In light of the recent murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police, and the numerous murders of black people by a white supremacist system, the Asian Pacific Islander Civic Action Network of Massachusetts (APIs CAN!) stands firmly with the black communities of this country. We call on each and every member of our AAPI community to stand up for black lives.
Our AAPI community has suffered recently from economic losses and anti-Asian racism as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. We know that under white supremacy, this violence is inextricable from the danger that black people face every day while jogging, sitting at home or just going about their everyday lives, from both the police and rightwing vigilantism. Any encounter with the police could turn deadly, and this long history of oppression of black people dates back centuries. Statistics show that a black person is killed by the police every twenty-eight hours. As immigrants and refugees and their children in this country, we inherit this ugly legacy, whether we want to or not.
Across the country, many of the businesses that were damaged or destroyed are owned by people of color and immigrants, including Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and many are black-owned as well. We express our sadness and sympathy for these business owners, many of whom have suffered tremendously due to the pandemic. However, we stand firmly
with millions of peaceful protesters standing against police brutality,
calling for justice for George Floyd and demanding a transformation of
the system that murders, dehumanizes and systematically oppresses black
people. We reject any attempt to pit the AAPI community
against black communities. We cannot confront anti-Asian American racism
without acknowledging and directly working against racism toward black
communities.
As part
of this, we must examine our own prejudices and deal with anti-black
racism within our own community. One of the officers who stood by during
George Floyd’s killing was Tou Thao, an Asian American. Our community
must speak unequivocally in solidarity with black communities to demand
justice for George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and so many
others.
There is a
history of Asian Americans being labelled the “model minority” in order
to pit us against black communities and other people of color that dates
back several decades. For this reason, it is particularly important for
us to take a clear stand for justice with black communities in this
moment.
In fact, our communities have a long history of
solidarity. It was the black-led Civil Rights and Black Power movements
that paved the way for Asian Americans to gain increased access to
education and employment, to challenge language-based discrimination,
and for liberalization of immigration in 1965.
When Asian people, like
Long Guang Huang and the Quincy Four, were targets of police violence,
the black community has always stood with us in demanding
accountability. In Massachusetts, we’ve stood together to demand that
construction sites be opened to workers of color, that teaching staff in
the public schools reflect the cultures of our children, and that
political districts be drawn to increase each community’s opportunity
for representation.
We
commit to supporting and following the lead of black-led organizing to
demand justice for police brutality and murders of black lives, and
toward changing systems that perpetuate white supremacy. We will
struggle sideby-side to transform these systems and build a better
world.
Karen Chen is
executive director of the Chinese Progressive Association. Sovanna Pouv
is executive director of the Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association of
Greater Lowell.