George Floyd’s death sparks soul-searching among Asian-Americans
- ‘Asian-Americans, have remained complicit in perpetuating anti-blackness and benefiting from white supremacy’

As anti-racism protests broke out across the United States, Viet Hoai Tran knew exactly what he wanted to write on his poster – “Yellow Peril Supports Black Power”.
“If we are talking about fighting for justice, for liberation, for change … all of us have to be part of this,” said the 27-year-old, who was born in Vietnam, but grew up in the US.
The death of George Floyd, a black man, in Minneapolis police custody sparked nationwide protests – and a sense of reckoning in the Asian-American community, which has historically fraught, even violent, ties with African Americans.
In particular, the revelation that one of the officers charged over Floyd’s death, Tou Thao, is Hmong has caused many Asian-Americans to grapple with their community’s complicity.
“Yellow peril” is a racial slur articulating the centuries-old Western fear of an East Asian takeover that has been repurposed by Asian Americans in a show of solidarity with the black community.
“There’s a lot of anti-blackness in the AAPI community,” said Tran, referring to the Asian Americans and the US diaspora of Pacific Islanders.