The Times podcast: Why we forget U.S. violence toward Chinatowns
![A plaque titled "Chinese Massacre" inlaid in a sidewalk](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/e102965/2147483647/strip/true/crop/2800x1838+0+0/resize/1200x788!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F0c%2F32%2Ff9ec4bb54f3d8e08ec41eaa92535%2Fla-photos-1staff-859012-et-monument-chinese-massacre6-mam.jpg)
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This fall, a commemoration in downtown Los Angeles marked the 150th anniversary of when a mob lynched 18 Chinese men and boys — one of the biggest such killings in American history.
The recent memorial comes in a year when many similar remembrances have bloomed across the United States. Anti-Asian hate crimes have soared during the pandemic, but that has also spurred an interest in learning the long, and long-hidden, history of such bigotry.
Host: Gustavo Arellano
Guest: L.A. Times columnist Frank Shyong
More reading:
History forgot the 1871 Los Angeles Chinese massacre, but we’ve all been shaped by its violence
L.A.’s memorial for 1871 Chinese Massacre will mark a shift in how we honor history
The racist massacre that killed 10% of L.A.’s Chinese population and brought shame to the city
White residents burned this California Chinatown to the ground. An apology came 145 years later
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