Assaulted while intervening
I intervened in a transphobic attack. The attacker wasn’t wearing a mask and I asked him to put one on. He said that coronavirus was because of me and that it was my fault. He threatened to hit me, and spit in my face
I intervened in a transphobic attack. The attacker wasn’t wearing a mask and I asked him to put one on. He said that coronavirus was because of me and that it was my fault. He threatened to hit me, and spit in my face
I was looking at some items on a shelf at a store and noticed two women walk by and where one of them clearly and loudly directing an anti-Asian term at my direction, specifically sounded like "Ching. ching, chang, chong". She repeated the phrase before walking further down the aisle.
I was riding my bicycle and needed to cross over from the bike lane to the left hand turn lane. The stoplight ahead turned red and I let several cars pass me. One car was approaching but since it was slowing down for the light I looked behind me a couple times and then crossed in front of the car. I thought it was a reasonable move without inconveniencing the driver. As I crossed, the driver shouted angrily, "Go! Go! Go fucking chink!" I was so angry I flipped the driver off as I turned left. But I felt some fear for the next few blocks as I worried the driver might come after me. Luckily, he didn't. But I've been shook up ever since.
My mom and I, both of Chinese descent, were walking on the sidewalk. A man walking towards us tried to shoo us away from him with his hand and shouted, “Stay away, I don’t want your coronavirus!”
My friend and I, two Asian American girls, took our moms to an arboretum and we were very excited when we found out that restaurants in our area have already started outdoor dining. We found an Italian restaurant with great reviews and called to ask if they have seats available. They told us either 5:30 or 9 pm, so we took the 5:30. It was a short drive over and when we arrived, the owner or manager seated us at a table at a corner. We didn't feel very comfortable dining in that corner so we asked if we could be switched to another table next to us. As we looked around, many tables were empty, and the table he seated us at was the only one without table cloth and it's half the size of other four people tables. A Caucasian family who came after us were seated at one of the larger tables with table cloth for four while we were shoved into the corner with a table that's half the size without a table cloth. We understand if there are seats taken for later and he cannot put us at an empty table that's set.
We asked him if we can sit somewhere else and he started to raise his voice and said, "if you don't like it, then go." OK, no problem. We shall leave. There were other diners around us at the moment and as we walked over to the car he was saying a rude things towards us. As we got to the edge of the parking lot, where the other patrons can't see or hear him, the manager caught us off guard and shouted "I DON'T NEED BUSINESS FROM PEOPLE LIKE YOU ALL!" My friend asked, "What do you mean by people like us?!" Silence. So she asked, "Do you mean that we are Asians?" Trying to give him the benefit of the doubt. Then he took off his mask, showed us that he was smiling and walked over to my friend towering over her (he's about 5"11" and my friend is 5'0”) he said "get off my property". We felt threatened and took steps back, stood on the sidewalk in shock, not sure what to do as our moms were as shocked standing a few feet from us. we were also shocked by how this manager/owner was so sweet to everyone who came in (all Caucasian) a moment ago and said this to us.
We weren't sure if we were over reacting or being too sensitive, but we just knew something isn't right here. Should we let it go? Should we report it? We weren't sure anymore. We went back to the car in shock, and thought, we need to let others know about what he just did so went back to the parking lot where the incident took place. The manager marched up to my car and took a photo of my license plate (for what reason, I do not know). He said to me: "I called the police so you better run." No, we are not running anywhere; as a matter of fact, my friend was calling the police at the same time he said that to me. I told him, "We are not going anywhere until the police comes". It occurred to us later that he told us to run because he thinks we are [undocumented] immigrants? I'm an elementary school teacher and my friend is an economist in the city.
The cops arrived within five minutes and we spoke to three officers who made us feel heard. When you encounter injustice and racism, we just want to be heard. The officers were incredibly decent and said "unfortunately I can't write up a ticket for someone being a jerk. My advice is don't support a place like this." We are proud to be Asian Americans, we love this country and this city. Unfortunately, racism is only growing.
On private Facebook group called “Vegetarian and Vegan recipes,
[someone posted] about Asian cuisine with the disclaimer “I know we are not supposed to like anything Chinese, but...”
