Monday, September 10, 2012
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
home
July 6, 2012 - While living in New York for the past 6 years, I clung to the idea of home as that place I was from to which I could always return. But I realize now how much my concept of home has been challenged and transformed. The home I found in New York was one where my community was based on choice, invention, and shared passion, rather than any idealized fantasy or circumstance of birth. My "immediate family members" were my amazing friends, by beautiful necessity, which opened up space for incredible new bonds. And my comfort zone was not something to be escaped as if it were bordered externally by fear, but celebrated as the capacity to find peace and strength in challenge, a capacity expanded from within through a deepening understanding and acceptance of myself.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
the construction of Asian America: a personal history
Thursday, April 5, 2012
On Marion Barry's Dirty Asian Problem
Friday, December 23, 2011
Private Danny Chen and threats to justice everywhere
When it was first discovered that an Asian American soldier had been found dead in Afghanistan from non-combat injuries, following hazing by his superiors, it was a blip in media consciousness, one story, if at all, to be the end of the story. Our lives carried on seamlessly, and besides the few individuals in this country who had happened to catch that passing spot in select New York media sources, the whole thing had never even happened. Even I thought that the significance of the story wouldn’t last the night, and though deeply saddened and troubled by what had happened, I resigned myself to the reality that this incident would fade into the rest of the invisible history of injustice against our community.
I was quickly pulled out of my resignation when I was asked to join a committee, led by OCA-NY, which was organizing to demand from the Army a fair and transparent investigation of Private Danny Chen’s death. As we met with the family and began planning an action to raise awareness, I was not entirely optimistic about the effect our action would have, considering that the horrifying brutality of the incident itself hadn’t seemed to ruffle a feather.
Trying to contribute the most I could to the campaign, I focused the goals of my own efforts on empowering the people in this city to speak out. I was less concerned with strategizing around the investigation because real justice is so scarcely given in these cases, and I had come to see all those meetings with power players as largely symbolic echoes of the status quo, in which we would get nothing from these officials but formulaic answers about policies that should have protected us.
Two and a half months later, Private Danny Chen’s name is plastered all over the national mainstream media, as if he has just been found dead. The explosion of media attention followed the announcement from the Army that eight soldiers had been charged in Danny’s death. But for the family members and activists who had been pressing for justice since the beginning of October, the guilt of these soldiers was not news, and the circumstances of the case had not become any more abominable or newsworthy. It was as if we had been telling everyone the whole time that something intolerable had happened, that Danny’s death was either a racially motivated murder by his fellow soldiers or the result of constant harassment and merciless violence against Danny by those same soldiers, but up until the moment the media decided it was important, people seemed unimpressed.
The sudden turnaround in our nation’s response to this event has really illustrated two things for me. The first is that when you are an underrepresented person, the most inhumane things that happen to your community are not news until you MAKE them news. Our campaign, which included a march and rally that brought over 400 people from the area, sent out the message that we as a community were not going to be silenced. As marginalized people, we had to convince the media, through grassroots action, that the world would actually care about what happened to Private Danny Chen– that despite the traditional invisibility of Asian Americans in our mainstream consciousness, this would actually be considered worthy of the public’s attention.
News outlets, in deciding which stories get coverage, don’t just respond to the interests of their readership but determine the things that people will be interested in. And as we can see by the widespread alarm of the public following the national media coverage of the case, it wasn’t due to a lack of interest or newsworthiness that there had been a blackout on this case up until now. The media holds the power in determining our national response to events of injustice, so we need to make sure they do their job.
The second thing I learned is that community action can be the essential means to an end. I know that, as an activist, this should be obvious to me. But as a community organizer, the goals of my activism have revolved around the process of empowering members of our communities, so much so that the goals in terms of what our organized power can achieve often become secondary. In the world of community organizing, it seems standard to start from community engagement first and then to find issues for the purposes of empowering people in the community, rather than starting with the issues and then finding the people to support those issues because their support is absolutely necessary. The actual demands of the action, and the interactions we have with elected officials and other power players around that action, sometimes seem more like exercises than critical steps to achieve a definite goal.
