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Reservist creates scholarship to make 'better Americans’

  • Published
Molding better Americans is the motivation behind a new foreign language scholarship created for Washington State University students by alumnus Christopher “CJ” Johnson (’02), an officer and linguist in the U.S. Air Force Reserve.

“So few Americans speak a foreign language, and the outcome is that few Americans understand the world outside their immediate circle,” Johnson said. “But studying a foreign language and actually employing it forces you to think beyond your circle, to look beyond America, and that’s important because it makes you a better American,” he said.

The tuition-assistance scholarship in WSU’s Department of Foreign Languages and Cultures will be awarded for the first time this fall. By Johnson’s request, preference will be given to a junior or senior majoring in French language.

“We’re extremely grateful for Chris’s generous support of WSU students and the positive impact it will have on many students’ lives,” said Don Shearer, director of development for the College of Arts and Sciences. “It means so much when our young alumni take an active interest in the success of students who soon follow them.”

Opening doors through language

Johnson learned French as a child in California and majored in French studies at WSU, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity and the 1998 Cougar Football team. He was also a cadet in the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps and is now a Lieutenant Colonel and foreign affairs officer in the Air Force Reserve with previous responsibilities in Francophone Africa.

His language proficiency has been critical to his success in the military, especially on overseas deployments.

Johnson served a 13-month tour at the U.S. Embassy in Morocco as the Air Force Program Officer in charge of U.S.-Morocco bilateral Air Force programs while assigned to the Deputy Under Secretary of the Air Force for International Affairs (SAF/IA) as an Air Force Reserve Individual Mobilization Augmentee. He was chosen for the tour in part for his French language proficiency.

“It has literally opened doors for me,” Johnson said. “I get an extra $400 in my paycheck because of my language skills, and in social situations, it’s a good party trick,” he quipped.

“Seriously, if you want to be good at your job and have credibility engaging with partners, you have to speak their language. You don’t need native fluency, but you have to be able to rap pretty well to be considered a legitimate partner in foreign affairs.”

The Air Force Reserve offers many career incentives for Citizen Airmen including foreign language proficiency pay, special assignments, dedicated access to career assistance advisors and more.

While most of Johnson’s French-speaking counterparts are fluent in English, his ability to understand their native tongue ensures more accurate communications, especially on technical points, he said.

He learned Portuguese at the Defense Language Institute and noted that being tri-lingual—improved his English skills, too.

“To speak and write well in another language, you have to understand grammar, and that understanding makes you a better English writer. It has certainly helped me in my job and made me a better officer because, in the military, you do a lot of writing.”

In 2013, Johnson was the first Air Force Reservist selected as a Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Affairs Strategist, now Foreign Affairs Officer (FAO). The Air Force Reserve has offered Johnson the opportunity advance in his primary career field, cyberspace, while pursuing niche FAO capabilities. The opportunity to pursue both career paths has made him a better Citizen Airman.

The Air Force Reserve is committed to building future leaders and preserving a capable force for the defense of our nation. Many broader benefits of foreign language study extend to people in all professions, not only the military, he said.

“If you’re learning a foreign language, you’re also learning the culture, and if you’re learning the culture, by default you’re widening your aperture, drifting into critical thinking, and getting a better understanding of society and the world. And if you’re critically thinking about society, then I think you’re being a good American.”

Hitting multiple marks 

Johnson endowed the scholarship largely to honor his mother, Nannea, a native of Indonesia who was fluent in Indonesian, Dutch, and French before she immigrated to the United States at nine years old. She mastered English in high school, studied French in college, and applied her diverse language skills throughout her adult life, working with law and accounting firms in California and Washington.

“She believed learning foreign languages was key to making a difference in the world,” Johnson said. “I’m doing everything my mom wanted to do herself—except for the military part.”

"In part, it's to ensure my mom’s legacy, but it’s also about Washington State University," he said. "I’m a massive Coug and I wanted to give back to the University, but I wanted to give back in a different way than most people do. Beyond doing something for my fraternity or the alumni association, or even Cougar Athletics, this scholarship was a way I could hit different marks with my mom and WSU.”

Broadening worldviews

“Mille mercis to CJ for his generosity in endowing this scholarship,” said WSU French professor Joan Grenier-Winther, one of Johnson’s fondly remembered teachers. “My greatest hope is that it will help a student travel to and study in a French-speaking country so as to be immersed in both French language and culture. It is so important, especially in these days of alienation and division, that American students have the experience of being a ‘foreigner’ somewhere, to be placed in that situation of being ‘the other,’” Grenier-Winther said.

“But if travel is not an option for students, simply being exposed to the beauty of the language, as well as the significance of French history, literature, music, and art on Western civilization, through the study of French at WSU, will broaden their worldview and enrich their lives.”

The Air Force Reserve seeks the best and brightest minds from across the nation to fill critical career fields and future growth in mission areas such as pilots, maintenance technicians and cyberspace and intelligence operators.