Some comments were questioning whether that disclaimer was made by Chinese folks in the group. What followed were a large slew of numbers of other Asians laughing and mocking the questioning and loving the disclaimer, hate speeches of long strands of justified reasons of the hate for China and Chinese people, and when we tried to ask others to stick to the recipes, more hate speech followed to justify the hate.
My young son was scootering next to me as I walked the dog around our local high school. We saw a white woman around the corner walking, so we paused to see if she was going straight or was going to turn towards us. She saw us waiting on the sidewalk from around the corner, put her white cloth face mask on her face, and started screaming at us: "Why can't you move?! Get out of the way!!!"
She screamed over and over again. I am shocked and moved to the side while she came right at us. My son was scared, so he remained in the middle of the sidewalk on his scooter. I yelled at him to move away from her. She then screamed at him, looming over him inches from his face, "Get out of my way! You people need to move!! Get out of my way! Why can't you get out of my way!!"
I was scared and shocked and tried to make sure she wouldn’t touch him. He moved towards me, and we quickly turned around the corner. She followed us back around the corner and continued to scream and yell at us. I wanted to pull out my phone to video tape her, but was afraid she would attack me.
She yelled at us at the top of her lungs, inches away from us, in the middle of a pandemic. She unleashed all her anger on my son. He was terrified and crying, saying he was trying to get away from her.
It's been 6 weeks now, and I still have PTSD that I am seeking therapy and anxiety medicine for this as a result. For a while, I was scared to leave my house without my husband at my side. This was racially motivated... her thinking that "us people should MOVE.”
As we were nearing the end of a Anti-Black racism rally, a white teenage boy rolled down his passenger seat car window and yelled, "This is not Chicago! If you don't like our country, go back to where you came from! Get out! Go back to where you came from!".
My spouse and I (both of Asian descent) were the only two people on that side of the street at the time since folks attending were practice social distancing.
The tax accountant I was working with at the time sent out a blanket email in late March to all his clients saying he was advising doing tele-conferences rather than meetings in person due to the “Chinese Virus Epidemic”. At best, this is unprofessional and insensitive, and at worst, it’s in-your-face racism (to use his business as a platform from which to project his racial biases). He later sent out a second similar blanket email where he referred to the "Wuhan Virus". This behavior encourages racist people to openly express their racism towards Asian-Americans, as it serves no other purpose.
I work at a pizzeria. A customer refused to come up her food because I was working. The customer asked if there is an Asian girl working at the counter and refused to come. She then said that she will come the next time the girl isn’t working.
My roommates and I were helping our protesters in peace. I am an Asian woman and my roommates are Caucasian and Multiracial. Out of nowhere, an older white male driving a truck stopped in front of us and started harassing the protesters. He started using some harsh and negative words and got into a confrontation with one of the protesters. They were arguing for a good minute and then the guy in the truck threw a bag of trash at the protester and drove away. And to be honest, there were multiple incidents where I was personally attacked by older white women in line to the grocery store. It will not go unnoticed. It will stop.
I was hiking with my girlfriend and her roommates in a regional park. At the beginning of our hike, a woman walking the opposite direction to us approached our group and punched both my girlfriend and I in the face and said, "f** you coronavirus." Our group did not escalate the matter further, and the woman walked away from us without a single look back.
There was a sign placed outside of a local business advertising a sale on their ice cream, calling it the "China Virus Special". The owner was contacted and he refused to change or remove the sign, but as more residents expressed their anger in person and online and threatened to boycott, the sign was removed after 3-4 days.
I saw a large sign on someone's front lawn that read, "Make China Pay Reparation" and a smaller sign near it that read, "Sorry America is closed. Owner gone nuts!” As of May 24, 2020, the sign is still up.
A multiracial group of people were social distancing outside the fence of the home of an East Asian family. One of the parents was celebrating a birthday and the family was gathered in their backyard while friends were arrayed along the fence. A middle-aged masculine person was biking down the sidewalk toward the house and I noticed that they were yelling something at the family/our group. At first I thought it was birthday greetings from a neighbor but as the person biked closer I realized they were shouting Asian-sounding gibberish (i.e. "ching chong" noises) at us. I shouted after them but they were already biking away.