Updated March 18, 2021 at 1:42 PM ET

Asian American leaders said Thursday that the community was in "crisis" following shootings in the Atlanta area earlier this week that killed eight people, including six Asian women.

Authorities said it's too early to determine whether the suspect will be charged with a hate crime, but on Thursday, Rep. Judy Chu, D-Calif., said the gunman's targets "were no accident."

"What we know is that this day was coming," she said. "The Asian American community has reached a crisis point that cannot be ignored."

Chu was one of more than a dozen witnesses who testified before lawmakers Thursday on Capitol Hill in a hearing on discrimination and violence against Asian American people.

She and other Asian American lawmakers requested the hearing before the House Judiciary committee last month as they seek federal action in response to attacks on their communities during the pandemic that have ranged from verbal harassment to physical assault.

A surge in attacks

From last March to February of this year, the organization Stop AAPI Hate has documented at least 3,795 such attacks on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders since they began tracking hate incidents last year.

The surge of recent anti-Asian attacks has spanned the country. There was a 27-year-old man who was assaulted in Los Angeles last month and an 83-year-old woman who was punched and spat on in White Plains, N.Y., last week. And Asian American seniors have been targeted in California's Bay Area.

Stop AAPI Hate has identified Asian American women, youth and elders as particularly vulnerable groups. Almost 70% of the incidents they documented were reported by women.

Rep. Chu and others Thursday said former President Donald Trump "stoked" anti-Asian hate by using phrases like "kung flu" and "China plague" in order to shift blame away from his response to the coronavirus pandemic.

In opening remarks, Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, said he was concerned that the hearing was about "policing of rhetoric," but Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., and other witnesses pushed back on his comments.

"Your president and your party and your colleagues can talk about issues with any other country that you want," Meng said. "But you don't have to do it by putting a bullseye on the back of Asian Americans across this country, on our grandparents, on our kids."

The fear "is very real"

On Tuesday evening, as news spread that six of the victims killed in the Atlanta area were of Asian descent, Manjusha Kulkarni, Stop AAPI Hate's co-founder, said the violence in Atlanta was an "unspeakable tragedy" for Asian Americans "already reeling from high levels of racial discrimination."

"I just had to take a pause," Kulkarni said, "because this is now sort of that next level."

Kulkarni was among the witnesses who spoke Thursday on Capitol Hill. Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois and U.S. Reps. Doris Matsui, D-Calif.; Young Kim, R-Calif.; and Michelle Steel, R-Calif also testified.

Other witnesses included civil rights advocates like John Yang, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice, and the actor Daniel Dae Kim.

"What happens right now and over the course of the coming months will send a message for generations to come as to whether we matter," Kim said Thursday. "You may consider us statistically insignificant now, but one more fact that has no alternative is that we are the fastest-growing racial demographic in the country."

Yang said Wednesday that while there are a lot of unknowns about the Atlanta suspect's motives, the attack emphasizes the importance of Thursday's hearing.

"What we do know is that the fear, the anger and the grief in our Asian American community is very real," he said. "I want to make sure we give voice to that."

Along with advocating for resources for victims and their communities, including mental health services, Yang said he aimed to ask lawmakers to publicly condemn the racist attacks.

He added that in order to prevent further incidents, there will need to be an educational effort to combat pervasive racial stereotypes, including "the model minority myth, the perpetual foreigner myth and in particular with respect to what happened in Atlanta, the sexualization of Asian women."

Kulkarni of Stop AAPI Hate also said she would advocate Thursday for federal funding for local programs that provide direct support and case management to victims of hate incidents. She and Yang both said they would like to see a more developed federal civil rights infrastructure that would address discrimination that doesn't rise to the level of a crime.

Biden administration outreach

The House Judiciary hearing is one piece of a larger federal response that Asian American leaders have been pushing for under an administration they see as more receptive to their concerns than Trump's.

On Wednesday, President Biden said he was "making no connection" between the recent attacks on Asian Americans and the shootings in Atlanta and would wait to say more until an investigation from the FBI and Justice Department is completed.

"Whatever the motivation here, I know that Asian Americans are very concerned," he said from the Oval Office. "As you know I've been speaking about the brutality against Asian Americans for the last couple months and I think it is very, very troublesome."

In January, Biden signed a memorandum condemning racism and xenophobia against AAPI communities and in his first primetime address last week, he called out "vicious hate crimes against Asian Americans, who've been attacked, harassed, blamed and scapegoated."

Jo-Ann Yoo, executive director of the Asian American Federation, attended a White House listening session for AAPI leaders earlier this month. She said that when Trump was in office, she would watch for a "spike in attacks" when someone from the White House used the term "China virus." In comparison, Yoo said, the tone of Biden's White House listening session was "surreal."

"You can't have one meeting and say O.K., we heard you, we're done," she said. "But I think we walked away feeling like, 'wow, this is different.'"

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Wednesday that Biden's domestic policy team and the Department of Justice are continuing to host listening sessions like the one Yoo attended.

On Friday, Biden and Vice President Harris will travel to Atlanta to meet with Asian American leaders there, postponing a political event that had been planned in the state.

Congressional action

Rep. Meng and Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, are also pushing for congressional action on violence targeting Asian Americans. Last week, they reintroduced a bill that would designate a Justice Department employee to take on an expedited review of hate crimes related to the pandemic.

The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act would also encourage state and local law enforcement agencies to establish online reporting of incidents in multiple languages, expand education campaigns and issue guidance on mitigating "racially discriminatory language" in describing the pandemic.

But Yoo and Kulkarni both warned before Thursday's hearing that depending on law enforcement would not solve what they see as a larger racism problem.

"People are saying we need cops, but a lot of what is happening isn't criminal," Yoo said.

According to Kulkarni, at least 90% of cases reported to Stop AAPI Hate over the last year were hate incidents rather than hate crimes. She said although these incidents, like being verbally harassed on the street or discriminated against at work, might not qualify as hate crimes, they "really do impact the lives of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders."

"There's an emphasis on the hate crimes piece," Kulkarni said. "But [policy makers] just won't be addressing most of what's happening to Asian Americans if that's all they do."

AAAJ's Yang sees Thursday's hearing as a chance to convey the severity with which the recent attacks have impacted Asian American communities.

"I hope that because of this testimony [lawmakers] will have the courage to speak out against the violence and to give visibility and protection to the Asian American community," he said. "I hope they understand why what's happening now has been so deeply traumatizing."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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