On January 21, two years after Seung-Hui Cho’s Virginia Tech shooting rampage left 32 dead and more injured, the agriculture-focused school suffered yet another gruesome incident. This time, when police first responders arrived at an off-campus student housing diner, police found doctoral candidate Haiyang Zhu, a Chinese national, holding a kitchen knife in one hand and the victim Xin Yang’s severed head in the other.
Little information on the circumstances leading to the incident is available while police are continuing to investigate the murder. The little information available does however mention Zhu’s recent financial woes from poor investments in the stock market. As a graduate student, fellow teachers and students attested to Zhu’s sociability and friendliness while expressing shock and awe over the incident. Yang, having arrived from China just weeks earlier on January 8 to study accounting met Zhu as part of Virginia Tech’s international program that pairs first year international students with mentors to better acclimate students to the campus.
When I first read the story on the Washington Post, I immediately thought, oh no, the few Asians at Virginia Tech are going to feel the brunt of social backlash after Cho and Zhu’s – both Asians – crimes. With emotions still strong over the Cho shootings, coupled with the small student body of Asians (1,934 out of 28,259 students identify themselves as Asian according to VA Tech’s website) emotionally-driven irrational locals may just identify the Asian coincidence for correlation. Just screening through the story’s comments on the Washington Post, a large part of responses to the story followed some strange logic to explain the murder.
barrysmith1:
In China, it is considered an insult to be rejected by a person of the opposite sex. The young man probably felt “dishonered” by this person and had to find a means to get back his honor. In the Oriental culture this is a common way of attempting to get ones honor back.Source: The Washington Post Article, The Comments
Right barrysmith1, just like all those “authentic” Chinese meals you’ve had at P.F. Chang’s and Samurai movies you watched, we all commit suicide when we’re shamed. Part of the “mystery” of the Orient just highlights the lack of knowledge the West has about Asian cultures. Add the mystique created by film that dramatizes aspects of Asian cultures unfamiliar to most Westerners, ignorance on Asian cultures only becomes amplified.
The recent incidents at Virginia Tech are tragic and I wish all families involved in the matter the best, but my hope is the public knows better and not believe a simple coincidence that both perpetrators are Asian that being Asian has anything to do with this.


