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Chiune Sugihara

Chiune Sugihara (杉原 千畝, Sugihara Chiune, 1 January 1900 – 31 July 1986)[1] was a Japanese diplomat who served as vice-consul for the Japanese Empire in Kaunas, Lithuania. During the Second World War, Sugihara helped thousands of Jews flee Europe by issuing transit visas to them so that they could travel through Japanese territory, risking his career and the lives of his family.[2][3] The fleeing Jews were refugees from German-occupied Western Poland and Soviet-occupied Eastern Poland, as well as residents of Lithuania.

Chiune Sugihara
杉原 千畝
Sugihara, before 1945
Born(1900-01-01)1 January 1900
Died31 July 1986(1986-07-31) (aged 86)
Resting placeKamakura Cemetery
Other names"Sempo", Sergei Pavlovich Sugihara
OccupationVice-consul for the Japanese Empire in Lithuania
Known forRescue of 5,558 Jews during the Holocaust
Spouses
  • Klaudia Semionovna Apollonova
    (m. 1918; div. 1935)
  • Yukiko Kikuchi
    (m. 1936)
Children4
Awards

In 1985, the State of Israel honored Sugihara as one of the Righteous Among the Nations for his actions. He is the only Japanese national to have been so honored.

In Lithuania, 2020 was "The Year of Chiune Sugihara". It has been estimated as many as 100,000 people alive today are the descendants of the recipients of Sugihara visas.[4]

Early life and education edit

Chiune Sugihara was born on 1 January 1900 (Meiji 33), in Mino, Gifu prefecture, to a middle-class father, Yoshimi Sugihara (杉原好水, Sugihara Yoshimi), and an upper-middle class mother, Yatsu Sugihara (杉原やつ, Sugihara Yatsu).[5] When he was born, his father worked at a tax office in Kozuchi-town and his family lived in a borrowed temple, with the Buddhist temple Kyōsen-ji (教泉寺) where he was born nearby. He was the second son among five boys and one girl.[1] His father and family moved into the tax office within the branch of the Nagoya Tax Administration Office one after another. In 1903 his family moved to Asahi Village in Niu-gun, Fukui Prefecture. In 1904 they moved to Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture. On 25 October 1905, they moved to Nakatsu Town, Ena-gun, Gifu Prefecture. In 1906 (Meiji 39) on 2 April, Chiune entered Nakatsu Town Municipal Elementary School (now Nakatsugawa City Minami Elementary School in Gifu Prefecture). On 31 March 1907, he transferred to Kuwana Municipal Kuwana Elementary School in Mie Prefecture (currently Kuwana Municipal Nissin Elementary School). In December of that same year, he transferred to Nagoya Municipal Furuwatari Elementary School (now Nagoya Municipal Heiwa Elementary School). In 1912, he graduated with top honors from Furuwatari Elementary School and entered Aichi prefectural 5th secondary school (now Zuiryo high school), a combined junior and senior high school. His father wanted him to become a physician, but Chiune deliberately failed the entrance exam by writing only his name on the exam papers. Instead, he entered Waseda University in 1918 (Taishō 7) and majored in English language. At that time, he entered Yuai Gakusha, the Christian fraternity that had been founded by Baptist pastor Harry Baxter Benninghoff, to improve his English.

In 1919, he passed the Foreign Ministry Scholarship exam. From 1920 to 1922, Sugihara served in the Imperial Japanese Army as a second lieutenant with the 79th Infantry Regiment, stationed in Korea, then part of the Empire of Japan. He resigned his commission in November 1922 and took the Foreign Ministry's language qualifying exams the following year, passing the Russian exam with distinction. The Japanese Foreign Ministry recruited him and assigned him to Harbin, Manchuria, China, where he also studied the Russian and German languages and later became an expert on Russian affairs.

 
Chiune Sugihara's birth registry, indicating his birthplace as Kozuchi Town, Mugi District, nowadays known as Mino City in Gifu Prefecture

Manchurian Foreign Office edit

When Sugihara served in the Manchukuo (Manchurian) Foreign Office, he took part in the negotiations with the Soviet Union concerning the Northern Manchurian Railway.

During his time in Harbin, Sugihara married Klaudia Semionovna Apollonova and converted to Christianity (Russian Orthodox Church),[6] using the baptismal name Sergei Pavlovich.[2]

In 1934, Sugihara quit his post as Deputy Foreign Minister in Manchukuo in protest over Japanese mistreatment of the local Chinese.[7]

Sugihara and his wife divorced in 1935, before he returned to Japan, where he married Yukiko (1913–2008, née Kikuchi[8]). After the marriage; they had four sons - Hiroki, Chiaki, Haruki, and Nobuki. As of 2021, Nobuki is the only surviving son and represents the Sugihara family.[9][10]

Chiune Sugihara also served in the Information Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and as a translator for the Japanese delegation in Helsinki, Finland.[11]

Lithuania edit

 
Former Japanese consulate in Kaunas

In 1939, Sugihara became a vice-consul of the Japanese Consulate in Kaunas, the temporary capital of Lithuania. His duties included reporting on Soviet and German troop movements,[1] and to find out if Germany planned an attack on the Soviets and, if so, to report the details of this attack to his superiors in Berlin and Tokyo.[12]

Sugihara had cooperated with Polish intelligence as part of a bigger Japanese–Polish cooperative plan.[13]

In Lithuania, Sugihara started using the Sino-Japanese reading "Sempo" for his given name,[14] since it was easier to pronounce than "Chiune".[15]

Jewish refugees edit

As the Soviet Union occupied sovereign Lithuania in 1940, many Jewish refugees from Poland (Polish Jews) as well as Lithuanian Jews tried to acquire exit visas. Without the visas, it was dangerous to travel, yet it was impossible to find countries willing to issue them. Hundreds of refugees came to the Japanese consulate in Kaunas, trying to get a visa to Japan. At the time, on the brink of the war, Lithuanian Jews made up one third of Lithuania's urban population and half of the residents of every town.[16] In the period between 16 July and 3 August 1940, the Dutch Honorary Consul Jan Zwartendijk provided over 2,200 Jews with official third destination passes to Curaçao, a Dutch colony in the Caribbean that required no entry visa, or to Surinam.

European Jewish refugees began to arrive in Japan in July 1940 and departed by September 1941. An overview during this period is described in the Annual Reports of 1940[17] and 1941[18] by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC).

In June 1940, Italy entered into the war and the Mediterranean route was closed. The Committee in Greater Germany, forced to seek new outlets for emigration, arranged for the transportation of Jews from Germany across Europe and Asia (via the Trans-Siberian Railway) to Vladivostok, thence to Japan. From Japan the refugees were to embark for destinations in the Western Hemisphere.

On 31 December 1940, the Soviet Union declared that all persons residing in Lithuania as of 1 September 1940, had the right to apply for Soviet citizenship. While the great bulk of Polish refugees in Lithuania opted for Soviet citizenship, there was a group of 4,000–5,000 persons for whom the promise of citizenship offered little opportunity. These were principally rabbis, yeshiva students, members of the intellectual classes and leaders of various Jewish communal and labor organizations. Most of them immediately applied for exit permits from Lithuania. Although during the early weeks of 1941 exit permits and Japanese transit visas were readily granted, the problem was how to find money for transportation costs for those people whose very existences were jeopardized if they remained in Lithuania. The JDC, in collaboration with a number of other American Jewish groups, contributed toward the funds required for the Trans-Siberian trip to Japan of 1,700 persons.

