People across the U.S. participated in rallies Saturday to condemn attacks against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders after the shooting rampage in Atlanta that left eight people dead.
From San Francisco to Pittsburgh and points in between, men, women and children marched and spoke out against the surge in hate crimes on members of the AAPI community, which came to a head Tuesday when a shooter targeted three Atlanta-area spas. Six of those killed were
I’ve dealt with words and looks and stuff my whole life,” Ann Johns told NBC News at an Atlanta rally. “My family doesn’t want me to go anywhere by myself.”
In San Antonio, Texas, former Mayor Juliàn Castro told demonstrators the United States has an “imperfect” history that warrants examining.
“We must stop hate against Asian Americans in this country,” said Castro, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Obama administration. “For generations, Asian Americans have been discriminated against. I don’t have to tell that to anybody in this crowd.”
Image: Betty Wu, center, and her children, Timmy, 3, and Kayley, 5, at a “Stop Asian Hate” rally Saturday in Pittsburgh.
Betty Wu, center, of Bellevue, Pa., and her children, Timmy, 3, and Kayley, 5, hold signs and listen to a speaker during a “Stop Asian Hate” rally to protest the recent surge in hate crimes against Asian Americans on Saturday in Pittsburgh. Alexandra Wimley / AP
In Pittsburgh, actor Sandra Oh told protesters that she is “proud to be Asian,”
In Chicago, a marcher in the Logan Square neighborhood told NBC Chicago they came out not only to show support for the victims of Tuesday’s shootings but to prevent such attacks in the future.
“I come here, I think of not only for me but also for my next generation,” demonstrator Dai Quing said. “I think they should have the same opportunity and be respected equal.”
Research released this weekby the reporting forum Stop AAPI Hate revealed nearly 3,800 incidents over the course of roughly a year against people of Asian descent. Women made up a far higher share of the reports, at 68 percent, compared to men, who made up 29 percent of respondents.












