The COVID-19 pandemic has made life difficult for millions of Americans. With over 500 thousands deaths, closed businesses, overcrowded hospitals and deep division among Americans regarding how to handle the virus, the pandemic has without a debt negatively affected the lives of millions of people. These issues outline how coronavirus has had repercussions beyond medical consequences and has effected different groups within the United States to varying degrees. The Asian American community has suffered drastically since the beginning of the pandemic. Increased amounts of violence have damaged the community and deterioated societal safety for Asian Americans.
The unfair blame towards Asian Americans has led to an increase in violence towards Asian Americans throughout the country. While hate incidents towards Asians have risen since the 9/11 attacks, the coronavirus provided a breeding ground for anti-Asian sentiment and hatred in the United States allowing for a dramatic rise in incidents since the beginning of the pandemic. While the numbers vary, several estimates mention over 2,800 reported incidents of anti-Asian sentiment since the beginning of the pandemic. Compared the 216 anti-Asian hate crimes reported in 2019, this significant rise outlines the issues that the pandemic has caused for Asian Americans.
Many shocking acts of violence towards innocent Asian Americans clearly demonstrate how the coronavirus has not only spawned hatred towards Asian Americans but also has made it seem okay to forcefully express their bigotry. On January 28th, a video caught a physical assault towards 84-year-old Thai immigrant Vicha Ratanapakdee in the San Francisco neighborhood of Anza Vista. The perpetrator visciously assaulted Ratanapakdee in broad daylight; Ratanapakdee was only minding his buisness and walking casually when a man runs into the frame and violently shoves him to ground. The police found him lying on the sidewalk; medics then took him to the hospital where he passed away due to the life-threatening injuries he sustained during the attack.
Other attacks towards Asian Americans have occured throughout the country. In Oakland’s Chinatown, Asian businessowners suffer due to a string of over 20 robberies in stores and nearby. Videos of the incidents, mainly against women and the eldery, capture the violent and unwaranted attacks in broad daylight. These incidents scare customers away from the already struggling businesses as many choose to shop outside of Chinatown in fear for their safety. They create add to an already unsafe environment for the elderly and Asian people in general. Many residents appear shocked to the unseen levels of brutality in their neighborhoods.
Another attack occured at a Brooklyn subway station on February 3rd. A confrontation with a stranger on the subway led to Filipino-American Noel Quintana getting sliced in the face with a box cutter. With a face full of blood and a scar stretching across his face, the other passengers stood in silence as Quintana bled profusely. He later received around 100 stitches after leaving the train and getting an ambulance ride to the hospital. While Quintana is currently in the healing process, he still fears for his life avoiding Central Park and unnecessarily leaving his home. Quintana is not the only victim of anti-Asian violence on the subway; two separate incidents of eldery Asian women getting punched on the subway occured in a Manhattan subway. These subway assaults resulted in the NYPD deploying 600 extra officers and increased patrols.
The rise in violence and discrimminatory acts towards Asian Americans leads to the question as to how to decrease and stop the violence. Naturally, increasing the amount of police in commmunities seems like a positive measure; increased police attention should reduce people getting assaulted in broad daylight. However, increased police surveillance does not attack the root of the violence. Deploying more officers in affected communities does nothing to combat the racist views of the perpretrators nor does it bring positive awareness. While the police may not solve this issue, other positive methods exist. For example, simply condemning intolerance and violence towards Asian Americans demonstrates that these acts do not belong in American society. Prominent leaders stepping up to condemn these incidents and using their platforms and networks to spread awareness will at least open people’s eyes to the injustices that occur. Another viable method would include educating people on the history of Asian Americans in the United States. Asian immigrants have come to America since the 19th century in the same way that German, Irish, Italian and other European immigrants have; many Asian Americans families have lived in America for several generations. Spreading knowledge on not just the hardships those immigrants faced but also the positive impact they have cemented will allow for a greater understand of their role as Americans. Finally, fostering stronger connections within not just the Asian American community but other minority racial groups (blacks and latinos) can bring about more unity between people of color. The term “Asian American” is a rather broad description considering immigrants from all over Asia come to the United States. Stronger connections between Indian Americans, Chinese Americas, Burmese Americans etc. could build a stronger Asian community better fit and united to combat the injustices committed against them.
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, rising levels of violence towards Asian Americans have devasted the communities involved. These types of actions have no place in modern Americans society, yet newer incidents occur on a regular basis. While roughly 3000 discrimminatory incidents have been reported, one should consider the incidents that do not get reported. The violence causes Asian Americans to live in fear of violence in broad daylight, retribution for the coronavirus and the virus itself. However, the onslaught can produce positive resuls. Increasing the awareness of these incidents shows the American public the prevalance of racism but also the struggle that these people go through. It can also cultivate a stronger sense of community between different Asian groups creating a stronger force with Asian American society. Discrimmination, racism, and bigotry still permeate modern America; the American people need to take a stand in order to bring unity to a rapidly dividing country.
Works Cited:
Cabison, Rosalie. “What You Can Do About Anti-Asian Violence.” Rolling Stone, Rolling Stone, 13 Feb. 2021, www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/asian-american-racism-violence-1127876/.
Grossman Kantor February 18, Wendy, and Wendy Grossman Kantor. “Filipino American Man Recounts Brutal Attack With Box Cutter on N.Y.C. Subway: ‘Nobody Helped’.” PEOPLE.com, Meredith Corporation, 18 Feb. 2021, people.com/crime/filipino-american-man-recounts-brutal-attack-with-box-cutter-on-n-y-c-subway-nobody-helped/.
Lim, Dion. “84-Year-Old Killed after Horrific Daytime Attack Caught on Video in San Francisco.” ABC7 San Francisco, KGO-TV, 1 Feb. 2021, abc7news.com/san-francisco-senior-attacked-sf-man-pushed-on-video-day-time-attack-caught-anza-vista-crime/10205928/.
Nakamura, David. “Attacks on Asian Americans during Pandemic Renew Criticism That U.S. Undercounts Hate Crimes.” The Washington Post, WP Company, 23 Feb. 2021, www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/asian-american-hate-crimes/2021/02/21/c28a8e04-72d9-11eb-b8a9-b9467510f0fe_story.html.
Nicole Johnson, Lauren Cook. “2 Asian Women Attacked in Separate Subway Incidents; NYPD, MTA Step up Patrols.” WPIX, Nexstar Inc., 16 Feb. 2021, www.pix11.com/news/local-news/2-asian-women-attacked-in-separate-subway-incidents-nypd-mta-step-up-patrols.
Venkatraman, Sakshi. “String of Attacks against Older Asians Leaves Big City Chinatowns on Edge.” NBCNews.com, NBCUniversal News Group, 11 Feb. 2021, www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/string-attacks-against-older-asians-leaves-big-city-chinatowns-edge-n1257157.
Venkatraman, Sakshi. “String of Attacks against Older Asians Leaves Big City Chinatowns on Edge.” NBCNews.com, NBCUniversal News Group, 11 Feb. 2021, www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/string-attacks-against-older-asians-leaves-big-city-chinatowns-edge-n1257157.