In July 1940, Jewish refugees from Germany and other countries began arriving in Japan at Tsuruga, Shimonoseki and Kobe.[19] Japanese embassies and consulates except Kaunas issued 3,448 Japanese transit visas from January 1940 to March 1941.[20] Most of the recipients held valid end-visas and immediately departed Japan. Starting in October 1940, Polish refugees from Lithuania began to land on Tsuruga. Their number increased sharply from January 1941 onwards. "By the end of March there were close to 2,000 in the country, mostly in Kobe. More than half of these refugees did not hold valid end-visas and were unable to proceed further than Japan." They were forced to stay for a long time to find immigration countries.

 
Table 1: Number of European Jews arriving in Japan

The number of Jewish refugees who came to Japan, as seen in Table 1, has been documented as 4,500,[21] 5,000[22] or 6,000.[23] The 552 persons noted in the second row of the table do not match the number of departing persons edited by Jewcom.[24] The Siberian railway had been closed and no evidence supporting this figure is found in JDC annual reports or MOFA documents. For the 200 persons described in Note 1 of Table 1, there is a document in the Archives of MOFA[25] that the Japanese consulate of Vladivostok transferred about 50 Jewish refugees who had been stranded in Vladivostok to Shanghai with Soviet Union cargo on 26 April 1941.[26]

Sugihara's visas edit

At the time, the Japanese government required that visas be issued only to those who had gone through appropriate immigration procedures and had enough funds. Most of the refugees did not fulfill these criteria. Sugihara dutifully contacted the Japanese Foreign Ministry three times for instructions. Each time, the Ministry responded that anybody granted a visa should have a visa to a third destination to exit Japan, with no exceptions.[1]

Being aware that applicants were in danger if they stayed behind, Sugihara decided to ignore his orders and, from 18 July to 28 August 1940, issued ten-day visas to Jews for transit through Japan. Given his inferior post and the culture of the Japanese Foreign Service bureaucracy, this was an unusual act of disobedience. He spoke to Soviet officials who agreed to let the Jews travel through the country via the Trans-Siberian Railway at five times the standard ticket price.

 
Czechoslovak passport with a visa, which was granted in 1940 by diplomat Sugihara. A 1940 issued visa by consul Sugihara in Lithuania, showing a journey taken through Soviet Union, Tsuruga and Curaçao.

Sugihara continued to hand-write visas, reportedly spending 18 to 20 hours a day on them, producing a normal month's worth of visas each day, until 4 September, when he had to leave his post before the consulate was closed. By that time, he had granted thousands of visas to Jews, many of whom were heads of households and thus permitted to take their families with them. It is claimed that before he left, he handed the official consulate stamp to a refugee so that more visas could be forged.[27] His son, Nobuki Sugihara, adamantly insisted in an interview with Ann Curry that his father never gave the stamp to anyone.[28] According to witnesses, he was still writing visas while in transit from his hotel and after boarding the train at Kaunas railway station, throwing visas into the crowd of desperate refugees out of the train's window even as the train pulled out.

 
Consular office with original consular flag in Kaunas

In final desperation, blank sheets of paper with only the consulate seal and his signature (that could be later written over into a visa) were hurriedly prepared and flung out from the train. As he prepared to depart, he said, "Please forgive me. I cannot write anymore. I wish you the best." When he bowed deeply to the people before him, someone exclaimed, "Sugihara. We'll never forget you. I'll surely see you again!"[11]

Sugihara himself wondered about official reaction to the thousands of visas he issued. Many years later, he recalled, "No one ever said anything about it. I remember thinking that they probably didn't realize how many I actually issued."[29]

Numbers saved edit

On the number of refugees passing through Japan who held Japanese transit visas for Curaçao issued by Sugihara, the so-called "Sugihara visa", there are two documents stating numbers of 2,200[30] and 6,000.[11] The 6,000 persons as stated in Visas for Life is likely hearsay.[citation needed]

K. Watanabe argued that there could be 6,000, arguing that use by three family members per visa is reasonable, that there were newspaper articles reporting the 6,000 figure, and that most of the refugees landing on Tsuruga were now admitted with a Sugihara visa. On 29 September 1983, Fuji Television aired a documentary "One visa that decided their fate - the Japanese who saved 4,500 Jews."

In 1985, when Chiune Sugihara received the Righteous among the Nations award, some Japanese newspapers reported that he saved 6,000 people and others 4,500.[31] The Japan Times, dated 19 January 1985, had the headline "Japanese Man honored for saving 6,000 Jews", and reported "Sugihara defied orders from Tokyo and issued transit visas to nearly 6,000 Jews". US newspapers [which?] referred to Sugihara as "a diplomat who defied his government's orders and issued transit visas for 6,000 Jews".

Table 2 shows the number of refugees who had stayed at Kobe in 1941 based on Archives of MOFA. Refugees classified as "No visa" in the table are presumed to have held fakes of Japanese transit visas issued by Sugihara.[32] The Soviets wanted to purge Polish refugees who had been stranded in Soviet territory with Japanese transit visas as soon as possible,[33] and so permitted them to get on the train to Vladivostok with or without a destination visa. The Japanese government was forced to admit them. On 8 April 1941, of the 1,400 Polish Jews staying at Kobe, about 1,300 were "for Curaçao" or "No visa".

 
Table 2: Number of European Jewish refugees staying at Kobe

The Polish ambassador in Tokyo, Tadeusz Romer, remembered, "They (Polish refugees) only had fictitious Dutch visas for the island of Curaçao and Japanese transit visas." According to the refugee name list surveyed by Fukui Prefecture,[34] of the 306 persons who landed at Tsuruga Port in October 1940, there were 203 Poles. Their destinations were US 89, Palestine 46, Curaçao 24, and others. It is estimated that about 80% of them were on the Sugihara visa list.[35] The documents of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum[36] and "Refugee and Survivor" do not mention the number of people saved by a "Sugihara visa".

More than half of the refugees who entered with invalid visas, including a "Sugihara visa", obtained valid visas with the help of JDC, HIAS, the Embassy of Poland, and the Japanese government, and embarked for host countries. In August–September 1941, Japanese authorities transferred about 850 refugees[37] stranded in Japan to Shanghai before Japan and the United States began war. According to Emigration Table by Jewcom, the number of Polish refugees leaving Japan for various destinations was Shanghai 860, US 532, Canada 186, Palestine 186, Australia 81, South Africa 59, and others 207, in total 2,111.

The total number of Jews saved by Sugihara is in dispute, with estimates around 6,000; family visas—which allowed several people to travel on one visa—were also issued, which would account for the much higher figure. The Simon Wiesenthal Center has estimated that Chiune Sugihara issued transit visas for about 6,000 Jews and that around 40,000 descendants of the Jewish refugees are alive today because of his actions.[1] Polish intelligence produced some false visas.[38] Sugihara's widow and eldest son estimate that he saved 10,000 Jews from certain death, whereas Boston University professor and author Hillel Levine also estimates that he helped "as many as 10,000 people", but that far fewer people ultimately survived.[39] Some Jews who received Sugihara's visas did not leave Lithuania in time, were captured by the Germans after Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, and perished in the Holocaust.

