On March 16, the nation was forced to pay attention when the hateful rhetoric, harassment and assaults against Asian Americans culminated in the murder of eight people, including six women of Asian descent in Atlanta, Georgia.

From the extortion and violence against Chinese laborers in the 1850s to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II — an incidence of personal pain and significance for my family, as my mother was interned during her senior year of high school — the oppression of Asian Americans runs deep even in a state that prides itself as a bastion of enlightenment. We’ve seen it in the persecution of Filipino American workers and the targeting of Southeast Asian refugees in the 1989 Cleveland Elementary School massacre that set the stage for modern school shooting incidents that have become almost commonplace. More recently, we’ve seen hatred and ignorance result in violence against Sikhs and Muslims of Asian descent after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. And now in 2021, the toxic cocktail of racism and aggression that afflicts much of American history has gained additional potency in the most heinous form of anti-Asian violence.

As home to the highest concentration of Asian Americans in the U.S., California and its public schools have a particular responsibility to create welcoming and inclusive school cultures that recognize the diversity of this population and provide targeted supports to help students succeed in academic, social and civic life. More than that, we have a responsibility as human beings to acknowledge past wrongs, not only as a means of atonement but as the foundation to building a better and more equitable future for ourselves and our children. It’s high time that the challenges, sacrifices and oppression Asian Americans faced in years gone by and still encounter today are recognized and addressed in meaningful ways. This is not a courtesy or a gift, but a requirement if we wish to uphold the aspirational ideal of America, stamp out hatred and create the conditions for an empathy, respect and shared understanding that extend to every member of this nation.