Editor's Note: As Asian Pacific American Heritage Month comes
to a close, we republish a selection from a series of leadership profiles
developed by the defunct site PoliticalCircus.com in May 2002.
By Andrew Li-ren Wang
©2002 PoliticalCircus.com
May 20, 2002
The career of Phil Tajitsu Nash is proof-positive that many roads can lead to
the same destination. He is guided by a deeply held belief in social justice, a
philosophy he has parlayed into a diverse career as a lawyer, lobbyist,
activist, columnist, professor, and political strategist.
Mr. Nash was born in New York City in 1956 and at an early age moved to Maywood,
New Jersey, where he grew up. His father, a 13th-generation Irish-English
American, was a teacher whose forebears had founded the city of New Haven,
Connecticut. His mother, a second-generation Japanese American whose family had
experienced firsthand the hardship of internment, was a teacher and a nurse.
From early childhood, they taught Phil and his siblings to cherish both Asian
and European cultures and to understand that both heritages were part of a
larger, eclectic American culture. They also instilled in their children an
appreciation of the diversity of American people. Mr. Nash recalls that as a
youngster his parents drove him to nearby Hackensack, New Jersey to swim at a
pool with African American and Latino children so that he would interact with
children from different backgrounds. It was in this diverse environment of
Northern New Jersey that Mr. Nash's sense of social awareness first took root.
The events that most profoundly shaped Mr. Nash's convictions and set him on his
current path occurred several years before his birth. His mother, Yoneko Tajitsu
Nash, was taken from her home in Seattle as a teenager and held at an internment
camp near Hunt, Idaho for three months during World War II. Her parent,
unfortunately, were interned for over two years. As a youngster, Phil heard
countless stories of these experiences from both his mother and his maternal
grandparents.
As a teenager and in his time as a college student at New York University in the
mid-1970s, Mr. Nash's personal philosophy matured as he made sense of the
lessons he had learned earlier in life. From childhood he learned that Americans
come from myriad combinations of cultural and economic backgrounds and that
though America is a land of opportunities, there are still inequalities that
require rectifying. From his mother's internment experiences in World War II he
learned that without political empowerment and activism, civil liberties and
social justice are vulnerable to attack from those who do not value such
virtues.
Mr. Nash's legal career started before he earned a J.D. degree, while he was a
law student at Rutgers University. During his time there, the law school was
sued for its affirmative action admissions policies. The plaintiff was a white
applicant who believed he had been rejected for admission because of his race.
Mr. Nash became involved with the Asian American Legal Defense and Education
Fund (AALDEF) and worked to defend the school's policies. In the process, he
gained a familiarity with civil procedure that would have been unattainable in
any classroom. After finishing law school, Mr. Nash went to work at the
Education Law Center in Newark, New Jersey, where his caseload consisted
primarily of interpreting school finance law. While there, he also gained
experience working bilingual education and disability cases on a pro bono basis.
From there, Mr. Nash moved to New York City where he served as staff attorney
for AALDEF and provided legal services to the Japanese American Redress
Movement. While in New York, he also worked at the District Council 37 Division
of Municipal Employee Legal Services on family services cases. There, he had the
opportunity to travel to the five boroughs, counseling city employees whom could
not otherwise afford legal representation.
In 1984, realizing that he valued the practice of law as a means to justice as
opposed to an end unto itself, Mr. Nash decided to take his career in a new
direction.
That same year, while still practicing law, he began teaching Asian American
history at Yale University. By 1986, Mr. Nash was teaching first-year law
courses at City University of New York (CUNY) and had become a faculty member at
NYU in the Department of Metropolitan Studies and helped to establish an Asian
American Studies program at the university. Two years later, he had moved to
Washington, D.C. to teach at the Georgetown University Law Center, where he
remained for several years. Mr. Nash currently teaches Asian American Studies at
the University of Maryland and attributes his teaching philosophy to Paulo
Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed, which emphasizes, among other theories on
education, that learning, both by the student and the teacher, is most
effectively accomplished through dialog and interaction.
Through his time as a lawyer and professor, Mr. Nash's columns have regularly
appeared in local, regional and national publications, in print and on the
Internet. His first experience as a writer was as a columnist for the New York
Nichibei. The Nichibei, an English-language newspaper founded by Mr. Nash's
maternal grandfather, was a source for news and articles on the Japanese
American Redress Movement. As a writer, Mr. Nash published a weekly column
called Inter-Changes. He also served as interim editor for a time, while the
regular editor took time off for personal reasons. Since 1998, Mr. Nash has
written Washington Journal, a weekly column on Washington politics as they
relate to Asian Americans that appears in the print and online editions of Asian
Week. He has also written several editorials that were published in the
Washington Post.
In his current career, Mr. Nash and his wife, Emilienne Ireland, are principles
of Science Writers, Inc., a company that develops web sites and documentation
standards for government, corporate, and non-profit clients. Clients includes
AT&T Corporation, IBM Corporation, the Departments of Defense and Energy,
the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, Brown University, and the American
Indian Law Alliance.
Within the auspices of Science Writers, Mr. Nash and Ms. Ireland also run
Campaign Advantage, a company that specializes in generating web sites, online
fundraising tools, and strategic Internet communication tools for Democratic and
progressive campaigns and causes. Current projects include the 2002 campaign web
sites for Stan Matsunaka, a fourth generation Japanese American running for an
open Congressional seat in Colorado's fourth district, and Sam Page, a physician
running for an open State Legislature seat in Missouri's 82nd district. In 2000,
Campaign Advantage received the Golden Dot Award for Excellence in Online
Campaigning for the campaign web site for Rick Johnson, a successful candidate
for Missouri State Representative. Campaign Advantage has also designed web
sites and Internet solutions for U.S. Congressman Dick Gephardt and Americans
for Gun Safety.
Mr. Nash and Ms. Ireland live in Bethesda, Maryland with their two teenage sons.
In his spare time, Mr. Nash provides pro bono legal services for Native
American, Asian American, and family law cases.