 
Recreation of Sugihara's consular desk in Kaunas

The Diplomatic Record Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has opened to the public two documents concerning Sugihara's file: the first aforementioned document is a 5 February 1941 diplomatic note from Chiune Sugihara to Japan's then Foreign Minister Yōsuke Matsuoka in which Sugihara stated he issued 1,500 out of 2,139 transit visas to Jews and Poles; however, since most of the 2,139 people were not Jewish, this would imply that most of the visas were given to Polish Jews instead. Levine then notes that another document from the same foreign office file "indicates an additional 3,448 visas were issued in Kaunas for a total of 5,580 visas" which were likely given to Jews desperate to flee Lithuania for safety in Japan or Japanese occupied-China.

Many refugees used their visas to travel across the Soviet Union to Vladivostok and then by boat to Kobe, Japan, where there was a Jewish community. Romer, the Polish ambassador in Tokyo, organized help for them. From August 1940 to November 1941, he had managed to get transit visas in Japan, asylum visas to Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Burma, immigration certificates to British Mandatory Palestine, and immigrant visas to the United States and some Latin American countries for more than two thousand Polish-Lithuanian Jewish refugees, who arrived in Kobe, Japan, and the Shanghai Ghetto, China.

The remaining number of Sugihara survivors stayed in Japan until they were deported to Japanese-held Shanghai, where there was already a large Jewish community that had existed as early as the mid-1930s. Some took the route through Korea directly to Shanghai without passing through Japan. A group of thirty people, all possessing a visa of "Jakub Goldberg", were shuttled back and forth on the open sea for several weeks before finally being allowed to pass through Tsuruga.[40] Most of the around 20,000 Jews survived the Holocaust in the Shanghai ghetto until the Japanese surrender in 1945, three to four months following the collapse of the Third Reich itself.

Imprisonment, release edit

External image
  Sugihara and his wife in front of a gate in Prague. It reads "No Jews allowed" in German but "Jews allowed" in Czech,[41] because someone scratched out the "no"

Sugihara was reassigned to Königsberg, East Prussia[39][page needed] before serving as a Consul General in Prague, in the German-occupied Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, from March 1941 to late 1942 and in the legation in Bucharest, Romania from 1942 to 1944. He was promoted to the rank of third secretary in 1943, and was decorated with the Order of the Sacred Treasure, 5th Class, in 1944. When Soviet troops entered Romania, they imprisoned Sugihara and his family in a POW camp for eighteen months. They were released in 1946 and returned to Japan through the Soviet Union via the Trans-Siberian Railway and Nakhodka port. In 1947, the Japanese foreign office asked him to resign, due to downsizing. Some sources, including his wife Yukiko Sugihara, have said that the Foreign Ministry told Sugihara he was dismissed because of "that incident" in Lithuania.[39][42]

Later life edit

Sugihara settled in Fujisawa in Kanagawa prefecture with his wife and three sons. To support his family he took a series of menial jobs, at one point selling light bulbs door to door. He suffered a personal tragedy in 1947 when his youngest son, Haruki, died at the age of seven, shortly after their return to Japan.[12] In 1949 they had one more son, Nobuki, who is the last son alive representing the Chiune Sugihara Family, residing in Belgium. Chiune Sugihara later began to work for an export company as general manager of a U.S. Military Post Exchange. Utilizing his command of the Russian language, Sugihara went on to work and live a low-key existence in the Soviet Union for sixteen years, while his family stayed in Japan.

 
Chiune Sugihara and his son Nobuki in Israel, December 1969
 
Chiune "Sempo" Sugihara's plaque in the garden at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem

In 1968, Yehoshua Nishri, an economic attaché to the Israeli Embassy in Tokyo and one of the Sugihara beneficiaries, finally located and contacted him. Nishri had been a Polish teen in the 1940s. The next year Sugihara visited Israel and was greeted by the Israeli government. Sugihara beneficiaries began to lobby for his recognition by Yad Vashem. In 1984, Yad Vashem recognised him as Righteous Among the Nations (Hebrew: חסידי אומות העולם, translit. Khasidei Umot ha-Olam).[43] Sugihara was too ill to travel to Israel, so his wife and youngest son Nobuki accepted the honor on his behalf.

In 1985, 45 years after the Soviet invasion of Lithuania, he was asked his reasons for issuing visas to the Jews. Sugihara explained that the refugees were human beings, and that they simply needed help.

You want to know about my motivation, don't you? Well. It is the kind of sentiments anyone would have when he actually sees refugees face to face, begging with tears in their eyes. He just cannot help but sympathize with them. Among the refugees were the elderly and women. They were so desperate that they went so far as to kiss my shoes. Yes, I actually witnessed such scenes with my own eyes. Also, I felt at that time, that the Japanese government did not have any uniform opinion in Tokyo. Some Japanese military leaders were just scared because of the pressure from the Nazis; while other officials in the Home Ministry were simply ambivalent. People in Tokyo were not united. I felt it silly to deal with them. So, I made up my mind not to wait for their reply. I knew that somebody would surely complain about me in the future. But, I myself thought this would be the right thing to do. There is nothing wrong in saving many people's lives... The spirit of humanity, philanthropy... neighborly friendship... with this spirit, I ventured to do what I did, confronting this most difficult situation – and because of this reason, I went ahead with redoubled courage.[44]

When asked by Moshe Zupnik, who received one of the visas from Sugihara in 1940,[45] why he risked his career to save other people, he said simply: "I do it just because I have pity on the people. They want to get out so I let them have the visas."

Chiune Sugihara died at a hospital in Kamakura, on 31 July 1986. Despite the publicity given him in Israel and other nations, he had remained virtually unknown in his home country. Only when a large Jewish delegation from around the world, including the Israeli ambassador to Japan, attended his funeral, did his neighbours find out what he had done.[42] His subsequent considerable posthumous acclaim contrasts with the obscurity in which he lived following the loss of his diplomatic career.[46]

Honor restored edit

His death spotlighted his humanitarian acts during World War II and created the opportunity to revise his reputation as a diplomat in his own country. In 1991 Muneo Suzuki, Parliamentary Vice-President of Foreign Affairs, apologized to Chiune's family for the long-time unfair treatment by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[47] Official honor restoration by Japanese Government was made on 10 October 2000, when Foreign Minister Yōhei Kōno set the award plaque and gave a commendation speech at the ceremony for Sugihara at the Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.[48]

Family edit

 
Yukiko Sugihara in 2000
  • Yukiko Sugihara (née Kikuchi) (1913–2008) – wife. Poet and author of Visas for 6,000 Lives. She was the eldest daughter of a high school principal in Kagawa Prefecture, and the granddaughter of a Buddhist priest in Iwate Prefecture. She was also well versed in German, and a member of Kanagawa Prefecture Poetry Committee and Selection Committee for Asahi Shimbun's Kadan poetry section. She was the author of Poetry Anthology: White Nights and other works. She also converted to Russian Orthodoxy upon her marriage to Sugihara.[citation needed] Died on 8 October 2008.
  • Hiroki Sugihara (1936–2002) – eldest son. Studied in California upon graduating from Shonan High School in Kanagawa Prefecture in Japan. Translated his mother's book Visas for Life into English.
  • Chiaki Sugihara (1938–2010) – second son. Born in Helsinki. Studied in California.
  • Haruki Sugihara (1940–12 November 1947) – third son. He was born in Kaunas. Died in Japan aged between six and seven of leukemia.
  • Nobuki Sugihara (1948–) – fourth son. Attended Hebrew University in Israel in 1968 at the invitation of the Israeli Foreign Ministry and the Jewish Fund. Represents the Sugihara family as the only surviving son of Chiune. Since his attendance at the award ceremony of the Sugihara Righteous Forest in the outskirt of Jerusalem on behalf of Chiune in 1985, Nobuki has been actively attending Chiune-related events around the world as the family's spokesperson. Nobuki also heads NPO Sugihara, registered in Belgium, in order to promote peace in the Middle East.
  • Grandchildren: Chiune Sugihara had 9 grandchildren (8 still alive) and 9 great-grandchildren.

