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Post by Admin on Mar 28, 2021 3:00:17 GMT
'Is This Patriot Enough?': Asian American Official Shows Military Scars, Condemns Racist Violence
Lee Wong, chairman of the West Chester, Ohio, Township Board of Trustees, condemned anti-Asian violence during an impassioned speech that has now gone viral.
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Post by Admin on Mar 28, 2021 22:04:51 GMT
Olympic Legend Kristi Yamaguchi On Anti-Asian Vitriol: What Makes America So Great Is The Diversity
Kristi Yamaguchi, legendary figure skater and the founder of the Always Dream Foundation, talks to Ali about the fear among the Asian community. While her grandfather was serving in the U.S. Army, Kristi’s mother was born in a WWII internment camp. She says she now tells her parents to “be aware of what's going on around you whenever you're out and about” and says, “it's not just going to take the Asian American community, but...everyone as a whole coming together.”
Former professional figure skater and Olympic gold medalist Kristi Yamaguchi said Thursday that “the entire Asian American community is on alert” amid a spike in anti-Asian violence throughout the past year and particularly after this week’s shooting spree in Atlanta, which left six Asian women dead.
During an interview on CNN’s “New Day,” Yamaguchi, whose great-grandparents emigrated to the U.S. from Japan, said she was compelled to speak out following the recent attacks against Asian Americans, including at least two alone on Wednesday in the San Francisco Bay area, where she lives.
“It’s important because it needs to stop, and I think we can’t tolerate it anymore,” she said. “I’m passionate about many different things, but this is definitely one that hits very close to home.”
The former Olympian, who also founded the Always Dream Foundation to promote childhood literacy among low-income families, referenced the trauma her grandparents endured in the Japanese internment camps during World War II.
Yamaguchi said that while previous generations of Asian Americans believed in “enduring almost the unbearable with dignity and perseverance and tolerance” in an attempt to move on from racism, “now is not that time to be silent.”
“Now is really the time to raise more awareness of what’s going on and to demand that things change," she said. “This younger generation is not afraid to speak out, I think they’ve given a lot of us courage to really stand up to what’s right, and I think that’s what we need to follow.”
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