Pacific Citizen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypeBi-monthly newspaper
PublisherJapanese American Citizens League
Founded1929
Headquarters123 Astronaut Ellison S. Onizuka St., #206
Los Angeles, California 90012.  United States
Pacific Citizen
TypeBi-monthly newspaper
PublisherJapanese American Citizens League
Founded1929
Headquarters123 Astronaut Ellison S. Onizuka St., #206
Los Angeles, California 90012.  United States
Circulation30,000
WebsitePacificCitizen.org
Free online archivesDigital Archives at PacificCitizen.org

The Pacific Citizen (P.C.) is a national, award-winning semi-monthly newspaper based in Los Angeles, California, United States focused on covering Asian Pacific American (APA) news. It was founded in 1929 and is published by the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), the nation’s oldest and largest APA civil rights organization.

Founded over 90 years ago, the P.C. was initially called Nikkei Shimin (日系市民, Nikkei Shimin), meaning Japanese American Citizen. The publication was based in San Francisco, California.

The publication’s name was officially changed to Pacific Citizen in 1931, chosen in a national contest. When World War II broke out, 120,000 Japanese Americans were interned. To keep the publication running smoothly, the newspaper was moved to Salt Lake City, Utah. In Utah, editor Guyo Tajiri and Larry Tajiri were hired to run the then-weekly newspaper.[1]

Coverage during World War II included the chronicling of everyday life at the camps and the heroism of the Nisei (second generation Japanese American) soldiers. The Friends of the American Way nominated the P.C. for a Pulitzer Prize in 1946 for its journalism coverage. At war’s end in the early 1950s the P.C. returned to the West Coast to Los Angeles, California. On September 27, 1952 Tajiri put together his last P.C. newspaper as editor.[citation needed]

Redress coverage

Former Shin Nichibei staffer Harry K. Honda became editor when the newspaper moved to Los Angeles. Since its inception, the P.C. has been the meeting place for many well-known Japanese American journalists and community leaders like Bill Hosokawa, Togo Tanaka, Mike Masaoka, Bill Marutani and Saburo Kido.

The P.C. also covered the Redress Movement, which sought to give reparations to Japanese Americans, who were interned during World War II. The P.C. was there in the room, and mentioned in President Ronald Reagan speech as he signed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 granting Japanese Americans who were affected by the World War II internment an official apology letter and monetary compensation.

Today’s coverage

References

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