Legacy and honors edit

 
The Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum in Tsuruga, Fukui, Japan, contains a Sugihara Chiune corner.

Sugihara Street in Vilnius, Lithuania, Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara Street in Jaffa, Israel, and the asteroid 25893 Sugihara are named after him.

In 1992, the town of Yaotsu opened the Park of Humanity, on a hill overlooking the town. In 2000, the Chiune Sugihara Memorial Hall was opened to the public. Since its establishment, more than 600,000 visitors, Japanese and foreign, visited and studied about Sugihara and his virtue.

A corner for Sugihara Chiune is set up in the Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum near Tsuruga Port, the place where many Jewish refugees arrived in Japan, in the city of Tsuruga, Fukui, Japan.[49]

 
Sugihara Street, Netanya

The Sugihara House Museum is in Kaunas, Lithuania.[50] The Conservative synagogue Temple Emeth, in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, US, built a "Sugihara Memorial Garden"[51] and holds an Annual Sugihara Memorial Concert.

When Sugihara's widow Yukiko traveled to Jerusalem in 1998, she was met by tearful survivors who showed her the yellowing visas that her husband had signed. A park in Jerusalem is named after him. Sugihara appeared on a 1998 Israeli postage stamp. The Japanese government honored him on the centennial of his birth in 2000.[1]

In 2001, a sakura park with 200 trees was planted in Vilnius, Lithuania, to mark the 100th anniversary of Sugihara.[clarification needed][52]

In 2002, a memorial statue of Chiune Sugihara by Ramon G. Velazco titled "Chiune Sugihara Memorial, Hero of the Holocaust" was installed in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, US. The life-size bronze statue depicts Sugihara seated on a bench and holding a hand-written visa. Adjacent to the statue is a granite boulder with dedication plaques and a quotation from the Talmud: "He who saves one life, saves the entire world." Its dedication was attended by consuls from Japan, Israel and Lithuania, Los Angeles city officials and Sugihara's son, Chiaki Sugihara.[53]

In 2007 he was posthumously awarded the Commander's Cross with the Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta,[54] and the Commander's Cross Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland by the President of Poland in 1996.[55] Also, in 1993, he was awarded the Life Saving Cross of Lithuania. He was posthumously awarded the Sakura Award by the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre (JCCC) in Toronto in November 2014.

In June 2016, a street in Netanya, Israel, was named for Sugihara in the presence of his son Nobuki, as a number of Netanya's current residents are descendants of the Lithuanian Jews who had been given a means of escaping the Third Reich.[56] There is also a street named Rua Cônsul Chiune Sugihara in Londrina, Brazil.

The Lithuanian government declared 2020 "The Year of Chiune Sugihara", promising to erect a monument to him and issue postage stamps in his honor.[57] A monument to Sugihara, featuring origami cranes, was unveiled in Kaunas in October 2020.[58]

 
Sugihara Way in front of Congregation Beth David, Saratoga CA, US

Since October 2021, there is a Chiune Sugihara Square in Jerusalem as well as a Garden named for him in the Kiryat Hayovel neighborhood of the city.[59]

Biographies edit

 
Sugihara's widow with Lithuania's president Valdas Adamkus at a tree planting ceremony in Vilnius, Lithuania in 2001
 
Memorial, Sugihara Park, Vilnius
 
Sakura cherry trees, Sugihara Park, Vilnius
  • Levine, Hillel (4 November 1996). In Search of Sugihara: The Elusive Japanese Diplomat Who Risked his Life to Rescue 10,000 Jews From the Holocaust. Free Press. ISBN 978-0684832517.
  • Yukiko Sugihara, Visas for Life, translated by Hiroki Sugihara, San Francisco, Edu-Comm, 1995.
  • Yukiko Sugihara, Visas pour 6000 vies, traduit par Karine Chesneau, Ed. Philippe Picquier, 1995.
  • A Japanese TV station in Japan made a documentary film about Chiune Sugihara. This film was shot in Kaunas, at the place of the former embassy of Japan.
  • Sugihara: Conspiracy of Kindness (2000) from PBS shares details of Sugihara and his family and the fascinating relationship between the Jews and the Japanese in the 1930s and 1940s.[60]
  • A Special Fate: Chiune Sugihara: Hero of the Holocaust (2000), by Alison Leslie Gold, is a book for young readers (grades 5-10). The book draws on interviews with Sugihara's wife and other witnesses and weaves in the stories of two Jewish refugee families. The epilogue describes how Sugihara was finally honored in his own country and in Israel.
  • On 11 October 2005, Yomiuri TV (Osaka) aired a two-hour-long drama entitled Visas for Life about Sugihara, based on his wife's book.[61]
  • Chris Tashima and Chris Donahue made a film about Sugihara in 1997, Visas and Virtue, which won the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film.[62]
  • A 2002 children's picture book, Passage to Freedom: The Sugihara Story, by Ken Mochizuki and illustrated by Dom Lee, is written from the perspective of Sugihara's young sons and in the voice of Hiroki Sugihara (age 5, at the time). The book also includes an afterword written by Hiroki Sugihara.
  • In 2015, Japanese fictional drama film Persona Non Grata (杉原千畝 スギハラチウネ) was produced, Toshiaki Karasawa played Sugihara.

