
 
		BY ROSE ADAMS 
 Brooklynites came together  
 to denounce the Atlanta shootings  
 at  three  separate  rallies  
 across the borough on Sunday  
 — arguing that the massacre  
 that killed six Asian women  
 exemplifi ed the increased racism  
 Asian-Americans have  
 faced during the COVID-19  
 pandemic. 
 “That  is  hate,”  said  state  
 Sen. John Liu, who represents  
 Queens, during a March 21  
 rally outside Brooklyn Borough  
 Hall. “That is a feeling  
 that we all feel as Asian-Americans, 
  that somehow we’re not  
 people or we’re not Americans.  
 We’re perpetual foreigners.”  
 The protests come less  
 than one week after a 21-yearold  
 suspect  Robert  Aaron  
 Long  opened  fi re  in  three  
 spas  and  massage  parlors  in  
 Atlanta, Georgia on March  
 16, killing eight people, six of  
 whom were women of Asian  
 descent. 
 Offi cers from the Atlanta  
 Police Department have faced  
 backlash after not labeling the  
 incident a hate crime, claiming  
 instead that Long was motivated  
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 by a sexual addiction,  
 and  that  he  “had  a  bad  day.”  
 Police are still investigating  
 the  shootings,  and  Long  remains  
 in custody. 
 Nationwide,  attacks  
 against Asian Americans and  
 Pacifi c Islanders (AAPI) have  
 surged over the last year. New  
 York  City  has  seen  the  biggest  
 spike  in  anti-Asian  hate  
 crime in the country, with incidents  
 jumping from three to  
 28 in 2020 — an 833 percent increase, 
  according to the Center  
 for the Study of Hate and  
 Extremism. 
 During three protests on  
 Sunday, Brooklynites fought  
 back against the rise in hate.  
 One rally, hosted by Borough  
 President Eric Adams outside  
 Borough Hall, drew Brooklyn  
 legislators, activists, and  
 local offi cials who vowed to  
 bring  those  attackers  of  the  
 Asian-Americans community  
 to justice.  
 “As  Brooklyn’s  top  prosecutor, 
  I am committed to  
 protecting all communities  
 —  including  the  AAPI  community  
 — from every type of  
 crime,  especially  hate-fueled  
 violence, and to holding those  
 who  commit  them  accountable,” 
   said  Brooklyn  District  
 Attorney Eric Gonzalez. “In  
 the face of rising intolerance  
 across  the  country,  we  must  
 all speak out and call out bigotry  
 and violence.” 
 One  Chinese-American  
 community leader said that  
 the  way  to  mitigate  anti- 
 Asian hate is not through policing, 
  but through increased  
 resources to community  
 groups.  
 “If we’ve learned anything  
 in the last year as were  
 marching for Black lives, the  
 police is not only the answer,”  
 said Wayne Ho, the president  
 of  the  Chinese-American  
 Planning Council, who spoke  
 Protesters  in  Bensonhurst  denounced  the  rise  in  hate  crimes  against  
 Asian-Americans on March 21.  Photo by Arthur de Gaeta 
 at the Borough Hall rally.  
 “We need to have restorative  
 justice,  we  don’t  need  incarceration  
 at this time.” 
 Protesters  also  gathered  
 outside  Barclays  Center  on  
 Sunday for the “Black People  
 for Asian Lives Rally” hosted  
 by a cadre of civil rights  
 groups.  
 Fighting hatred 
 Protestors blast anti-Asian racism 
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