Asian American Business Leaders and Public Figures Denounce Atlanta Shootings, Condemn 'Deliberate' AttacksAmid a disturbing surge of biased violence against the Asian American community, everyone from small-business owners to advocacy organizations and celebrities are desperately urging the public to end the hate.

ByJustin Chan

In the wake ofthe Atlanta shootingsthat left eight people, six of whom were Asian women, dead on Tuesday, Asian American business leaders came together to decry the increasing number of hate crimes against the community.

On Wednesday, Ascend, a nonprofit Pan Asian organization for business professionals,released a statement on Twitterin response to the tragedy reading, "We're deeply saddened by the news of Atlanta violence and growing number of deliberate attacks against Asians across the nation. We condemn these attacks and stand in solidarity with the Asian American community in Atlanta and across the US to #stopasianhate."

Related:How Should You Be Talking With Employees About Racism?

With more than 18 professional chapters and 40-plus student chapters in both the U.S. and Canada, Ascend is one of the largest Pan-Asian organizations that serves Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) businesspeople. Gold House, a nonprofit collective of Asian Pacific Islander (API) entrepreneurs, also urged the public to support the API community.

"We want you to grieve for these 8 people," the organizationtweetedthe night of the shootings. "We want you to check in on your API friends and neighbors. But we also want you to know that we're fired up and are actively planning tonight. When life gets tough, we get tougher. More to come."

Georgia officials initially declined to call the shootings a hate crime, asserting that the investigation is still pending. At a press conference, Cherokee County public information officer Capt. Jay Baker suggested that the suspect, who claimed to have been motivated by his sex addiction,had "a really bad day."Baker was widely criticized for minimizing the epidemic of violence against Asian-Americans, who havebeen victims of nearly 4,000 reported hate crimessince the pandemic started.

Frustrated, public figures such as fashion designer Prabal Gurung persisted in denouncing the shootings and parallel violence. "Enough is enough," Gurungtweeted on Wednesday.“是的,我们悲伤,我们想让你悲伤with us for these eight lives lost and countless others. We want you to feel our pain and the pain of many innocents elders, women and our people from the AAPI community who have been attacked and harmed."

In a lengthy Instagram post,restaurateur and film director Eddie Huangechoed Gurung's sentiments, writing, "This was a coordinated attack on multiple Asian businesses with 6 Asian victims. Stand with us, speak up with us, and if there is any humanity in you, recognize that our pain is yours as well. No one should be targeted and murdered because you don't like the color of their skin, PERIOD."

和反映提升的担忧,亚洲业务啊wners across the country told CNN thatthey now feel particularly vulnerable."I have 18 employees, and I have run my salon for 25 years. I am scared," one unidentified nail salon owner from Long Island shared. "My husband told me that no matter how long I will live in the United States, I will never be seen as an American because of my Asian face."

The victims who died in Tuesday's attack have been identified as Xiaojie Tan, Daoyou Feng, Delaina Yaun, Paul Andre Michels, Hyun J. Grant, Soon C. Park, Suncha Kim and Yong A. Yue. One man, Elcias Hernandez-Ortiz, survived.

Wavy Line
Justin Chan

Entrepreneur Staff

News Writer

Justin Chan is a news writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, he was a trending news editor at Verizon Media, where he covered entrepreneurship, lifestyle, pop culture, and tech. He was also an assistant web editor atArchitectural Record, where he wrote on architecture, travel, and design. Chan has additionally written forForbes,Reader's Digest,Time Out New York,HuffPost,Complex, andMic.He is a 2013 graduate of Columbia Journalism School, where he studied magazine journalism. Follow him on Twitter at@jchan1109

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