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- Newsgroups: alt.discrimination
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!eclnews!cec1!mps1
- From: mps1@cec1.wustl.edu (Mihir Pramod Shah)
- Subject: Re: Chinese racism towards Blacks
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.075449.11963@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- Sender: usenet@wuecl.wustl.edu (News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cec1
- Organization: Washington University, St. Louis MO
- References: <92317.070401KRB104@psuvm.psu.edu> <1992Nov18.021510.16458@msuinfo.cl.msu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 07:54:49 GMT
- Lines: 76
-
- Bo,
-
- You don't know how pleased I am that you brought up this important
- issue. I have discussed this topic with MANY people, and I think it should be
- brought into the open.
- I am a child of Indian immigrants, so we have some common thread,
- namely that we are of Asian descent. You seem to understand some of the
- problems associated with Asian-Americans and Asians in America as it pertains
- to racism, etc.
- You have put your finger right on the button. Not ALL Asians are
- racist, just as not all whites, blacks, hispanics, etc. are racists. Your tone
- is very civilized and concilliatory. You understand what needs to be done.
- Let me explore the background of so-called Asian racism. While it is
- not widespread since Asians are a very small minority, it is important because
- of the tremendous rate of growth among Asians, especially from immigration.
- Most Asians come from homogenous backgroungs. Their native nations had
- little if any ethnic diversity. Consequently, as you pointed out,
- Asians coming to America have some tendency to hook onto racial stereotypes and
- misconceptions. The example of India is a little more interesting, but some of
- the results are the same. In India, the races are more or less similar, but
- there is a huge habit of labelling and stereotyping people of other religions,
- castes, regions, languages, etc. It is part of the ancient Indian culture, and
- of course the caste system only exaserbated this problem. Nonetheless, the
- common denominator I see in Asian racism is lack of exposure to people of
- different racial and cultural background. This results in stereotyping of not
- only blacks, but whites, hispanics, even other asians, etc.
- The thing to keep in mind is that while Asian racism should be
- corrected, its roots are understandable. We must all work together to help
- remedy this problem. The children of Asian immigrants will probably learn to
- be more open and tolerant. This is promising, but we must be more active in
- trying to combat racism.
- I will give you some examples of racism in my own experiences. My
- parents basically came here alone. They were forced to interact with different
- people and races. Thus, my parents have a fairly open and tolerant view on
- race. My father's longest-serving employee happens to be black. He is a very
- loyal and respectful person. On the other hand, some of my relatives who have
- come here later have not had as open views. They were more likely to be
- shielded from reality, in part because now my father could help them and employ
- them. They did not have to see the "real" world. There is nothing wrong with
- this; in fact this is the secret to so many successful Asian families. One
- side effect, however, is the lack of exposure to other people. Consequently,
- some of my relatives have made some rather racist comments in private. They
- are not racist people, but they have some very condescending views.
-
- I like to use the example of the LA Riots. This is an excellent case
- study in racial misunderstanding and distrust. The problem we have here is
- that certain, if not many, Korean shopkeepers had extremely different and
- suspicious attitudes towards blacks. Not all, but many. We have discussed the
- reasons behind this enough, so I won't say it again. On the other side, there
- are blacks who are do not fully understand the Koreans' situation. Some of
- them have theories that the government gave secret loans to them without
- interest. This is a common conspiracy theory that Asians are successful
- because they are give secret preferential treatment. We all know the real
- reason is good old fashioned work ethics, moral/family values, and hard
- efforts. I won't go into the political debate over family values, for I do not
- agree with the far-right-wing radical's definition of family values.
- Nonetheless, here we had two groups who did not know enough about each other
- enough, and the dynamite was just waiting to explode.
-
- I am sorry to say that although we must all do our best to help,
- frankly there are some Asians who must clean up their act.
-
- Before I go further, I would like to point out that I am not bashing
- Asians or Asian culture. It is part of my heritage, and I would not want to
- beat my cultural background to death over one issue. As a U.S. born citizen, I
- am very proud to be an American, but I also acknowledge my Asian roots.
- Nonetheless, no culture is perfect. We must work together to iron out those
- problems and negative aspects. We should emphasize good sides of our culture,
- such as hard work, moral values, sacrifice, etc., but we most also fight
- negative elements within our culture such as racism, sexism, suppressionmE
- negative elements such as racism, sexism, suppression of individualism,
- parental pressure, etc.
-
- Peace...Mihir
-
-
-