Vietnamese Americans start self-defense course in wake of Atlanta
shootings
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[April 14, 2021]
By Daniel Trotta
GARDEN GROVE, Calif. (Reuters) - When
tragedy struck across the country in Georgia, Tam Nguyen helped fellow
members of his Southern California Vietnamese-American community start
defense courses and assert themselves in the face of racism, rebranding
his charity as a social justice movement.
The critical moment came on March 16, when a gunman opened fire at three
Atlanta area spas, killing eight people including six Asian-American
women.
The shootings came as hate crimes against Asian Americans surged because
of racist rhetoric linking them to the global spread of the coronavirus.
"We grieved heavily. Our hearts were tremendously heavy," Nguyen said.
"When you get tired of grieving, you want action. You want change."
The pandemic had previously prompted Nguyen, co-owner of Advance Beauty
College in Garden Grove, to form Nailing It for America. Nailing It
worked with partners such as Orange County United Way to collect
donations, distributing $30 million worth of personal protective
equipment for healthcare workers and meals to isolated seniors, Nguyen
said.
Nguyen, 47, was on a group text chat with Nailing It leaders when news
broke of the Atlanta shooting.
"Our conversation changed. It took on a new purpose," he said.
Nailing It had already been discussing the rising hate incidents. Now
there was a death toll in an industry similar to Nguyen's own.
After the Atlanta shootings, Nguyen invited Garden Grove Mayor Steve
Jones to Advance Beauty College to make a press statement. When Jones
came the next day, he announced he had asked police to increase patrols
in areas frequented by elderly Asian Americans. Other officials and
police officers have visited to teach students and community members how
to avoid becoming a victim and what to do in case of a hate incident.
The city also neighbors Huntington Beach in Orange County, where white
supremacists gather for periodic demonstrations.
"I'm a young female and Asian and there's so much violence going on ...
I really want to know what to do if I get into situations," said beauty
college student Vy Truong, 19.
Self-defense classes like those held in the college's main classroom
have also been started elsewhere among Asian Americans in California.
At Advance Beauty College, martial arts instructors work with around 50
students and a few outsiders about once every two weeks.
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Six degree black belt aikido instructor Tam Ha teaches self-defense
to students at Advance Beauty College during the outbreak of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Garden Grove, California, U.S.,
April 12, 2021. Picture taken April 12, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Mannequin heads used for hairstyling lessons are set aside and
students and martial arts instructors gather on an open floor plan
surrounded by mirrored salon-style work stations.
At the second session, Tam Ha, a 58-year-old aikido black belt,
demonstrated how to ward off a larger and more powerful attacker
long enough to get away. He taught countermoves that might send an
assailant careening to the ground, and how to deliver punches to
vulnerable areas.
"Both as an Asian American and as a woman in general, I felt like it
was very useful for defending myself," said Linda Tran, 21. "A lot
of us are really on edge, because you don't want to get attacked.
Mostly the older Asian Americans because they're kind of left
defenseless."
Nguyen was born in Vietnam, brought to the United States at age 1,
and raised in Garden Grove, site of the largest ethnic community of
Vietnamese outside Vietnam. Advance Beauty College is his family's
business.
Many Vietnamese settled in Garden Grove upon coming to the United
States after the Vietnam War in the 1970s. The city south of Los
Angeles has a population of 170,000 that is more than 40 percent
Asian, according to U.S. Census data.
The Nguyen family business, started by his parents, says it has
graduated 50,000 students over 35 years. It has two campuses with a
total 500 students - many of them Vietnamese women - and 50
instructors despite limited capacity due to social distancing rules.
Nguyen said his parents raised him to keep a low profile, but the
times require him to act against fear, hate, ignorance and violence.
Now his group is organizing activities such as a benefit concert to
fight anti-Asian violence. Last Friday, two days before the latest
white nationalist demonstration in Huntington Beach, it hired a
sky-writer to scroll "NO HATE" some 11,000 feet (3,300 meters) in
the sky.
"Growing up in a Vietnamese household, I was taught to be a good
immigrant, be a good refugee," Nguyen said.
"Unfortunately, that doesn't work."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Donna Bryson and Tom Hogue)
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