Terror
Summary
In this episode of One Million Neighbors from Axis Mundi Media, the realities of anti-refugee violence come into sharp focus through the story of Linda Nguyen, who arrived in Oregon as a child after the fall of Saigon. What should have been a new beginning was instead marked by harassment, isolation, and confusion, as she and other Southeast Asian refugees became targets of blame and resentment. From playground bullying to brutal persecution across communities in California and Texas, the episode traces how the aftermath of the Vietnam War, economic anxiety, and long-standing anti-Asian racism fueled a wave of hostility—sometimes erupting into deadly attacks and organized terror, including campaigns led by the Ku Klux Klan.
Yet even amid fear and injustice, Terror highlights the resilience of refugee communities and the importance of resistance. Stories like the Vietnamese Fishermen’s Association’s legal victory against the Klan reveal how refugees and their allies fought back using the tools of the American legal system. The episode also draws connections to the present, reminding listeners that anti-immigrant violence and fear continue to shape lives today. Ultimately, it raises urgent questions about responsibility, belonging, and moral courage: in a nation defined by both welcome and exclusion, what does it mean to stand with those who are most vulnerable—and what kind of society will we choose to become?
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