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Suddenly, reports of hate crimes against those of Asian and Pacific Islander backgrounds skyrocketed.
My friend Shirley s restaurant was repeatedly vandalized with hate graffiti, prompting her husband to spend a great deal of money on security cameras and taking other security measures.
In one particular case, a man stole a large DoorDash food order, yelled racial slurs and threatened to harm Jimmy before fleeing after a customer called the police.
To be sure, the restaurant industry, perhaps more than any other, has been devastated by the pandemic.
However, by the end of March 2020, more than half of Chinese restaurants, which might otherwise be perfectly suited to thrive in a takeout only environment, stopped transacting entirely. No other type of restaurant in this group even comes close, the credit card processing company Womply found.
Moved by security camera videos of older Asians being viciously attacked in the San Francisco Bay Area, Jacob Azevedo, a young Latino man, offered in an Instagram post to escort anyone in Oakland’s Chinatown who felt unsafe. Others saw the message and wanted to help him: Compassion in Oakland launched in February and has grown from hundreds to more than 2,000 orange-vested volunteers and is working to take the initiative to cities across the country.
“This [violence] is the worst we have ever seen, but it’s the best response I’ve ever seen myself, because when the worst came, we are seeing the best of humanity,” says Carl Chan, president of Oakland’s Chinatown Chamber of Commerce, who emigrated from Hong Kong in the 1970s.
Moved by security camera videos of older Asians being viciously attacked in the San Francisco Bay Area, Jacob Azevedo, a young Latino man, offered in an Instagram post to escort anyone in Oakland’s Chinatown who felt unsafe. Others saw the message and wanted to help him: Compassion in Oakland launched in February and has seen volunteer applications grow from hundreds to more than 2,000, and the organization is working to take the initiative to cities across the country.
“This [violence] is the worst we have ever seen, but it’s the best response I’ve ever seen myself, because when the worst came, we are seeing the best of humanity,” says Carl Chan, president of Oakland’s Chinatown Chamber of Commerce, who emigrated from Hong Kong in the 1970s.
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RULING THE WEEK
Hey, all Elizabeth here. It’s nice to be back with you all for a week when Katie’s out on vacation. I have a bit of a royal scoop to kick off the newsletter this week. After Prince Philip died, I got a series of fascinating messages from my Aunt Diane about her relationship with him. She first met him in the 90s, when she was a young executive at the World Wildlife Fund and he was president of WWF International.