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Cover Story

April 16, 2007
Tragedy At Virginia Tech
“We Are Hokies”
A Life Cut Short
Witness To Massacre
4-16-07
The Media And The Message
“Cho Seung-Hui” or “Seung-Hui Cho?”
Breaking The Silence
“He Has Made The World Weep”
Remembering the Fallen
Home > 2007 > May > Cover Story > “We Are Hokies”

“We Are Hokies”
In wake of massacre, KA students rally around the Virginia Tech community

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In the days following the Virginia Tech tragedy, Korean and Korean American communities across the nation united for a time of mourning and reflection, struggling to find solace amid a storm of questions and fears. At quickly organized vigils and church services, they shared sorrow for the 32 victims and their loved ones.

The gatherings also seemed to serve an added purpose: to regroup as a community. Virginia Tech had posed new questions and challenges to Korean Americans, including how to respond to a national tragedy when the killer had the same face as our own.

 

It was around 9:55 a.m. on April 16 when Virginia Tech junior Sara Hwang finished class and noticed several police cars on campus.

“There was someone telling students, ‘You have to stay in the building.’ But we didn’t think she was serious, so a lot of us just left,” recalls the 21-year-old biology major.

Hwang walked to War Memorial Hall, planning on getting in an early workout at the gym. She, along with 15 others, ended up getting locked in the building by campus security for three hours. Inside, the group struggled to connect the images of fear and horror on the TV news with their institution of higher learning.

“At that moment it didn’t seem like it was real,” says Hwang. “At first, the news reported that one person had passed away. But as we kept watching, within three hours, the number got all the way up to 32.”

Two days later, Hwang headed home at the urging of her parents. When she returned to the university the night before classes were to resume, she did not feel fearful, though her campus just a week earlier was scene to one of the most horrific shooting sprees in this country’s history. Instead, she felt relieved to be back in an environment where people could share in her experience and grief in the same way.

“[My family] wasn’t here when this happened,” she says. “They understand how tragic it was, but I guess I kind of enjoyed coming back to school because I have friends here, and I like being around people who were all on campus together when this happened. I feel like we’re more united now. I’m a true Hokie at heart.”

It’s a sentiment shared by others at Virginia Tech. Graduate student Seung-woo Lee, leader of the on-campus Korean student association, has fielded multiple calls from the media. His newfound responsibility as the voice of the school’s KA community has worn on him and the 35-year-old is tired of the correlations being made between Seung-Hui Cho’s act and his Korean roots.

“We are Hokies,” he emphasizes. “I don’t have any special feelings because he was Korean. I just feel sad. It happened on our campus — it could’ve happened somewhere else, but it happened on our campus.”

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