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Posted: 2020-06-06T12:00:20Z | Updated: 2020-06-30T16:03:30Z

In the wake of the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, Asian American activists and social justice organizations have made renewed calls for solidarity and allyship with Black communities.

A deeper and often more difficult step for Asian Americans has been acknowledging and frankly discussing the anti-Blackness engrained in their own communities. But some are trying to begin that work.

Anti-Black racism in Asian communities is tied to the model minority myth, which white political leaders, particularly in response to the civil rights movement in the 1960s, wielded in order to drive a wedge between Asian Americans and other people of color . Many Asian immigrants internalized that mentality, operating under the false impression that being a good immigrant could help them assimilate into whiteness and align themselves with white people.

If we hope to end this violence all of it we must reckon with our complicity in this tangled web of white supremacy, and our responsibility to dismantle it.

- Densho

At its absolute worst, this dynamic has resulted in high-profile incidents of violence. Following the Los Angeles police brutally beating Rodney King, Korean shop owner Soon Ja Du shot and killed Black teenager Latasha Harlins, the two catalysts for the 1992 LA riots.

One of the former Minneapolis police officers involved in Floyds death was a Hmong American named Tou Thao who, as seen in the widely viewed video footage, did nothing to stop white then-officer Derek Chauvin from killing Floyd. (On Wednesday, Thao and two other former officers were charged with aiding and abetting murder .)

It takes a lot of work to untangle and eradicate this, acknowledging that Asian Americans have faced their own racism throughout history including during the current COVID-19 crisis but have also sometimes instigated anti-Black racism, as many activists and social justice organizations have pointed out in recent weeks.

The anti-Asian violence being directed at our communities during this pandemic is inextricably linked to the anti-Black violence that allows the police to murder unarmed civilians like George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, that teaches the Amy Coopers of the world to weaponize their white tears to summon those same police, that teaches us to stay silent while those same police commit those same murders as if that will somehow protect us, said Densho, an organization that works to preserve the history of Japanese American incarceration during World War II, in a statement . If we hope to end this violence all of it we must reckon with our complicity in this tangled web of white supremacy, and our responsibility to dismantle it.

HuffPost spoke to a number of Asian Americans grappling with how to start these often painful and messy conversations with their family members. Many were younger Asian Americans who were born in the U.S. or immigrated here as children, trying to engage their older immigrant parents with varying results.

While some said Floyds death catalyzed the conversation, many said theyve been having these tough conversations for years, as they themselves have gotten older and started to interrogate this internalized anti-Blackness.

Its important to know that I personally was very racist as well. Like, I dont think any of us ever want to say the words in that format. But the truth is, if you harbor racism, you are racist in that moment, said Angeli Patel, who is Indian American. By college, she started to grapple with it, and after sort of confronting it myself, I didnt wait. I kind of just immediately started to confront my parents.