2002
PASSING OF YUJI ICHIOKA
Yuji
Ichioka, a UCLA historian and community activist who coined the
term "Asian American" in the late 1960s to advance the rationale for
bringing diverse Asian groups together, has died of cancer in Los Angeles.
He was 66.
A founder
of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center in 1969, Ichioka was considered
by many to be the nation's foremost authority on Japanese American history.
A man of many dimensions, the San
Francisco-born scholar was known not only for his pursuit of social
justice and research to recover the "buried past" of the early Japanese
settlers, but also for his zest for life: playing basketball, eating,
drinking and traveling.
Ichioka
mastered Japanese to tackle the original sources of immigrant life,
such as diaries, letters and old newspapers. His seminal work, "Issei:
The World of the First Generation Japanese Immigrants, 1885-1924," won
the 1989 U.S. History Book Award of the National Assn. for Asian American
Studies.
Ichioka's
contributions in compiling the Japanese American Research Project Collection
at UCLA has made it the nation's largest and most significant historical
archives on Japanese Americans.
His many articles and two of his books, "A Buried Past" and "A Buried
Past II," provided the foundation for Japanese American studies.
In the 1960s, when people of Asian ancestry totaled fewer than 1 million,
compared to nearly 11.9 million in the 2000 census, the idea of Chinese,
Japanese, Filipinos and Koreans joining together for a shared political
purpose was unheard of. And the proposition that Asians needed to forge
an alliance with blacks, Latinos and Native Americans to work on a common
agenda was even stranger.
Ichioka created the first inter-ethnic pan-Asian American political
group and coined the term "Asian American" to frame a new self-defining
political lexicon. Before that, people of Asian ancestry were generally
called Oriental or Asiatic.
His role in creating the academic discipline was a logical outgrowth
of his commitment to teach histories that weren't part of the mainstream
curriculum.
More than 120 years after the first Japanese immigrants came, Ichioka
stands out as the researcher who documented and analyzed the Japanese
American experience from the immigrants' perspective. He gathered his
materials over many years by talking families into turning over from
their garages and attics dusty trunks and boxes left by their ancestors.
Ichioka's firsthand experience with racism influenced his outlook on
social justice. His family was interned during World War II. He also
lived among blacks in Berkeley, and picked fruit alongside Mexicans
in the Central Valley.
After undergraduate studies at UCLA, he earned a master's degree at
UC Berkeley and did graduate work at Columbia, but decided not to pursue
a doctorate because he thought it was a "waste of time."
For 33 years, Ichioka was senior researcher at the Asian American Studies
Center and an adjunct professor in the history department.
In a modern-day "Alien Land Law" dispute in which the San Francisco
YWCA claimed sole title to a historic building erected in the 1920s
in the city's Japantown, Ichioka uncovered a crucial 80-year-old diary
proving that the property was actually held in trust by the YWCA for
the benefit of the Japanese American community.
His research showed that the San Francisco YWCA merely held "paper title"
to circumvent laws barring Asian immigrants from owning real estate,
Tamaki said.
Emma Gee was Ichioka's wife of more than 25 years. In addition to his
wife, Ichioka is survived by his mother, Sei, and brothers Eddie and
Victor, all of the San Francisco Bay Area; and sisters Pat S. Traylor
of La Jolla and Yowko Richardson of Portland, Ore.