Bordewich was born in
New York City in 1947, and grew up in
Yonkers, New York. While growing up, he often traveled to
Indian reservations around the United States with his mother, LaVerne Madigan Bordewich, the executive director of the
Association on American Indian Affairs, then the only independent advocacy organization for Native Americans. This early experience helped to shape his lifelong preoccupation with American history, the settlement of the continent, and issues of race, and political power. He holds degrees from the
City College of New York and
Columbia University. In the late 1960s, he did voter registration for the
NAACP in the still-segregated South; he also worked as a
roustabout in Alaska's Arctic oil fields, a taxi driver in New York City, and a deckhand on a Norwegian freighter. In 2015, he served as chairman of the awards committee for the Frederick Douglass Book Prize, given by the Gilder-Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, at
Yale University. He is a frequent public speaker at universities and other forums, as well as on radio and television. As a journalist, he has traveled extensively in Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Africa, writing on politics, economic issues, culture, and history, on subjects ranging from the civil war in
Burma, religious repression in China,
Islamic fundamentalism,
German reunification, the Irish economy, Kenya's population crisis, and many others. He also served for brief periods as an editor and writer for the
Tehran Journal in Iran in 1972–1973, a press officer for the United Nations in 1980–1982, and an advisor to the
New China News Agency in Beijing in 1982–1983, when that agency was embarking on its effort to switch from a propaganda model to a western-style journalistic one. He is married to Jean Parvin Bordewich. ==Writing career==