading
to an invisibility of the true scope and scale of the attacks against
Asians and Asian Americans. This invisibility is nothing new for us. In
data collection, we are lumped together as a monolith that erases the
disproportionate impacts on communities like Pacific Islanders,
Vietnamese, and Filipino communities.
Kimi concludes:
We are all dealing with a lot right now and remember: Elevating the issues
facing one community should never be interpreted as minimizing the plight
of others. We rise together.
To my Asian and Asian American sisters and brothers, I see you, and I give
you big virtual hugs. We are expected to be resilient because society
expects us to minimize our pain. That needs to end. It is okay to be
unapologetically angry and hurt and still be driven to work on climate
change every single day.
To our allies, please educate yourselves, amplify Asian and Asian American
voices, and check in on your Asian and Asian American colleagues. Don't
expect responses, but it feels good to be thought of.
I'm still angry and sad and hurt. And I got that slide deck done.
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[ [link removed] ]Please read Kimi Narita's full blog post at NRDC.org.
For ways to get involved, visit [ [link removed] ]www.stopaapihate.org.
The mission of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is to
safeguard the Earth: its people, its plants and animals, and the natural
systems on which all life depends.
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