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John Y. Tateishi
John
Tateishi, who has been involved with Asian American communities
for over twenty-five years, gained national prominence in 1978 when
he launched a national campaign to seek redress for Japanese Americans
interned in U.S. detention camps during WWII. As the National Redress
Director of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), Mr. Tateishi
crafted the legislative and public affairs strategies of the campaign
that successfully culminated in 1988 with an apology from the President
and Congress and monetary redress for the victims of the internment.
After leaving the JACL, he founded Tateishi/Shinoda and Associates,
a management and public affairs consulting firm in San Francisco
with a subsidiary in Dallas, Texas, and continued as an advocate
of Asian American and civil rights. In 1999, he accepted the position
of National Executive Director of the Japanese American Citizens
League, the nations oldest and largest Asian American civil
rights organization, to undertake the challenge of shepherding the
seventy-three year old organization into the new millennium.
Mr. Tateishis
leadership in the redress campaign led him to be the subject of
a television documentary by the BBC in England and a special two-hour
documentary by NHK television in Japan. He has on numerous occasions
appeared on national network television and radio, and has appeared
before public audiences throughout the country. He is the author
of And Justice for All (Univ. of Washington Press), an oral history
of the World War II internment of Japanese Americans, and a contributing
author to Last Witnesses (St. Martins Press), a collection
of essays by the children of the WWII internment camps. He was a
Senior Fellow at the UCLA School of Public Policy and Social Research
for the 2001-2002 academic year, and among his board positions,
is a trustee of the newly formed campus of the University of California
at Merced.
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