‘Je suis Chaolin’: why the Chinese in France are speaking up about violence and racism
Chinese migrants in Paris and its suburbs are fed up with crime and aggression towards their community, demanding more protection from the state
It was a winter evening in Aubervilliers. The inventory was done, and Jenny Chou was finishing her shift at a shoe store. As the bespectacled 24-year-old walked out on Avenue Victor Hugo, a young man grabbed her purse and ran.
Thefts were becoming alarmingly frequent in this Paris suburb in the past months, and Chinese storekeepers on the same avenue found themselves sharing nearly identical experiences of being robbed, and attacked physically or verbally.
Many shared Chou’s sentiment: “They only attack the Chinese. Why the Chinese?”
For several months now, Chou has avoided walking alone, and heads straight home after work.
“I made a complaint, nothing happened. In China, it’s much better. If someone commits a crime, something is done,” she opined in fluent French.
More than 100 cases of aggression against Chinese residents were reported since November in Aubervilliers alone, the association L’Amitié Chinoise En France said.