Notable people helped by Sugihara edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Tenembaum B. "Sempo "Chiune" Sugihara, Japanese Savior". The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b Levine, Hillel (4 November 1996). In Search of Sugihara: The Elusive Japanese Diplomat Who Risked his Life to Rescue 10,000 Jews From the Holocaust. Free Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0684832517.
  3. ^ Mochizuki, Ken; Lee, Dom (1997). Passage to Freedom : The Sugihara Story (1st ed.). New York: Lee & Low Books. Afterword. ISBN 1880000490. OCLC 35565958.
  4. ^ Liphshiz, Cnaan (23 May 2019). "Holocaust hero Chiune Sugihara's son sets record straight on his father's story". Times of Israel. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  5. ^ The birthplace is recorded as Kouzuchi-town, Mugi district in the family registry of the Sugiharas
  6. ^ Pulvers, Roger (11 July 2015). "Chiune Sugihara: man of conscience". The Japan Times Online. ISSN 0447-5763. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  7. ^ "Sugihara: Conspiracy of Kindness . Interactive Timeline (text-only) | PBS". www.pbs.org.
  8. ^ Masha Leon: ""Remembering Yukiko Sugihara", forward.com
  9. ^ (in French) Anne Frank au Pays du Manga – Diaporama : Le Fils du Juste 29 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Arte, 2012
  10. ^ Horovitz, David (14 October 2021). "81 years later, Chiune Sugihara's humanity continues to enable new lives". www.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Yukiko Sugihara (1995). Visas for life. Edu-Comm Plus. ISBN 978-0-9649674-0-3.
  12. ^ a b Sugihara, Seishiro (2001), Chiune Sugihara and Japan's Foreign Ministry, between Incompetence and Culpability. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
  13. ^ . Asiatic Society of Japan. March 1995. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  14. ^ "Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara".
  15. ^ "Righteous Among the Nations: Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara".
  16. ^ Cassedy, Ellen. "We Are Here: Facing History In Lithuania." Bridges: A Jewish Feminist Journal 12, no. 2 (2007): 77–85.
  17. ^ JDC, "Aiding Jews Overseas, Report of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Inc. for 1940 and the first 5 months of 1941 2 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine" pp. 27–28, 39
  18. ^ JDC, "Aiding Jews Overseas, Report of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Inc. for 1941 and the first 5 months of 1942 2 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine" pp. 15–16, 33.
  19. ^ JACAR.B04013208900, I-0881/0244
  20. ^ JACAR.B04013209400,I-0882/0102
  21. ^ Marthus, Jurgen "Jewish Responses to Persecution vol. III 1941–1942" p. 43
  22. ^ Warhaftig, Zorach (1988). Refugee and Survivor: Rescue Efforts during the Holocaust. Yad Vashem. ISBN 978-965308005-8.
  23. ^ Watanabe, Katsumasa (2000). 真相・杉原ビザ [The truth – Sugihara Visa] (in Japanese), Tokyo: Taisyo Syuppan
  24. ^ Jewcom. "Emigration from Japan, July 1940 – November 1941"
  25. ^ "Miscellaneous documents relating to problems of ethnic groups/ Problem of Jews: Vol. 11/ Division-3". Japan Center for Asian Historical Records [ja]. Ref. B04013209600.
  26. ^ JACAR.B04013209600,0882/0245
  27. ^ Wolpe, David. "The Japanese Man Who Saved 6,000 Jews With His Handwriting."" New York Times. 15 October 2018. 15 October 2018.
  28. ^ Interview with Ann Curry on 22 May 2019 at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in NYC
  29. ^ Sakamoto, Pamela Rotner (1998). Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees: a World War II dilemma. New York: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-96199-2.
  30. ^ Guryn, Andrzej. "Tadeusz Romer. Help for Polish Jews in Far East
  31. ^ Japan Times and Asahi on 19 January 1985, as 6,000, Nikkei and Mainichi on 17 January 1985, as 4,500
  32. ^ Altman, Ilya. "The issuance of visas to war refugees by Chiune Sugihara as reflected in documents of Russian Archives" (2017)
  33. ^ JACAR.B04013209400,i-0882/0036
  34. ^ JACAR.B04013209100,I0881/0448
  35. ^ Kanno, Kenji (2018). "The Arrival of Jewish Refugees to Wartime Japan as reported in the local newspaper Fukui Shinbun(Part I: 1940)" (PDF). ナマール(in Japanese) (22). Kobe・Yudaya Kenkyukai.
  36. ^ ushmm "Polish Jews in Lithuania:Escape to Japan"
  37. ^ JACAR.B04013209700,I-0882/0326
  38. ^ Aleksandra Hądzelek (University of Technology Sydney, Australia) (2016). "The memory of Sugihara and the "visas for life" in Poland" (PDF). rcin.org.pl.
  39. ^ a b c Levine, Hillel (1996). In search of Sugihara: the elusive Japanese diplomat who risked his life to rescue 10,000 Jews from the Holocaust. New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-0-684-83251-7.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  41. ^ "Zdeněk Slanina: Japonský Schindler Čiune Sugihara v Praze 1940-41".
  42. ^ a b Lee, Dom; Mochizuki, Ken (2003). Passage to Freedom: The Sugihara Story. New York: Lee & Low Books. ISBN 978-1-58430-157-8.
  43. ^ Hauser, Zvi (28 October 2020). "Persona non grata no more: Chiune Sugihara - analysis". from the original on 29 October 2020.
  44. ^ Levine, Hillel (1996). In search of Sugihara: the elusive Japanese diplomat who risked his life to rescue 10,000 Jews from the Holocaust. New York: Free Press. p.259
  45. ^ Goldberg, Carey (8 November 1995). "The Honors Come Late For a Japanese Schindler;A Month of Tribute to Savior of Thousands". The New York Times.
  46. ^ Fogel, Joshua A. "The Recent Boom in Shanghai Studies." Journal of the History of Ideas 71, no. 2 (2010): 313–333.
  47. ^ "Sugihara Chiune: "Japan's Schindler"". nippon.com. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  48. ^ Reitman, Valerie (20 October 2000). "Honors--Some Say Belated--for 'the Japanese Schindler'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  49. ^ "Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum". Tmo-tsuruga.com. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
  50. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 February 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 June 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  52. ^ "Chiune Sugihara sakura park - Vilnius". wikimapia.org. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  53. ^ Kyodo News International, Inc. "Sugihara statue dedicated in L.A.'s Little Tokyo". The Free Library. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  54. ^ "2007 Order of Polonia Restituta" (PDF). Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  55. ^ "1996 Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland" (PDF). Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  56. ^ . japantimes.co.jp. The Japan Times. 8 June 2016. Archived from the original on 8 June 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2016. A ceremony on a planned street named after the late Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara was held in Netanya, Israel, on Tuesday. Sugihara issued transit visas to thousands of Jews people during World War II, which later came to be known as "visas for life," as they saved many from Nazi persecution. Netanya is known as a place where many Jews arrived after fleeing from the oppression thanks to visas issued by Sugihara. The plan to build the street marks 30 years since Sugihara's death. "It's such an honor. I wish my father was here," said Sugihara's fourth son, Nobuki, 67.
  57. ^ Rankin, Jennifer (4 January 2020). "My father, the quiet hero: how Japan's Schindler saved 6,000 Jews". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  58. ^ "Chiune Sugihara Statue Unveiled in Kaunas – Lithuanian Jewish Community". 20 October 2020. from the original on 5 December 2020. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  59. ^ "Jerusalem square dedicated to Chiune Sugihara, Japanese diplomat who helped Jews escape Nazis". The Japan Times. 12 October 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  60. ^ "Sugihara: Conspiracy of Kindness | PBS". PBS. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  61. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 December 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  62. ^ "Visas and Virtue (2001) – IMDb". IMDb. 20 April 1997. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  63. ^ Fiszman, Rachele. "In Memoriam." PS: Political Science and Politics 33, no. 3 (2000): 659–60.

