More than 150 protesters rallied outside the Queens Public Library in Flushing on March 27, demanding an end to anti-Asian racist attacks, violence against women and  
 white supremacy.  Photo by Gabriele Holtermann 
 Activists rally against anti-Asian hate crimes  
 on steps of Queens Public Library in Flushing 
 BY GABRIELE HOLTERMANN 
 As the show of support for  
 Asian Americans continues to  
 grow, more than 150 protesters  
 rallied outside the Queens  
 Public  Library  in  Flushing  on  
 March 27, demanding an end  
 to anti-Asian racist attacks,  
 violence against women and  
 white supremacy. The protest  
 was part of ANSWER’s National  
 Day of Action, held in over  
 60 cities and towns across the  
 United States on Saturday.  
 ANSWER  Coalition  (Act  
 Now to Stop War & End Racism) 
   and  co-organizer  Justice  
 Center  en  el  Barrio —  groups  
 that fight for social justice and  
 demand an end to wars — also  
 called on authorities to label the  
 Atlanta mass shooting, which  
 killed eight people, including  
 six Asian American women, a  
 hate crime. 
 Chanting “Stop the hatred,  
 stop the violence, Asian Americans  
 won’t  be  silenced,”  the  
 diverse crowd held up signs  
 expressing their frustration  
 with systemic racism and calling  
 for unity before speakers  
 addressed the protesters,  
 among them family members of  
 Christian Hall.  
 Christian Hall, a 19-year-old  
 who was adopted from China  
 when he was 1, was shot seven  
 times and killed by Pennsylvania  
 State Troopers on an I-80  
 overpass on Dec. 30, 2020, while  
 he had a mental health crisis  
 and was suicidal. PA State  
 troopers claimed that Hall was  
 pointing a gun at them, but a  
 video shared by civil rights attorney  
 Ben Crump shows that  
 the young man had his hands  
 in the air when troopers began  
 shooting.  
 Wearing red shirts picturing  
 Christian and holding up a  
 family portrait of Hall and his  
 parents Fe and Gareth, family  
 members rallied around  
 Christian Hall’s cousin, Nicole  
 Henriquez-Otero, a Flushing  
 resident, when she addressed  
 the crowd. 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   Q 2     NS.COM   |   APRIL 2-APRIL 8, 2021 
 Henriquez-Otero recalled  
 a loving, curious and exciting  
 teenager who stood with the  
 Black Lives Matter movement  
 last summer and explained that  
 the pandemic had affected his  
 mental health. When he was on  
 the bridge, a witness called the  
 police to help him.  
 “He needed help, but instead,  
 they killed him. They shot him  
 seven times. No one tried to  
 help him. He was on that bridge  
 by himself. And  if you’ve  seen  
 the video, you’ve seen his hands  
 drop,” his cousin said.  
 She also had this to say  
 about the “bad day” defense of  
 the Atlanta shooter.  
 “He was having a bad day.  
 But guess what? We don’t get  
 to have a bad day, do we? When  
 we have a bad day, we get killed.  
 But when that murderer killed  
 those people  in Atlanta, he  got  
 sympathy from that police officer. 
  I wish they would have given  
 sympathy to Christian,” Nicole  
 Henriquez-Otero declared. 
 Speakers  also  recalled  the  
 United States’ long history of  
 racism against Asian Americans, 
  harking back to the 19th  
 century when Chinese laborers  
 were exploited to build the nation’s  
 railroad system or work  
 in gold mines. 
 Amanda  Yee,  a  member  of  
 the Party for Socialism and  
 Liberation, said that back then,  
 white Americans believed that  
 Chinese workers carried diseases  
 like smallpox and the  
 plague, much like today, when  
 Asian Americans are blamed  
 for COVID-19. Additionally,  
 many Americans blamed Chinese  
 workers for declining  
 wages,  leading  to  the  Chinese  
 Exclusion Act in 1892, prohibiting  
 Chinese immigration for  
 decades. 
 “I’m  here  to  tell  you  that  
 anti-Asian racism and Sinophobia  
 that we see directed at  
 the Asian working class. Those  
 are fundamentally American  
 values,” Yee declared. 
 After the rally, the protesters  
 marched through the Flushing,  
 drawing  cheers  from  residents  
 along the way. 
 Monica Cruz with the Party  
 for Socialism and Liberation felt  
 terrific about the turnout, and  
 to her, it was a sign that people  
 want their voices to be heard.  
 Addressing the rise in anti- 
 Asian hate crimes, especially  
 during the pandemic, Cruz said,  
 “Anti-Asian racism has always  
 been a core fabric of American  
 society of white supremacy.  
 There’s a long history of this.” 
 “It’s very clear that the community  
 is sick and tired of this  
 racism. Sick and tired of Sinophobia  
 and sick and tired of  
 war drives and the pain,” the  
 activist explained.  
 Marcus Valeria, a Brazilian  
 immigrant and member of  
 Defend Democracy in Brazil,  
 attended the rally and march  
 in  solidarity  with  the  Asian  
 American community.  
 “When there is hate, there is  
 hate towards everybody. So we  
 all have to stick together and  
 fight back,” Valeria said. 
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