John Tateishi

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John Tateishi
Born1939
Los Angeles, California
EmployerJapanese American Citizens League
MovementReparations for Japanese-Americans

John Tateishi (born 1939) is the former redress director of the Japanese American Citizens League and was a key figure in the campaign for reparations for the Internment of Japanese Americans.[1]

Life

Tateishi was born in

Pearl Harbor attack, and with his family was forced to move to the Manzanar center for the duration of the war as part of the enforcement of Executive Order 9066. Tateishi was key to the 1978 launch of the campaign.[2]

At University of California, Berkeley he studied English literature and later did graduate studies at University of California, Davis. He took a teaching position at the City College of San Francisco and became involved with the Japanese American Citizens League in 1975.[3]

In 1978, he became the chair of the National Committee for Redress and helped guide the campaign. He resigned from the city college in 1981 to fully focus on the campaign, and served as the principal lobbyist for it through his position as the redress director. Tateishi left the campaign two years before the Civil Liberties Act of 1988.[4]

He rejoined the organization as national executive director in 1999, and focused on criticizing the Bush administration's handling of the post 9/11 crisis.[1]

Books

  • And Justice for All: An Oral History of the Japanese American Detention Camps – March 1, 1999
  • Redress: The Inside Story of the Successful Campaign for Japanese American Reparations – March 10, 2020

References

  1. ^ a b Rosario, Isabella (2020-03-24). "The Unlikely Story Behind Japanese Americans' Campaign For Reparations". NPR. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  2. ^ Rosario, Isabella (2020-03-24). "The Unlikely Story Behind Japanese Americans' Campaign For Reparations". NPR. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  3. OCLC 1112140632.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
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  4. ^ "First Person: John Tateishi's Long Fight for 'Redress' and Justice for Japanese Americans". KQED. 16 February 2022. Retrieved 2022-04-07.