Stop Asian Hate Chicago Rally
Woman holds a sign and attends a rally to support stop AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) hate at the Logan Square Monument in Chicago, Saturday, March 20, 2021. A diverse crowd gathered to demand justice for the victims of Atlanta, Georgia spa shooting for an end to racism, xenophobia and misogyny. Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press
Stop Asian Hate Chicago Rally
Woman holds a sign and attends a rally to support stop AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) hate at the Logan Square Monument in Chicago, Saturday, March 20, 2021. A diverse crowd gathered to demand justice for the victims of Atlanta, Georgia spa shooting for an end to racism, xenophobia and misogyny. Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press

An Asian American student was stabbed multiple times in the head while waiting to get off a bus at Indiana University. The attack has yet to be called a hate crime, though the attacker reportedly targeted the victim because she was “Chinese.” It’s clear that anti-Asian violence continues even past the surge the U.S. saw in 2020. But what more needs to be done?

Reset discusses with a panel of Asian American activists and community members.

GUESTS: Abbey Eusebio, Anti-Hate Action Center manager for the Chinese American Service League

Ami Gandhi, former NAPAWF Chicago member and current NAPAWF Indiana member, senior counsel at Chicago Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights

Andrea Chu, Midwest organizing manager with Asian American Advancing Justice Chicago

Emily Etzkorn, graduate assistant for the University of Illinois Chicago’s Asian American Resource and Cultural Center

Stop Asian Hate Chicago Rally
Woman holds a sign and attends a rally to support stop AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) hate at the Logan Square Monument in Chicago, Saturday, March 20, 2021. A diverse crowd gathered to demand justice for the victims of Atlanta, Georgia spa shooting for an end to racism, xenophobia and misogyny. Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press
Stop Asian Hate Chicago Rally
Woman holds a sign and attends a rally to support stop AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) hate at the Logan Square Monument in Chicago, Saturday, March 20, 2021. A diverse crowd gathered to demand justice for the victims of Atlanta, Georgia spa shooting for an end to racism, xenophobia and misogyny. Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press

An Asian American student was stabbed multiple times in the head while waiting to get off a bus at Indiana University. The attack has yet to be called a hate crime, though the attacker reportedly targeted the victim because she was “Chinese.” It’s clear that anti-Asian violence continues even past the surge the U.S. saw in 2020. But what more needs to be done?

Reset discusses with a panel of Asian American activists and community members.

GUESTS: Abbey Eusebio, Anti-Hate Action Center manager for the Chinese American Service League

Ami Gandhi, former NAPAWF Chicago member and current NAPAWF Indiana member, senior counsel at Chicago Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights

Andrea Chu, Midwest organizing manager with Asian American Advancing Justice Chicago

Emily Etzkorn, graduate assistant for the University of Illinois Chicago’s Asian American Resource and Cultural Center