How
another tragic case can reveal some of the worst and the best of Asian American
identities and experiences in the early 21st century.
As I’ve highlighted
before in this space, Asian Americans have had a meaningful and
complex presence in our national community for at least 150 years; but
nonetheless, this American community has significantly grown, statistically and
in prominence, in recent decades. As recent
analyses of the 2010 census reflect, the Asian American community is the fastest-growing
American population thus far in the 21st century. Such
statistical growths can be connected to two recent examples of prominent,
successful Asian Americans: Jeremy Lin, the
Taiwanese American basketball player whose New York Knicks’ star turns dominated
weeks of news cycles earlier this year (and appeared on two
consecutive Sports Illustrated covers); and Dr.
Jim Yong
Kim, the Korean American physician, global health expert, and
Dartmouth College president whom President
Obama recently nominated to lead the World Bank when its
current president’s term is over.
Yet the
story of the last year’s other most prominent Asian
American, Private Danny Chen, complicates that picture quite thoroughly. That
linked New York magazine article does
a great job highlighting the key stages of that story, from Chen’s parents’
immigrations from China to his childhood in New York’s Chinatown, his decision
to enlist in the army to his deployment to Afghanistan, and, most
significantly, the torments and tortures he apparently received on a daily
basis from his superiors and fellow soldiers once there; tortures that were
consistently and brutally tied to Chen’s racial identity (or rather to
ridiculous stereotypes related to it) and that, once again apparently (since
information has been at times painfully difficult for Chen’s family and
advocates to learn), culminated
in the particularly brutal hazing that led to his suicide on October 3rd
of last year. Chen’s story certainly has to be contextualized on multiple
levels, including in relationship to the war in Afghanistan, the presence
of white supremacists and other divisive figures in the military, and
national debates over bullying; yet there’s also no question, given what we
know about the treatment of Chen, that he was hazed and, effectively, killed,
due to his Chinese American heritage, and more exactly to how much that
heritage seemed to separate him from his peers, to render him (despite his
having volunteered for the US Army) somehow outside of this shared American
community.
On the
other hand, the fact that we know any of that, and moreover that a number of
Chen’s superiors and peers are now in the process of being charged and brought
to trial, is due quite directly to Asian American voices and communities.
Chen’s family and friends had virtually no luck getting information about his
experiences and death out of the military until the Organization of Chinese Americans—NY Chapter
(OCA-NY) got involved; his story has since gained in national attention
and awareness thanks in large part to numerous
other Asian American organizations
and communities; and some of our most eloquent and talented Asian
American writers, scholars
and social activists, and political
leaders have dedicated significant efforts to engaging with and extending
the story’s questions and meanings. What this tragedy has also made clear, that
is, is that the Asian American community in the early 21st century
is as multi-layered, multi-vocal, and nationally engaged as any; moreover, these
voices and efforts, individually but even more so collectively, have
constituted a deeply inspiring representation of American ideals (free speech,
assembly and protest, democratic resistance to powerful narratives, and more)
at their best.
May recap
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? And any suggestions for the series?
UPDATE: A
petition inspired by Danny Chen, and shared with me by Jasmine Stephenson of
ipetitions.com: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/zerotoleranceharassment/
.
5/30
Memory Day nominees: A tie between Randolph
Bourne, the journalist, activist, and
cultural critic
whose ideas of a trans-national
America foreshadowed much late
20th and early 21st century American Studies work;and
James Chaney, the
young Misssissippi student and Civil
Rights worker whose brutal
murder epitomized white supremacist violence and inspired multiple cultural responses.
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