San Mateo JACL

San Mateo JACL The JACL has 112 chapters nationwide and eight regional districts with over 24,000 members found in twenty-three states.

San Mateo JACL is dedicated to promoting the historical and cultural understanding of the Japanese American experience and to protecting and advancing the human and civil rights of our multi-ethnic society through educational and community programs. The Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) is a membership organization whose mission is to secure and maintain the human and civil rights of Americ

ans of Japanese ancestry and others victimized by injustice. In addition to its national headquarters in San Francisco, the JACL has five regional offices (Los Angeles, Fresno, San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago), as well as an office in Washington D.C. and an organizational newspaper, the Pacific Citizen, distributed nationally from its office in Los Angeles. The JACL derives its effectiveness through its regional offices located in key cities and areas to serve the needs of the organization's members and to maintain the well-being of all Asian Americans. The San Mateo Chapter of the JACL is located in San Mateo, California and serves the needs of its members on the San Francisco Peninsula.

01/09/2026

The San Mateo chapter of the JACL is organizing a ikebana demonstration and class for children ages 8 to 16. The class will be held at the San Mateo Community Center Gardener's Hall, corner of 5" and South Claremont, San Mateo, on January 24, 2026 from 1:30 to 3:00.

All materials will be provided, and no prior experience is necessary. Participants will have the opportunity to learn the basics of ikebana and create their own floral arrangements to take home.

The oldest Ikebana school, Ikenobo, will be taught by Sensei Kurasaki. A modest fee of $10 will be applied for materials and the deadline, for the first 18 students, will be January 11, 2026.

Please email Diana Okamoto at [email protected], to register.

Help support the Community Center this Saturday!
11/06/2025

Help support the Community Center this Saturday!

08/16/2025

Loyalty and resistance. Immigration and citizenship. Resilience and solidarity. Exactly who gets to be an American? The Korematsu Institute's virtual exhibit is live! Learn more about the conditions, power of language, and history of the Japanese American Incarceration at our virtual “AM I AN AMERICAN OR AM I NOT?” website. This is about all of us. Visit the exhibit here: https://tinyurl.com/5y98pxvv

08/16/2025

JANM is outraged by the presence of armed federal agents on its Norman Y. Mineta Democracy Plaza today, an effort to intimidate speakers at the Museum’s Daniel K. Inouye National Center for the Preservation of Democracy (Democracy Center), which was the chosen venue for a press conference held by Governor Gavin Newsom and other state and federal elected officials about California’s redistricting initiative. The Democracy Center explores the rights, freedoms, and fragility of democracy, helping to build bridges, and find common ground between people of diverse backgrounds and opinions. As the press conference began, around seventy-five armed Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agents swarmed the sidewalk in front of the Museum and arrested at least one passerby. JANM’s Historic Building and Mineta Democracy Plaza is the site where in 1942, Los Angeles area Japanese Americans were ordered to assemble for forced removal to concentration camps during World War II.

“We are outraged and deeply distressed that armed federal agents came onto our campus—making arrests on the very ground where, in 1942, Japanese American families were forced to board buses bound for concentration camps. It was a deliberate act of provocation and intimidation. The parallels are stark: entire communities were forcibly removed from the West Coast in 1942 and today our immigrant brothers and sisters face the terror of ICE and CBP raids across the country. It was a miscarriage of justice then, and it is a miscarriage of justice now. Our plaza is hallowed ground—a ground zero point in the civil rights history of this country. That history is part of our DNA and the reason we exist—to confront difficult truths about race, identity, and the fragility of democracy, to stand up to authoritarianism. The Democracy Center was chosen by Governor Gavin Newsom for a major press conference on California’s redistricting initiative—a choice that speaks volumes for the visibility of our mission and the importance of the work we do every day to defend the principles that define a free and just society,” said Ann Burroughs, President and CEO of the Japanese American National Museum.

Photo: Aerial perspective of crowd boarding buses in front of Nishi Hongwanji Buddhist Temple, Los Angeles, California, 1942,

Gift of Jack and Peggy Iwata
Object number93.102.102

06/10/2025

"JACL denounces the Trump administration’s continued attacks on immigrants in the United States, escalated this week with a new travel ban targeting non-European nations, withdrawal of Temporary Protected Status for Nepali immigrants, and the expanded immigration raids that have culminated in the unlawful deployment of the National Guard in California."

You can read our full statement at https://jacl.org/statements/jacl-denounces-continued-attacks-on-immigrants

04/08/2025

The National Endowment for the Humanities warned museums across the country that it was slashing funding, including money previously pledged to places such as LACMA and the Japanese American National Museum.

04/05/2025

It's been recently discovered that the pages about the 100th, 442nd, and other AANHPI military units have been removed from the U.S. Army website. The JACL calls for the immediate restoration of these pages, which honor the distinguished service of countless AANHPI soldiers.

Read our full statement: jacl.org/statements/jacl-calls-for-immediate-restoration-of-100th/442nd-history-to-the-us-army-website

03/06/2025

JACL Statement on Executive Order Designating English as the Official Language of the US

You can read the full statement online at: jacl.org/statements/jacl-statement-on-executive-order-designating-english-as-the-official-language-of-the-us

03/06/2025

ATTENTION JACL MEMBERS!

Early Bird registration for the 2025 JACL National Convention is available now! Join us this summer in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as we celebrate "Voices in Unity"! You can register and start booking your hotel at https://jacl.org/2025-national-convention

More convention information will be announced, so be sure to follow us on social media or sign up for our emails for more updates!

03/06/2025

Today, JACL joins Campaign Legal Center, OCA-Asian Pacific American Activists, Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists in taking legal action against Elon Musk and DOGE for their unchecked actions in slashing federal funding, dismantling federal agencies, and firing federal employees.

Read the full press release at jacl.org/statements/campaign-legal-center-sues-elon-musk-and-doge-for-exercising-unchecked-power-and-harming-everyday-americans

Sharing pics from our recent Daifuku making class. Thank you for joining us! If you missed it, follow us or join to lear...
02/01/2025

Sharing pics from our recent Daifuku making class. Thank you for joining us! If you missed it, follow us or join to learn about our next gathering.

02/01/2025

Happy Lunar New Year! 🐍♥️ The Year of the Snake is said to be a transformative time. The snake is known for being wise, intuitive, clever, and mysterious; it has a certain calmness to all of this which makes it perfect for problem-solving and communicating.

These wooden bookends were carved out of pine by Minoru Fujita while incarcerated in Manzanar concentration camp. Fujita carved a cactus with a snake crawling upward toward the top on each of the bookends.

Crafts made in the concentration camps have been of much cultural significance for JANM and the Japanese American community. Held in captivity in adverse conditions, many turned to craftwork to while away their free time. Mr. Fujita's story shows the ingenuity that we bring into the Year of the Snake.

Credit: Japanese American National Museum, Gift of Ron and Helen Takata, 2002.167.1A,1B

Address

415 S Claremont Street
San Mateo, CA
94401

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when San Mateo JACL posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to San Mateo JACL:

Share