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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/wp_mjgj8c/racefiles.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114<\/a><\/p>\n This February, a grand jury indicted rookie\u00a0NYPD Officer Peter Liang on charges related to the fatal shooting last November of 28-year-old Akai Gurley. Gurley, an unarmed African American man, was killed when he stepped into the stairwell of the public housing building where his girlfriend lived with their two-year-old daughter. At the time, Liang and another officer were conducting a vertical patrol, a routine tactic in which police officers sweep public housing buildings in search of criminal activity. Liang drew his gun and fired a bullet that hit Gurley in the torso, killing him.<\/p>\n Liang\u2019s indictment has sparked protests from some Chinese Americans calling for the charges to be dropped. Meanwhile, another group of Asian American voices have stood by the grieving Gurley family to support the indictment, and to demand police reforms like an end to discriminatory and deadly vertical patrols.<\/p>\n ****<\/p>\n Twenty-four years ago, in October 1991, Korean American storeowner Soon-Ja Du was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter for shooting and killing a 15-year-old African American girl named Latasha Harlins earlier that year. Du had suspected Harlins of shoplifting, and engaged in a physical struggle with her inside Empire Liquor store in South Los Angeles. When Harlins angrily left her juice on the counter and turned to leave, holding the $2 that would have paid for her purchase, Du shot her in the back of the head. For taking Harlins\u2019 life, Du paid $500 and served no prison time.<\/p>\n Two weeks before Harlins\u2019 death, four LAPD officers were caught on video brutally beating an African American motorist named Rodney King. When the officers were acquitted that following spring, Los Angeles erupted in civil unrest. The Los Angeles riots, as the five-day event came to be known, involved 10,000 federal troops, resulted in more than 50 deaths and some 12,000 arrests, overwhelmingly of Black and Brown people. It also caused $1 billion in damages, heavily targeting Korean-owned businesses. Korean Americans dubbed the riots, which began on April 29, 1992, \u201cSa-I-Gu\u201d (meaning 4-2-9, or April 29).<\/p>\n What do these two stories, of Peter Liang and Soon-Ja Du, Akai Gurley and Latasha Harlins, 24 years apart, have to do with one another? <\/em><\/p>\n What can they teach us about who we are – and who we will be – in an increasingly multiracial America?<\/em><\/p>\n Following Soon-Ja Du\u2019s 1991 conviction, Jerry Yu, executive director of the Korean American Coalition, noted that not all in the community unconditionally supported Du. “We can relate to her as a Korean and we can pray for her that she not suffer,” he said. “But, on the other hand, just because we are Korean, that doesn’t mean we wanted her to get off. There has to be justice.”<\/p>\n Likewise last month, in response to demands by some Chinese Americans that charges against Peter Liang be dropped, Esther Wang of CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities wrote:<\/p>\n (Their) argument basically boils down to this: If these white officers got off, so should Peter Liang.<\/em><\/p>\n I understand the sentiment. I look at Peter Liang, and I see someone who looks like my brothers. I can imagine what it must be like for his parents\u2014a garment worker and restaurant worker\u2014to face the terrifying prospect of their only son going to prison. And I get why, when the vast majority of mostly white officers aren\u2019t indicted when they shoot to kill, one might be upset that an Asian cop is the one who is.<\/em><\/p>\n But at its heart, this argument is deeply flawed. Rather than calling for accountability for all police officers who kill, regardless of their race, this sentiment is rooted in the belief that no officers should be held accountable for their actions.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Yu\u2019s and Wang\u2019s words are separated by 24 years, yet similar in their painstaking honesty. They reveal how ethnic identification can be a powerful place from which we see the humanity of perpetrators of violence like Du and Liang, while also firmly demanding that they face justice. In doing so, they\u00a0reject the false divide between compassion and accountability.<\/p>\n Ethnic identity holds deep meaning for many of us \u2013 as a marker of sameness, a space for mutual recognition and empowerment in the face of hostility. Solidarity with those who look and talk and worship like us can be a rational response in a society that tells us that we do not belong. We form ethnic associations, temples, churches, etc. to protect ourselves from discrimination and harm, and to create spaces for cultural celebration and community.<\/p>\n On the other hand, for those of us who are queer, trans, dark-skinned, disabled, criminalized, or otherwise marginalized, our own ethnic communities are not always intuitive places of solidarity and safety. Moreover, in a nation increasingly polarized around questions of race and democracy, those of us committed to racial justice can find ourselves pushing back against organized conservative forces within<\/a> our own ethnic communities.<\/p>\n On key political issues, we must scrutinize ethnic allegiances, and the politics of those<\/a> who fan the flames of ethnic outrage. In both the cases of Du and Liang, the most conservative positions \u2013 calling to close ethnic ranks to protect one\u2019s community, and reinforcing\u00a0racist ideas\u00a0about Blackness and crime \u2013 have come from ideological forces within and outside the community.<\/p>\n1. When ethnic solidarity is not enough<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n