Then you need to move! As you know, I live in the far, far south of Texas, right on the Rio Grande. My son-in-law is Chinese. There are virtually no Asians in this part of the country. He is retired Air Force (24 years) who now works for the State of Texas as a Corrections Officer. He works at the juvenile facility with high school aged offenders, mostly hispanic.
One of the supervisors saw him at the end of the hall surrounded by teen aged boys and came charging out into the hall to help protect his officer. When he got there he realized the boys had never met an Asian man and were curious about him and his culture and were asking him questions and having a great time talking to him and learning about the place in China his parents came from and which he had visited a couple of time to see family still in China. They wanted him to say things in Chinese, and to talk about his favorite Chinese food, and how to use chopsticks!
My grandsons experience the same thing in Youth Group. The other kids are fascinated by these Chinese kids in the far south of Texas (they take after their dad, and look nothing like their mom, our daughter. In fact my daughter says she knows they are hers because she was there when they were born, but she can't figure out how all 3 of them can be exact clones of their dad with, apparently, no input from mom at all!).
Oddly enough I have found that the greater percentage of minorities in a community the less likely you are to encounter racism. Go figure.