User:Cellingluck

Jay Gluck, born in Detroit, Michigan in 1927, grew up on New York's East Side and spent a short time in his mother's hometown of Newcastle, England. A Jewish Geordie, he was the shortest in his class but quickly learned how to protect himself on the street. At 17, he joined the US Navy Air Arm. After the war, he roamed universities - George Washington and Columbia before graduating in Archaeology-Middle East Studies in 1949 from Berkeley. He attended the Asia Institute School for Asian Studies, completing a two-year MA degree, while deputy to Director Arthur Upham Pope, the famous Persian scholar.

Before either the Asia or Japan Societies were active in New York he initiated stage performances, art exhibits and conferences for Asian problems such as the nationalization of Iranian oil and the Arab-Israeli conflict. In New York he met his future wife Sumi, a Nisei, and in 1951 sailed for Japan to study its art as a guest of a noble art family, the Sens, tea masters in Kyoto. Intending to study for two years, then enter the diplomatic service, he ended up living the rest of his life between Japan, Iran and the United States.

After Kyoto he spent four years in war-ravaged Tokyo where he published Anone, a tourist fortnightly and Ah So!, the very popular book of comic cartoons which went into many printings and a complete revision. Two years in a farming village in Hiroshima were followed by seven teaching at Wakayama National University. He twice (1964, 1977) republished Oxford University Press' masterpiece A Survey of Persian Art in 12 and 13 volumes, co-edited three additional volumes and, with wife Sumi, co-authored a supplement on Persian handicrafts. In 1980, the first Kitano International Festival was held; and 1992 saw the publication of the mammoth 1,340-page Inside Out guide to Japan.

Jay was the first non-Japanese to receive Kobe City's "International" and "Hyogo Prefecture's 'Order of the Crane'" - their highest civilian awards.

Jay Gluck (1927-2000) died on December 19, 2000 in California after a long, heroic struggle with Parkinson's disease. His wife Sumi lived in their house in Claremont California until her passing on November 19, 2005. They are survived by their two sons, Cellin and Garet.