<Anchor> After the



Corona 19 pandemic, hate crimes targeting Asians have been continuing around the world.

There is also a movement to fight this kind of thing, and Pixar, a famous animation production company, has released an animation based on the love of a Korean grandmother for free, expressing its support for the Asian world.



Reporter Kim Kyung-hee reports.



<Reporter> He



says he doesn't like his gaze and stabs him with a weapon, pushes an elderly man on the road, and even beats a strong man.



Last week in the UK, a college instructor who was jogging was beaten just because he was Chinese.



A series of hate crimes targeting Asians have even organized a vigilante in Chinatown, Oakland, California.



[Cynthia Choi/Hate Crime Opposition Organization: We are overwriting the corona 19 pandemic as if it were the fault of Asian people.

Politicians are also spreading these accusations, encouraging attacks.] While the



US Department of Justice professed a federal investigation, soft power also came out.



Pixar, an American animation production company, has released two short animations featuring Asians for free.



These are works that talk about love and inclusion through Korean grandmothers and grandchildren, Filipino fathers and sons.



In particular, director Jang Woo-young, the second generation of Korean, who wrote and directed the short story <Wind>, which contains the sacrifice and love of a Korean grandmother, said that he would like to send support to them through his work in a period of hate crimes against Asians, especially the elderly.



The publishing house of the famous American picture book Doctor Seuss series has also decided to stop selling six books containing racist depictions, and efforts to combat hate crimes are growing.



(Video editing: Kim Joon-hee)