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  • A smattering of firecrackers, the odd lion dance and a lone drummer: New York's Chinatown turned the page on a year it was ravaged by the pandemic and virus stigmatization with subdued celebrations Friday. No annual parade or large family gatherings greeted the Lunar New Year. Just relief at the passing of the Year of Rat and hope that the Year of the Ox will bring a turnaround in fortunes. "Of course I'm happy the year has finished," says Jenny Li, as a slow trickle of shoppers stop at her gift store to buy lanterns, tubes of confetti and red envelopes synonymous with Chinese New Year. Li has seen takings at her shop plummet to a quarter of what they were before coronavirus struck the Big Apple almost exactly a year ago. "It was tough times. I hope for the new year that everything goes back to normal and everybody gets healthy," the 48-year-old told AFP. The pandemic has closed thousands of businesses and restaurants across New York City, where Covid-19 has killed more than 28,000 people. Nowhere has the pain been felt more acutely than in Chinatown, where the economic toll was compounded by misunderstandings of the virus and racism. As Covid-19, which former president Donald Trump routinely called the "Chinese virus," spread from Wuhan around the world in early 2020, New York's bustling Chinatown turned ghost town almost overnight. "Even before the economic impact and the crisis really hit New York City, there was a lot of xenophobia and just fear about," recalls Olympia Moy, co-founder of the non-profit Think! Chinatown. "It just like snowballed into a really bad situation." This week, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted an article about a massive spike in hate crimes against Asian Americans across the United States. "We CANNOT allow bigotry and hate to divide us," he tweeted. Sixteen-year-old Irina Wong echoed that sentiment as she welcomed in the New Year with her parents and younger brother after traveling from New Jersey to Chinatown. "I hope that this coming year, whether Covid becomes better or not, we can all learn to rely on each other and I wish there would be less division throughout the country," she told AFP. The pandemic closed several stores and left many more fighting for survival in this historic district in Lower Manhattan. "Usually at this time of year all the restaurants are full," says restaurant manager Alex Chan, pointing to empty tables up and down the street. George Ma, the 55-year-old owner of a gift shop says he is seeing "a little bit of improvement" with the rollout of vaccines. There was further cause for optimism, Friday, with the new year coinciding with the partial reopening of indoor dining in New York. Restaurants are now allowed to sit customers inside at 25 percent capacity. "It will make a big difference," said Chan, who nevertheless doesn't expect Chinatown to really pick up until April at the earliest. pdh/ft
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  • In New York's Chinatown, pandemic and stigma dulls New Year cheer
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