Further reading edit

  • Ayirtman-Sugihara, Esin (2020). Chiune Sugihara. ISBN 978-9464007862.
  • Chapman, J.W.M., "Japan in Poland's Secret Neighbourhood War" in Japan Forum No. 2, 1995.
  • Ganor, Solly (2003). Light One Candle: A Survivor's Tale from Lithuania to Jerusalem. Kodansha America. ISBN 978-1-56836-352-3.
  • Gold, Alison Leslie (2000). A Special Fate: Chiune Sugihara: Hero Of The Holocaust. New York: Scholastic. ISBN 978-0-439-25968-2.
  • Goldstein, Jonathan, "The Case of Jan Zwartendijk in Lithuania, 1940" in Deffry M. Diefendorf (ed.), New Currents in Holocaust Research, Lessons and Legacies, vol. VI, Northwestern University Press, 2004.
  • Iwry, Samuel (2004). To Wear the Dust of War: From Bialystok to Shanghai to the Promised Land, an Oral History (Palgrave Studies in Oral History). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6576-9.
  • Johnstone, George "Japan's Sugihara came to Jews' rescue during WWII" in Investor's Business Daily, 8 December 2011.
  • Kaplan, Vivian Jeanette, Ten Green Bottles: The True Story of One Family's Journey from War-torn Austria to the Ghettos of Shanghai (St. Martin's Press, 2004) ISBN 0-312-33054-5
  • Kaplan, William, One More Border: The True Story of One Family's Escape from War-Torn Europe, ISBN 0-88899-332-3
  • Kowner, Rotem. 2023. "A Holocaust Paragon of Virtue’s Rise to Fame: The Transnational Commemoration of the Japanese Diplomat Sugihara Chiune and Its Divergent National Motives." The American Historical Review, Volume 128, Issue 1, Pages 31–63,
  • Kranzler, David (1988). Japanese, Nazis and Jews: The Jewish Refugee Community of Shanghai, 1938–1945. Ktav Pub Inc. ISBN 978-0-88125-086-2.
  • Krebs, Gerhard, at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 November 2005), NOAG 175–176, 2004.
  • Krebs, Gerhard, "The Jewish Problem in Japanese-German Relations 1933–1945" in Bruce Reynolds (ed.), Japan in Fascist Era, New York, 2004.
  • Mitsui Hideko, "Longing for the Other : traitors' cosmopolitanism" in Social Anthropology, Vol 18, Issue 4, November 2010, European Association of Social Anthropologists.
  • Pałasz-Rutkowska, Ewa & Andrzej T. Romer, "Polish-Japanese co-operation during World War II" in Japan Forum No. 7, 1995.
  • Paldiel, Mordecai (2007). Diplomat heroes of the Holocaust. Jersey City, NJ: distrib. by Ktav Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-88125-909-4.
  • Saul, Eric (1995). Visas for Life : The Remarkable Story of Chiune & Yukiko Sugihara and the Rescue of Thousands of Jews. San Francisco: Holocaust Oral History Project. ISBN 978-0-9648999-0-2.
  • Shiraishi Masaaki (2021). Sugihara Chiune: The Duty and Humanity of an Intelligence Officer. Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture.
  • Staliunas, Darius; Stefan Schreiner; Leonidas Donskis; Alvydas Nikzentaitis (2004). The vanished world of Lithuanian Jews. Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 978-90-420-0850-2.
  • Steinhouse, Carl L (2004). Righteous and Courageous: How a Japanese Diplomat Saved Thousands of Jews in Lithuania from the Holocaust. Authorhouse. ISBN 978-1-4184-2079-6.
  • Sugihara Seishiro & Norman Hu (2001), Chiune Sugihara and Japan's Foreign Ministry : Between Incompetence and Culpability, University Press of America. ISBN 978-0-7618-1971-4
  • Sugihara Yukiko (1995), Visas for Life, translation by Hiroki Sugihara and Anne Hoshiko Akabori, Edu-Comm Plus Editors, ISBN 978-0964967403
  • Taniuchi Yutaka (2001), The miraculous visas – Chiune Sugihara and the story of the 6000 Jews, New York: Gefen Books. ISBN 978-4-89798-565-7
  • Watanabe Takesato (1999), "" in Social Sciences Review, Doshisha University, No. 59.
  • ""

External links edit

  • The Chiune Sugihara Memorial Hall in Yaotsu Town
  • NPO Chiune Sugihara. Visas For Life Foundation in Japan
  • Jewish Virtual Library: Chiune and Yukiko Sugihara
  • Revisiting the Sugihara Story from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project: "Forget You Not"
  • (awarded to Sugihara in 2000)
  • Foreign Ministry honors Chiune Sugihara by setting his Commemorative Plaque (10 October 2000)
  • Chiune Sempo Sugihara – Righteous Among the Nations – Yad Vashem
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum – Online Exhibition 23 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara
  • Yukiko Sugihara's Farewell on YouTube
  • Sugihara Museum in Kaunas, Lithuania
  • Interview Nobuki Sugihara
  • Chiune Sugihara at Find a Grave  

