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Notes from America with Kai Wright

The Missing History of Asian America

Notes from America with Kai Wright

WNYC Studios

News Commentary, Politics, History, News

4.41.5K Ratings

🗓️ 22 March 2021

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We’ve been here before: A time of national stress, Asian Americans made into scapegoats, and violence follows. The community saw it coming. So why didn’t everybody else? A mass shooting in Atlanta follows a year of warnings from Asian Americans who have said they do not feel safe. But the violence has forced to the surface old questions about where Asian Americans sit in our nation’s maddening racial caste system, and community leaders have struggled to get people across the political and racial spectrum to take the moment seriously. Helen Zia, activist and author of Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People and other books about the Asian American community, was spokesperson for the Justice for Vincent Chen campaign in the early 1980s. She tells the story of that era’s scapegoating of Asian Americans, and draws a line all the way back to the 18th Century. And Arun Venugopal, senior reporter in WNYC’s Race and Justice Unit, shares his reporting on the community in New York City, which has emerged as an epicenter of day to day reports of harassment and violence. Companion listening for this episode: The (Un)Making of a ‘Model Minority’ (1/4/21) An odd racial pecking order puts Indian Americans in a curious place -- outside of whiteness, but distinct from other people of color. How’d that come to be? And is it changing? 'Community' Is a Verb. And It’s Hard (6/12/20) Racism is not a Black and white challenge; communities of color are often pitted against one another. A story from Chicago about how the pandemic challenged, and strengthened inter-community alliances. Plus, a dispatch from one of the hardest hit neighborhoods in the country, where the community has had to fend for itself. “The United States of Anxiety” airs live on Sunday evenings at 6pm ET. The podcast episodes are lightly edited from our live broadcasts. To catch all the action, tune into the show on Sunday nights via the stream on WNYC.org/anxiety or tell your smart speakers to play WNYC. We want to hear from you! Connect with us on Twitter @WNYC using the hashtag #USofAnxiety or email us at [email protected].

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the United States of Anxiety, a show about the unfinished business of our history and its grip on our future.

0:07.5

I always thought to myself a significant fear that one day we too would be marching for Asian Pacific Islander lives.

0:16.0

Every attack I see I think about my mother, my grandmother, my father.

0:19.0

To want to tune out any parts of history that don't have precisely to do with us I feel is a very

0:24.8

understandable thing from an emotional perspective but it's an incredibly dangerous thing.

0:29.3

Why do we want it?

0:31.3

Overnight this country was swept up by suspicion and fear and naked outright hatred.

0:38.0

We had nothing to do with Pearl Heart.

0:40.0

I think the Asian American community has united in a way behind this that I've never seen before.

0:46.0

So now to come here and not be able to trust the government and the police that are mishandling the situation is so overall traumatizing.

0:57.2

Welcome to the show. I'm Kai Wright.

0:59.6

We now know all of their names.

1:03.3

Delana Ashley Young, Paul Andre Michelle,

1:07.9

Sahelia Tan,

1:10.4

Soon Chung Park,

1:42.0

He Yun Jung Grant, Sun Cha Kim, Dowyo Fung and Young A U. Eight people killed in and around Atlanta about this violence over the past week and I'm stuck on a couple of themes that just keep coming up.

1:49.7

The first is just how depressingly predictable the whole thing was, in part because we've all become so accustomed to breaking news about men with guns killing strangers they don't like for all kinds of reasons.

2:03.6

But also because for more than a year,

2:06.0

Asian Americans all over the country have been saying,

2:08.2

hey, we don't feel safe.

2:10.3

There's a problem here.

2:11.5

Pay attention. Which leads me to the second theme that I keep coming upon

...

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