This event now concluded. Report available here.
- Speakers: Charles Rockefeller (Trustee, Asia Society), and others
- Date: Saturday, March 31, 2018, 14:00–17:30
- Venue: Iwasaki Koyata Memorial Hall, International House of Japan
A forum will be organized to kick off APYLP in March 2018. It will revisit the visionary work that John D. Rockefeller III undertook in the post-World War II era to strengthen ties across the US, Japan, and other Asian countries. Representatives from institutions that John D. Rockefeller III helped establish or headed, such as the International House of Japan, Asia Society, the Maureen & Mike Mansfield Foundation, and the Raman Magsaysay Award Foundation, as well as other institutions in the Asia Pacific that share the similar mission, will be invited to discuss the historical lessons from those efforts and their relevance to the present-day world.
Speakers (In order of appearance):



<Panel 1>





As CEO of Bai Xian Asia Institute, Ms. Chao leads an organization that seeks to build bridges across cultures and develop a new generation of leaders. She is CEO of Novel Investment Partners Limited, Chairman of Novetex Textiles Limited, and a Director of Novelpark Investments Limited. Ms. Chao also serves as supervisor and board trustee at the International Christian School of Hong Kong and standing vice chairman of the Hong Kong Association of Zhejiang Entrepreneurs. She holds a BA from Brown University, and earned her MBA from Stanford University. She also spent a year as an undergraduate at Keio University.

