The Bishop Family Memorial Scholarship Fund

Honoring the legacy of ACCJ leader Bill Bishop and his family through education

As a typhoon slammed Yokota Air Base in July 1974, a plane rocked its way down to the runway. Onboard was navy photographer Bill Bishop. That first night, he also experienced his first earthquake. It was a dramatic start to a five-decade relationship with Japan that would lead the South Dakota native to become a key part of the US business community in the country.

Last December, on Christmas morning, Bishop, his wife Izumi, and their daughter Sophianna lost their lives, killed by their neighbor at their family home in Saitama Prefecture.

Members of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan (ACCJ) remember Bishop for his kindness, humor, friendship, and dedication to the chamber, where he served as chair, vice-chair, and board liaison of the Healthcare Committee over the years.

On June 12, the ACCJ and the United States–Japan Bridging Foundation gathered at Tokyo American Club to honor the family and launch the Bishop Family Memorial Scholarship Fund at an event entitled Lives Lived for Bridging the United States and Japan.

In attendance were US Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, representatives of Tochigi Prefecture Governor Tomikazu Fukuda, and ACCJ members and guests.


We hope creating a fund that will support students who will come from the US to study in Japan, at Temple University, will be an incredible way to support Bill and his family’s legacy.

Tom Mason, the foundation’s executive director, said, “We hope creating a fund that will support students who will come from the US to study in Japan, at Temple University, will be an incredible way to support Bill and his family’s legacy.”

Bishop studied in Japan himself and received a bachelor of arts degree from Sophia University. He earned a master’s degree from Temple University in Philadelphia, and later became a lecturer and board member at the Japan campus.

The event also marked the 25th anniversary of the United States–Japan Bridging Foundation, which provides US undergraduates—especially those from historically underrepresented communities—with scholarships to study abroad in Japan. It also offers mentorship and networking opportunities to build a Japan-related career, fostering the next generation of US leaders with connections to the bilateral relationship. Since its founding in 1998, the group has supported more than 2,000 students.

Some of this year’s Bridging Scholars, as well as alumni, also joined the event to share their experiences studying in Japan thanks to the foundation’s support.

The Bishop Family Memorial Scholarship Fund will be based at, and managed by, the US–Japan Bridging Foundation, which will administer and manage the scholarship and its programs—including the recruitment of students. Logistics, fundraising, and community support will be provided by the ACCJ.

Education Committee Vice-Chair Thierry Porte, who is also chairman of the United States–Japan Bridging Foundation, is happy to be a part of this.

“I knew Bill Bishop well,” he told The ACCJ Journal. “He and I worked together in the late 1990s to early 2000s at the ACCJ, and he was an active member of the American community in Japan. As [he was] someone who was very active working with students, there was quite a bit of movement in the community to remember Bill and his family.”

Porte said the Bishop Family Memorial Scholarship Fund will be a “living memorial to Bill, his wife, and his daughter and the logical place to collaborate would be the ACCJ, where Bill was very active and his daughter interned.”


 
John Amari

Writer and researcher from the UK who specializes in articles on intellectual property, business, and entrepreneurs.

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