chiune, sugihara, 杉原, 千畝, sugihara, chiune, january, 1900, july, 1986, japanese, diplomat, served, vice, consul, japanese, empire, kaunas, lithuania, during, second, world, sugihara, helped, thousands, jews, flee, europe, issuing, transit, visas, them, that, t. Chiune Sugihara 杉原 千畝 Sugihara Chiune 1 January 1900 31 July 1986 1 was a Japanese diplomat who served as vice consul for the Japanese Empire in Kaunas Lithuania During the Second World War Sugihara helped thousands of Jews flee Europe by issuing transit visas to them so that they could travel through Japanese territory risking his career and the lives of his family 2 3 The fleeing Jews were refugees from German occupied Western Poland and Soviet occupied Eastern Poland as well as residents of Lithuania Chiune Sugihara杉原 千畝Sugihara before 1945Born 1900 01 01 1 January 1900Kozuchi Gifu JapanDied31 July 1986 1986 07 31 aged 86 Kamakura Kanagawa JapanResting placeKamakura CemeteryOther names Sempo Sergei Pavlovich SugiharaOccupationVice consul for the Japanese Empire in LithuaniaKnown forRescue of 5 558 Jews during the HolocaustSpousesKlaudia Semionovna Apollonova m 1918 div 1935 wbr Yukiko Kikuchi m 1936 wbr Children4AwardsOrder of the Sacred Treasure 5th Class 1988 Righteous Among the Nations 1984 In 1985 the State of Israel honored Sugihara as one of the Righteous Among the Nations for his actions He is the only Japanese national to have been so honored In Lithuania 2020 was The Year of Chiune Sugihara It has been estimated as many as 100 000 people alive today are the descendants of the recipients of Sugihara visas 4 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Manchurian Foreign Office 3 Lithuania 3 1 Jewish refugees 3 1 1 Sugihara s visas 3 1 2 Numbers saved 4 Imprisonment release 5 Later life 6 Honor restored 7 Family 8 Legacy and honors 9 Biographies 10 Notable people helped by Sugihara 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and education editChiune Sugihara was born on 1 January 1900 Meiji 33 in Mino Gifu prefecture to a middle class father Yoshimi Sugihara 杉原好水 Sugihara Yoshimi and an upper middle class mother Yatsu Sugihara 杉原やつ Sugihara Yatsu 5 When he was born his father worked at a tax office in Kozuchi town and his family lived in a borrowed temple with the Buddhist temple Kyōsen ji 教泉寺 where he was born nearby He was the second son among five boys and one girl 1 His father and family moved into the tax office within the branch of the Nagoya Tax Administration Office one after another In 1903 his family moved to Asahi Village in Niu gun Fukui Prefecture In 1904 they moved to Yokkaichi Mie Prefecture On 25 October 1905 they moved to Nakatsu Town Ena gun Gifu Prefecture In 1906 Meiji 39 on 2 April Chiune entered Nakatsu Town Municipal Elementary School now Nakatsugawa City Minami Elementary School in Gifu Prefecture On 31 March 1907 he transferred to Kuwana Municipal Kuwana Elementary School in Mie Prefecture currently Kuwana Municipal Nissin Elementary School In December of that same year he transferred to Nagoya Municipal Furuwatari Elementary School now Nagoya Municipal Heiwa Elementary School In 1912 he graduated with top honors from Furuwatari Elementary School and entered Aichi prefectural 5th secondary school now Zuiryo high school a combined junior and senior high school His father wanted him to become a physician but Chiune deliberately failed the entrance exam by writing only his name on the exam papers Instead he entered Waseda University in 1918 Taishō 7 and majored in English language At that time he entered Yuai Gakusha the Christian fraternity that had been founded by Baptist pastor Harry Baxter Benninghoff to improve his English In 1919 he passed the Foreign Ministry Scholarship exam From 1920 to 1922 Sugihara served in the Imperial Japanese Army as a second lieutenant with the 79th Infantry Regiment stationed in Korea then part of the Empire of Japan He resigned his commission in November 1922 and took the Foreign Ministry s language qualifying exams the following year passing the Russian exam with distinction The Japanese Foreign Ministry recruited him and assigned him to Harbin Manchuria China where he also studied the Russian and German languages and later became an expert on Russian affairs nbsp Chiune Sugihara s birth registry indicating his birthplace as Kozuchi Town Mugi District nowadays known as Mino City in Gifu Prefecture nbsp Observation Kozuchi town from Mt Ogura Kyosenji Temple where Chiuna Sugihara was born and village section Named Chiune which can be seen from the temple nbsp Kyōsen ji Temple 教泉寺 This temple was located at the address reported as the birthplace of Sugihara Chiune and there was a Kōzuchi tax office that Chiune father served in the immediate area nbsp Chiune Bridge A bridge over Chiune cho which was the origin of the name of Chiune nbsp Bus stop of Chiune cho where the name of Sugihara Chiune was derivedManchurian Foreign Office editWhen Sugihara served in the Manchukuo Manchurian Foreign Office he took part in the negotiations with the Soviet Union concerning the Northern Manchurian Railway During his time in Harbin Sugihara married Klaudia Semionovna Apollonova and converted to Christianity Russian Orthodox Church 6 using the baptismal name Sergei Pavlovich 2 In 1934 Sugihara quit his post as Deputy Foreign Minister in Manchukuo in protest over Japanese mistreatment of the local Chinese 7 Sugihara and his wife divorced in 1935 before he returned to Japan where he married Yukiko 1913 2008 nee Kikuchi 8 After the marriage they had four sons Hiroki Chiaki Haruki and Nobuki As of 2021 Nobuki is the only surviving son and represents the Sugihara family 9 10 Chiune Sugihara also served in the Information Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and as a translator for the Japanese delegation in Helsinki Finland 11 Lithuania edit nbsp Former Japanese consulate in Kaunas In 1939 Sugihara became a vice consul of the Japanese Consulate in Kaunas the temporary capital of Lithuania His duties included reporting on Soviet and German troop movements 1 and to find out if Germany planned an attack on the Soviets and if so to report the details of this attack to his superiors in Berlin and Tokyo 12 Sugihara had cooperated with Polish intelligence as part of a bigger Japanese Polish cooperative plan 13 In Lithuania Sugihara started using the Sino Japanese reading Sempo for his given name 14 since it was easier to pronounce than Chiune 15 Jewish refugees edit As the Soviet Union occupied sovereign Lithuania in 1940 many Jewish refugees from Poland Polish Jews as well as Lithuanian Jews tried to acquire exit visas Without the visas it was dangerous to travel yet it was impossible to find countries willing to issue them Hundreds of refugees came to the Japanese consulate in Kaunas trying to get a visa to Japan At the time on the brink of the war Lithuanian Jews made up one third of Lithuania s urban population and half of the residents of every town 16 In the period between 16 July and 3 August 1940 the Dutch Honorary Consul Jan Zwartendijk provided over 2 200 Jews with official third destination passes to Curacao a Dutch colony in the Caribbean that required no entry visa or to Surinam European Jewish refugees began to arrive in Japan in July 1940 and departed by September 1941 An overview during this period is described in the Annual Reports of 1940 17 and 1941 18 by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee JDC In June 1940 Italy entered into the war and the Mediterranean route was closed The Committee in Greater Germany forced to seek new outlets for emigration arranged for the transportation of Jews from Germany across Europe and Asia via the Trans Siberian Railway to Vladivostok thence to Japan From Japan the refugees were to embark for destinations in the Western Hemisphere On 31 December 1940 the Soviet Union declared that all persons residing in Lithuania as of 1 September 1940 had the right to apply for Soviet citizenship While the great bulk of Polish refugees in Lithuania opted for Soviet citizenship there was a group of 4 000 5 000 persons for whom the promise of citizenship offered little opportunity These were principally rabbis yeshiva students members of the intellectual classes and leaders of various Jewish communal and labor organizations Most of them immediately applied for exit permits from Lithuania Although during the early weeks of 1941 exit permits and Japanese transit visas were readily granted the problem was how to find money for transportation costs for those people whose very existences were jeopardized if they remained in Lithuania The JDC in collaboration with a number of other American Jewish groups contributed toward the funds required for the Trans Siberian trip to Japan of 1 700 persons In July 1940 Jewish refugees from Germany and other countries began arriving in Japan at Tsuruga Shimonoseki and Kobe 19 Japanese embassies and consulates except Kaunas issued 3 448 Japanese transit visas from January 1940 to March 1941 20 Most of the recipients held valid end visas and immediately departed Japan Starting in October 1940 Polish refugees from Lithuania began to land on Tsuruga Their number increased sharply from January 1941 onwards By the end of March there were close to 2 000 in the country mostly in Kobe More than half of these refugees did not hold valid end visas and were unable to proceed further than Japan They were forced to stay for a long time to find immigration countries nbsp Table 1 Number of European Jews arriving in Japan The number of Jewish refugees who came to Japan as seen in Table 1 has been documented as 4 500 21 5 000 22 or 6 000 23 The 552 persons noted in the second row of the table do not match the number of departing persons edited by Jewcom 24 The Siberian railway had been closed and no evidence supporting this figure is found in JDC annual reports or MOFA documents For the 200 persons described in Note 1 of Table 1 there is a document in the Archives of MOFA 25 that the Japanese consulate of Vladivostok transferred about 50 Jewish refugees who had been stranded in Vladivostok to Shanghai with Soviet Union cargo on 26 April 1941 26 Sugihara s visas edit At the time the Japanese government required that visas be issued only