<Panel 2>





Report
- Opening Remarks
- Commemorative Speech by Charles Rockefeller
- Panel Discussion I
- Panel Discussion II
- Closing Remarks by James Kondo
◆ Opening Remarks
On March 31, 2018, the International House of Japan played host to the Asia Pacific Young Leaders Program (APYLP) kick-off forum. The APYLP, a new program uniting I-House and other member organizations, serves to give young, motivated leaders the chance to meet, discuss ideas, and learn from each other in the hope of fostering innovative, Asia-led ideas and solutions for increasingly complex issues. The Asia Pacific continues to emerge as a stronger global presence, with experts predicting it will occupy a central position globally in the next 10 to 20 years. Amid that shifting dynamic, young Asia Pacific leaders will need to forge bonds across borders, work to understand each other, and blaze trails together as they strive to fulfill their crucial responsibilities in ensuring global stability and prosperity. The APYLP kick-off forum, the first gathering for the program, started with a congratulatory speech by Yoshimasa Hayashi, Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, who was involved in drafting the Mansfield Fellowship Act.
◆ Commemorative Speech by Charles Rockefeller
Charles Rockefeller, one of the representatives from intellectual and cultural exchange organizations in the Asia Pacific region and a grandson of John D. Rockefeller III who helped found many Asia-focused institutions in the 1950s and ‘60s, joined the Kick-off Forum. He made a commemorative speech “Learning from the Past,” in which he explained how the Rockefeller family has been committed to this region for over a century.
The Rockefeller family has a long-standing relationship with Asia. It dates back to 1863, when 24-year-old John D. Rockefeller, Charles’ great-great grandfather, first gave a $10 donation to a missionary organization in China. Since then, that engagement has progressed and grown through the generations. One example is Charles’ great grandfather John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who supported the restoration of the Imperial University Library after the Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923 and the reconstruction of St. Luke’s International Hospital in the 1930s, both in Tokyo, through donations. Charles also spoke about his grandfather John D. Rockefeller III’s first trip to Japan in 1929, where he first met Matsumoto Shigeharu, with whom he later founded the International House of Japan. This trip would also forever shape JDR III’s world view—that the Asia Pacific region had enormous potential, and that understanding and respect were essential to a more peaceful and prosperous world. JDR III believed in “the shared hopes, fears and aspirations” of Asians and Americans, and contributed to establishing more institutions in Asia, such as the Asia Society, Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, International Rice Research Institute, India International Centre, and Asian Cultural Council. At the end, Charles spoke about his father Jay Rockefeller, who extended the Rockefellers’ special tie to Japan, especially in the economic and industrial sphere, by attracting more than 20 Japanese corporations to West Virginia as governor and then senator.
Rockefeller concluded his speech by saying that he hopes to keep leading the way toward fuller mutual understanding in the region and the world through his involvement in the Asia Pacific region.
◆ Panel Discussion I
Panel Discussion I, featuring speakers from several organizations that John D. Rockefeller III helped create, was an illuminating look at the issues currently confronting the Asia Pacific.
Daniel Russel, a senior fellow of the Asia Society, noted that climate change, terrorism, infectious disease, and security threats are just some of the many issues at hand. Another point deserving attention, he explained, is the role of NGOs in linking networks and providing a vital social infrastructure as IT and AI make ongoing advances.
Cynthia Bautista, a trustee of the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, agreed and emphasized that government-led globalization has delivered both economic growth and its side effects such as inequality. In order not to leave behind such dark sides of globalization and to improve everyone’s life, the involvement of agents outside of government on the ground is important, she claimed.
Chao Ronna, CEO of the Bai Xian Asia Institute, explained the need to overhaul the conventional education system in Asia, which puts an excessive focus on being the best or being No. 1. She sounded the alarm that such a system may cause misunderstandings in the definition of “leaders.”
Frank Jannuzi, a representative of the Maureen & Mike Mansfield Foundation, exhorted the next-generation leaders in the room to embody Former U.S. Ambassador Mike Mansfield’s deep sense of humility and commitment to bringing people together—and to embrace bold, daring risks, just as John D. Rockefeller III did decades ago. He also left strong messages such as “you can learn from misfortune” and “nothing is stopping you” which he himself gained through his personal experiences of failure in youth.
I-House trustee Watanabe Yasushi cited the anti-apartheid speech “Ripple of Hope” delivered by Robert Kennedy in South Africa in the 1960s to remind the audience how big the power of a good deed and idealism is. Such positive energy will eventually spread widely in the neighborhood like ripples, and more importantly these ripples can be brought about by anyone, he stressed.
The moderator, Doden Aiko of NHK, Japan Broadcasting Corporation, wrapped up the first panel discussion with the impression that “it does make such a big difference to be in the same room for discussion, even though there are technologies to connect people remotely.”
◆ Panel Discussion II
Panel Discussion II shifted the spotlight to up-and-coming leaders, all veterans of various leadership programs, to examine how the younger generations perceive the issues and potential of the Asia Pacific region.
According to Lee Wonjae, a fellow in the Asia Leadership Fellow Program, team efforts to tackle issues that affect multiple parts of the regional community—the aging societies of East Asia, for example—will help create safety nets for avoiding frustration, opposition, and conflict at the national and even individual levels. Moreover, he launched into his theory that technology innovation is the key to the solution of problems. In the case of aging societies, technology innovation will not only enhance labor-saving which then resolves problems including waning productivity and worker shortage, but also creates new values—work for others and community, not for one’s own benefit.
Nagao Shunsuke, CEO of White Star Capital, raised a question as moderator about how people can treat highly emotional issues such as inequality and isolationism generated by the idea of “us vs them” dispassionately. In response to the question, Nitobe Leadership Program fellow Ohashi Hideo highlighted the process of cultivating mutual understanding through education as a key means for eliminating the misconceptions and conflicts that can arise from indifference and intolerance. He also added that “answers” may not be always there for us; it demands a process of quest sometimes.
Amy Jackson, who was in the first batch of the Mike Mansfield Fellowship Program, claimed that the challenge is “creating a forward-thinking, globally oriented, and innovative global community that embraces differences and easily traverses borders.” She also underscored the importance of trade which makes it much more imperative to find diplomatic solutions to the difficult problems we are facing today and much harder to fight wars against each other. Through trade promotion, bringing attention to the poor and nurturing cross-border, person-to-person interconnectedness becomes possible, she believes.
A guest speaker, Kobayashi Lin, who is Chair of the Board at United World College (UWC) ISAK Japan, focused on today’s problems in the education system and emphasized the importance for students of 1) learning from diversity, 2) identifying the issues to tackle, 3) taking purposeful actions with a risk-taking attitude, and 4) learning from both successes and failures. She also addressed her attempt to introduce a mentor program for capacity building of educators. At the end of her speech, she cited a French philosopher that “Pessimism comes from your feelings; optimism from the will,” which she has come to believe through her hard-fought struggles for establishment of UWC.
◆ Closing Remarks by James Kondo
The last speaker at the kick-off event was James Kondo, an I-House trustee and one of the founders of the APYLP. Kondo observed that we will be facing numerous unprecedented geopolitical, economic, and social issues over the next two decades. In that context, Kondo believes that the solutions to pressing problems will demand fresh, outside-the-box thinking that can come to life when young leaders join forces. He noted that programs for next-generation leaders are sprouting up in many places, but he also reminded the audience that honing individual skills can only go so far: the key issues facing society transcend what people can do by themselves. Collaboration is vital. Even if an approach might seem overly ambitious or even impossible, Kondo said, young leaders need to keep striving toward their goals together.
The number of alumni emerging from the programs of the participating organizations has reached more than 2,500 in total—in other words, there is now a large pool of young leaders. Kondo voiced his intentions to keep creating opportunities for young leaders to unite, enter into dialogue, and work to expand their activities across a broader scope.