But this time, the issue was the catalyst, and the people who came out to demand justice for Private Danny Chen made the difference. When over 400 people walked through the streets chanting “NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE” and congregated for a vigil that ignited our passion, the media had no choice but to start taking interest in the case, and it was only a matter of time before we heard back from the Army, who had been trying to sweep this embarrassment under the rug.
During our planning for the march and rally, we considered the fact that people had to know this was not just an Asian American issue. The death of a US soldier at the hands of his superiors is an affront to our civil rights, national security, government transparency, and so much more than that, and just because it happened to an Asian American body does not mean the rest of our country is exempt from having to care. Originally, we had been planning to have the action in Columbus Park in Chinatown, to make it accessible to residents of that community who were most affected by the death of one of their community members, but the concern arose that it would be seen as just a “Chinese” thing. We ultimately decided to start a march from the Army Recruiting Center in TriBeCa, as a way of bringing it beyond the Chinatown borders. Still, the turnout was mostly Asian Americans, with some valuable support from Occupy Wall Street and other concerned individuals. What was even more troubling was that as we stood on the street outside the Army Recruiting Center with our signs and candles, most people hurriedly pushed past us, expressing their annoyance that we were blocking the sidewalk rather than taking a second to realize why we were there.
The sad truth is that these incidents of gross violence and injustice happen so often that it takes a lot to overcome people’s threshold for caring. And especially when these issues get boxed into racial categories, people who don’t identify with the race in question feel it’s okay to stop listening completely. Race in America is a factor that makes issues that concern all of us somehow concern only some of us, when the reality is that the presence of race as a motivating factor for injustice should be even more a reason for nationwide concern, considering the deeper implications that it has on the state of our country’s civil rights and the reflection it bears on our humanity as Americans.
We all need to pay attention when anyone in this country is attacked for his or her identity, not just when the attacks are against people who are like us. When a gay college student is tormented by his peers to the point of suicide, we all need to respond. When a black man is beaten by power-crazed police due to prejudice, we all need to respond. When a state decides to chase out its undocumented immigrants, the very people on whose backs its economy depends, based on obviously false economic justifications, we all need to respond. And not only that, but we also have to respond to the daily reality and culture of oppression in this country, including stop-and-frisk, bullying, and hate speech, which make life for marginalized people impossible. We all need to respond to these things because they are not isolated events – they are symptomatic of something else that is dangerously wrong at the core of this country. We need to emphasize the fact that these attacks on people from our communities should not and, in reality, do not affect only our communities.
I am haunted by the words of Former Commander of U.S. Forces in Vietnam, General William Westmoreland, on why we shouldn’t sweat killing all those Vietnamese people: “Well, the Oriental doesn’t put the same high price on life as does the Westerner. Life is plentiful; life is cheap in the Orient. And as the philosophy of the Orient expresses it, life is not important.” Racially motivated hate and violence does not start with individuals. It is written into the establishment of our country. The spread of racist ideas was necessary in order to justify slavery, American imperialism, our ongoing wars abroad, and the continued reliance of our economy on the perpetual underclass. These incidents are not anomalies but the predictable results of the way our country has been set up. With this in mind, each and every one of us needs to act, for each other and with each other, in order to achieve fundamental changes in this country. Only then will we be able to say, NEVER AGAIN.
Rest in peace Danny.
Friday, December 16, 2011
Private Danny Chen, and why I will never again reach out to OWS about something that matters to me
I can't stress enough that the following article only represents my opinions as an individual, and are not to be affiliated with any other person, organization or community:
December 15, 2011
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Arundhati Roy
"I know that I don't want to be worn to the bone where I lose my sense of humor. But once you've seen certain things, you can't un-see them, and seeing nothing is as political an act as seeing something."
