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		Tears and outrage: Victims of Georgia spa killings remembered by loved 
		ones
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		 [March 20, 2021] 
		By Rich McKay and Alexandra Ulmer 
 ACWORTH, Ga. (Reuters) - Clutching a 
		bouquet of flowers, Jami Webb wept alongside her fiance Kevin Chen at a 
		makeshift memorial set up in front of Young's Asian Massage for the 
		victims of this week's shooting rampage at three Atlanta-area spas.
 
 Most of those who stopped and prayed in front of the flowers, burning 
		candles and signs condemning racism and violence were strangers to the 
		eight victims. But for Webb, 29, and her family, the visit was personal 
		and deeply painful.
 
 Her father, Michael, is the former husband of the spa's owner, Xiaojie 
		"Emily" Tan, one of the six Asian women killed when a gunman opened fire 
		on Tuesday.
 
 "Today is about taking care of family business," Michael Webb, 64, said 
		on Friday, declining a reporter's request for an interview.
 
		
		 
		
 Tan was a "smart, hardworking businesswoman," according to her friend 
		Greg Hynson, 54. Originally from China, she was devoted to her business 
		but loved to travel when she could. She would have turned 50 this week.
 
 Hynson met Tan six years ago, when the former competitive weight lifter 
		sought out massages for his sore back. "If I found somebody good I'd 
		stick with them," he said. "She was one of those people."
 
 'HEART OF GOLD'
 
 Relatives and friends of some of the other victims shared memories of 
		their loved ones and expressed their grief in online posts.
 
 "She had a heart of GOLD. She didn't care of your race, color, or 
		religion. If you needed help, she was there," read a Facebook post by 
		Cristy Lynn McGouirk, who identified herself as a cousin of Delaina 
		Ashley Yaun Gonzalez, who died at Young's Asian Massage in Acworth.
 
 Gonzalez had gone there with her husband on a date night, McGouirk said 
		in another post. The husband, Mario, survived the attack and is 
		"completely devastated."
 
 "They were on a date night, and just wanted to relax. In a blink of an 
		eye, she was taken from him," she wrote.
 
 The suspect, 21-year-old Atlanta-area resident Robert Aaron Long, has 
		been jailed on charges of murdering eight people, six of whom were women 
		of Asian descent.
 
 Hyun Jung Grant was one of those shot at Gold Spa in Atlanta. Her son, 
		Randy Park, set up a GoFundMe page to help raise money for himself and 
		his brother. The loss of their mother left them alone in the United 
		States.
 
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			Kevin Chen consoles his fiancee Jami Webb outside Young's Asian 
			Massage following the deadly shootings in Acworth, Georgia, U.S. 
			March 19, 2021. Webb is the daughter of Xiaojie Tan, the owner of 
			the spa who was killed in the shootings. REUTERS/Bita Honarvar 
            
			 
            "She was a single mother who dedicated her whole life to providing 
			for my brother and I," Park wrote. "She was one of my best friends 
			and the strongest influence on who we are today. Losing her has put 
			a new lens on my eyes on the amount of hate that exists in our 
			world."
 As of early Friday evening, Park's GoFundMe had raised nearly $1.5 
			million in donations, far more than its $20,000 goal.
 
 'I DON'T FEEL SAFE'
 
 The makeshift memorials that took shape outside Young's and the two 
			other spas in Atlanta resemble hundreds of others that have sprung 
			up across the United States in recent years to honor the victims of 
			the country's epidemic of gun violence.
 
 The Atlanta shrines have also become places to pay tribute to 
			victims of a nationwide surge in anti-Asian violence and harassment 
			that many say has been largely ignored until Tuesday's bloodshed.
 
 Among the group of well-wishers who stopped by Young's Asian Massage 
			was Tracey Xu, who described herself as a business professional who 
			moved to the United States from China 24 years ago to attend school, 
			and decided to stay.
 
 "We're sad to the point of breaking over this," Xu said. "I moved to 
			America because it was the beacon of hope to the world. I love both 
			China and America, but this is crazy."
 
            
			 
			Xu said she has felt an undercurrent of racial hatred against Asians 
			since she moved to the country, but never like now. "It's now all 
			out in the open, people have become emboldened," she said.
 Xu attributed the worsening climate to former President Donald 
			Trump's attacks on China and his labeling of the COVID-19 pandemic 
			as the "China virus."
 
 "Many Asians don't feel safe here any more. I don't feel safe, not 
			like before."
 
 (Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and Alexandra Ulmer in San 
			Francisco; Writing by Maria Caspani; Editing by Frank McGurty and 
			Daniel Wallis)
 
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