Korean-American actors Daniel vs. Kim
Sister reveals about Atlanta shooting
“I’m running away from my brother’s car”

Daniel vs. Kim / Photo = Instagram
The younger sister of Korean-American actor Daniel Dae-Kim, 53, who is active in Hollywood, is also reported to have been racist.
Daniel vs. Kim, who appeared on CNN’s’Quomo Prime Time’ on the 17th (local time), confessed that her younger sister was also a victim of a racial discrimination crime in 2015.
According to Kim’s explanation, a man argued against his younger sister who was running near his home. He drove over and shouted,’Don’t go to the sidewalk’. Kim’s sister went up to India, but the man reversed the car and hit her sister.
Daniel vs. Kim recalled a painful memory, saying, “My younger brother said,’Did you hit me now?’ and the man backed up again and hit his running sister by car again to die.”
Daniel Dae Kim was born in Busan in 1968 and moved to the United States at the age of two. An actor who received a public eye for the role of Kwon Jin-soo in the American drama’Lost’.
He said earlier, “The race of the person who commits the crime is no more important than the simple fact that’if you act with hatred in your heart, you too are part of the problem’.” Silence is also a conspiracy.”
After the Atlanta serial shootings, which killed eight victims, including six Asian women, including Koreans, there is a campaign to stop the hatred of Asians.
Many Hollywood stars are vigorously raising their voices through social media. Korean actor and comedian Margaret Jo appealed, “I’m angry. This is terrorism. It’s a hate crime. Stop killing us.”
“I send my deep love to the American Asian community,” said Guinness Feltro. “You make our country better, and we love you.”
Kim Kardashian also posted the phrase’Stop Asian Hate’ on his Instagram that day and said, “It is heartbreaking to face the shocking story of daily violence against Asians, especially the elderly. Asians are also respected as human beings. It’s worth,” he wrote.
The American Academy Awards official tweeted, “Today we pause the celebration to show our respect for the lives of the eight who have gone away.” “To highlight the continuing increase in hate crimes against the Asian and Asian American communities. I paused for a while,” he said.
“As we continue our solidarity, we send strength, hope and support to the Asian-Pacific (AAPI) community, as well as condemn anti-Asian racism everywhere.”
Meanwhile, Atlanta police said that shooting shooter Robert Aaron Long, 21, said the incident was not racially motivated and that he had stated that he may have fallen into sex addiction. In response, the Korean Association of Los Angeles (LA) issued a statement and criticized that this case was a “obvious hate crime” and that seeing the suspect’s’sex addiction’ as a motive for the incident was distortion.
Reporter Kim Ye-rang [email protected]