Bay artists and skaters gather in San Francisco and Oakland to support Asian communities

The Bay Area on Saturday with paintbrushes and posters, roller skates and skateboards showed support for Asian communities who were the victims of an increasing number of hate crimes.

In San Francisco, several hundred people filled the upper level of Portsmouth Square in Chinatown for an art event in the community, designed to give Asian Americans and supporters a safe place to express their sadness and anger. Many in the crowd displayed handmade signs: “Respect everyone’s grandmother,” “Hate is a virus,” and “Asians belong.”

Others grabbed pots of bright watercolor paint and brushes and painted butterflies and messages of peace, concern and resistance on the plaza to counter the ugly violence that has erupted across the country and the Bay Area. The crowd toured on their toes around the freshly painted messages.

Corri Uyeda, 29, of San Francisco, painted a bright blue “Hapa Pride” and used the word for a person with a mixed Asian heritage. She said she attended the event because she has the need to stand up.

A Chinatown resident stands with the San Francisco Asian American and Pacific Islander community during a rally in Portsmouth Square in San Francisco.

A Chinatown resident stands with the San Francisco Asian American and Pacific Islander community during a rally in Portsmouth Square in San Francisco.

Mike Kai Chen / Special to The Chronicle

“I’m just sick of people being beaten in the streets like our grandparents,” Uyeda said. ‘If someone who’s been taught to grow up to keep a head, do not make noise, I’m tired of it. We need to start showing up for our people. ”

Uyeda recently joined a security patrol and neighborhood watch in Chinatown.

On top of a raised planter in a corner of the park, speakers encouraged the community to lean on each other and pay attention.

Sasanna Yee, one of the organizers, spoke about the pain she has suffered since her 89-year-old grandmother, Yik Oi Huang, was beaten in 2019 at Visitacion Valley Playground. She died in 2020 from her injuries, her family said.

“I always show up to be with the community for healing,” she said. “I know I can not handle this pain alone.”

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