to those who had gone through appropriate immigration procedures and had enough funds Most of the refugees did not fulfill these criteria Sugihara dutifully contacted the Japanese Foreign Ministry three times for instructions Each time the Ministry responded that anybody granted a visa should have a visa to a third destination to exit Japan with no exceptions 1 Being aware that applicants were in danger if they stayed behind Sugihara decided to ignore his orders and from 18 July to 28 August 1940 issued ten day visas to Jews for transit through Japan Given his inferior post and the culture of the Japanese Foreign Service bureaucracy this was an unusual act of disobedience He spoke to Soviet officials who agreed to let the Jews travel through the country via the Trans Siberian Railway at five times the standard ticket price nbsp Czechoslovak passport with a visa which was granted in 1940 by diplomat Sugihara A 1940 issued visa by consul Sugihara in Lithuania showing a journey taken through Soviet Union Tsuruga and Curacao Sugihara continued to hand write visas reportedly spending 18 to 20 hours a day on them producing a normal month s worth of visas each day until 4 September when he had to leave his post before the consulate was closed By that time he had granted thousands of visas to Jews many of whom were heads of households and thus permitted to take their families with them It is claimed that before he left he handed the official consulate stamp to a refugee so that more visas could be forged 27 His son Nobuki Sugihara adamantly insisted in an interview with Ann Curry that his father never gave the stamp to anyone 28 According to witnesses he was still writing visas while in transit from his hotel and after boarding the train at Kaunas railway station throwing visas into the crowd of desperate refugees out of the train s window even as the train pulled out nbsp Consular office with original consular flag in Kaunas In final desperation blank sheets of paper with only the consulate seal and his signature that could be later written over into a visa were hurriedly prepared and flung out from the train As he prepared to depart he said Please forgive me I cannot write anymore I wish you the best When he bowed deeply to the people before him someone exclaimed Sugihara We ll never forget you I ll surely see you again 11 Sugihara himself wondered about official reaction to the thousands of visas he issued Many years later he recalled No one ever said anything about it I remember thinking that they probably didn t realize how many I actually issued 29 Numbers saved edit On the number of refugees passing through Japan who held Japanese transit visas for Curacao issued by Sugihara the so called Sugihara visa there are two documents stating numbers of 2 200 30 and 6 000 11 The 6 000 persons as stated in Visas for Life is likely hearsay citation needed K Watanabe argued that there could be 6 000 arguing that use by three family members per visa is reasonable that there were newspaper articles reporting the 6 000 figure and that most of the refugees landing on Tsuruga were now admitted with a Sugihara visa On 29 September 1983 Fuji Television aired a documentary One visa that decided their fate the Japanese who saved 4 500 Jews In 1985 when Chiune Sugihara received the Righteous among the Nations award some Japanese newspapers reported that he saved 6 000 people and others 4 500 31 The Japan Times dated 19 January 1985 had the headline Japanese Man honored for saving 6 000 Jews and reported Sugihara defied orders from Tokyo and issued transit visas to nearly 6 000 Jews US newspapers which referred to Sugihara as a diplomat who defied his government s orders and issued transit visas for 6 000 Jews Table 2 shows the number of refugees who had stayed at Kobe in 1941 based on Archives of MOFA Refugees classified as No visa in the table are presumed to have held fakes of Japanese transit visas issued by Sugihara 32 The Soviets wanted to purge Polish refugees who had been stranded in Soviet territory with Japanese transit visas as soon as possible 33 and so permitted them to get on the train to Vladivostok with or without a destination visa The Japanese government was forced to admit them On 8 April 1941 of the 1 400 Polish Jews staying at Kobe about 1 300 were for Curacao or No visa nbsp Table 2 Number of European Jewish refugees staying at Kobe The Polish ambassador in Tokyo Tadeusz Romer remembered They Polish refugees only had fictitious Dutch visas for the island of Curacao and Japanese transit visas According to the refugee name list surveyed by Fukui Prefecture 34 of the 306 persons who landed at Tsuruga Port in October 1940 there were 203 Poles Their destinations were US 89 Palestine 46 Curacao 24 and others It is estimated that about 80 of them were on the Sugihara visa list 35 The documents of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 36 and Refugee and Survivor do not mention the number of people saved by a Sugihara visa More than half of the refugees who entered with invalid visas including a Sugihara visa obtained valid visas with the help of JDC HIAS the Embassy of Poland and the Japanese government and embarked for host countries In August September 1941 Japanese authorities transferred about 850 refugees 37 stranded in Japan to Shanghai before Japan and the United States began war According to Emigration Table by Jewcom the number of Polish refugees leaving Japan for various destinations was Shanghai 860 US 532 Canada 186 Palestine 186 Australia 81 South Africa 59 and others 207 in total 2 111 The total number of Jews saved by Sugihara is in dispute with estimates around 6 000 family visas which allowed several people to travel on one visa were also issued which would account for the much higher figure The Simon Wiesenthal Center has estimated that Chiune Sugihara issued transit visas for about 6 000 Jews and that around 40 000 descendants of the Jewish refugees are alive today because of his actions 1 Polish intelligence produced some false visas 38 Sugihara s widow and eldest son estimate that he saved 10 000 Jews from certain death whereas Boston University professor and author Hillel Levine also estimates that he helped as many as 10 000 people but that far fewer people ultimately survived 39 Some Jews who received Sugihara s visas did not leave Lithuania in time were captured by the Germans after Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 and perished in the Holocaust nbsp Recreation of Sugihara s consular desk in Kaunas The Diplomatic Record Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has opened to the public two documents concerning Sugihara s file the first aforementioned document is a 5 February 1941 diplomatic note from Chiune Sugihara to Japan s then Foreign Minister Yōsuke Matsuoka in which Sugihara stated he issued 1 500 out of 2 139 transit visas to Jews and Poles however since most of the 2 139 people were not Jewish this would imply that most of the visas were given to Polish Jews instead Levine then notes that another document from the same foreign office file indicates an additional 3 448 visas were issued in Kaunas for a total of 5 580 visas which were likely given to Jews desperate to flee Lithuania for safety in Japan or Japanese occupied China Many refugees used their visas to travel across the Soviet Union to Vladivostok and then by boat to Kobe Japan where there was a Jewish community Romer the Polish ambassador in Tokyo organized help for them From August 1940 to November 1941 he had managed to get transit visas in Japan asylum visas to Canada Australia New Zealand and Burma immigration certificates to British Mandatory Palestine and immigrant visas to the United States and some Latin American countries for more than two thousand Polish Lithuanian Jewish refugees who arrived in Kobe Japan and the Shanghai Ghetto China The remaining number of Sugihara survivors stayed in Japan until they were deported to Japanese held Shanghai where there was already a large Jewish community that had existed as early as the mid 1930s Some took the route through Korea directly to Shanghai without passing through Japan A group of thirty people all possessing a visa of Jakub Goldberg were shuttled back and forth on the open sea for several weeks before finally being allowed to pass through Tsuruga 40 Most of the around 20 000 Jews survived the Holocaust in the Shanghai ghetto until the Japanese surrender in 1945 three to four months following the collapse of the Third Reich itself Imprisonment release editExternal image nbsp Sugihara and his wife in front of a gate in Prague It reads No Jews allowed in German but Jews allowed in Czech 41 because someone scratched out the no Sugihara was reassigned to Konigsberg East Prussia 39 page needed before serving as a Consul General in Prague in the German occupied Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia from March 1941 to late 1942 and in the legation in Bucharest Romania from 1942 to 1944 He was promoted to the rank of third secretary in 1943 and was decorated with the Order of the Sacred Treasure 5th Class in 1944 When Soviet troops entered Romania they imprisoned Sugihara and his family in a POW camp for eighteen months They were released in 1946 and returned to Japan through the Soviet Union via the Trans Siberian Railway and Nakhodka port In 1947 the Japanese foreign office asked him to resign due to downsizing Some sources including his wife Yukiko Sugihara have said that the Foreign Ministry told Sugihara he was dismissed because of that incident in Lithuania 39 42 Later life editSugihara settled in Fujisawa in Kanagawa prefecture with his wife and three sons To support his family he took a series of menial jobs at one point selling light bulbs door to door He suffered a personal tragedy in 1947 when his youngest son Haruki died at the age of seven shortly after their return to Japan 12 In 1949 they had one more son Nobuki who is the last son alive representing the Chiune Sugihara Family residing in Belgium Chiune Sugihara later began to work for an export company as general manager of a U S Military Post Exchange Utilizing his command of the Russian language Sugihara went on to work and live a low key existence in the Soviet Union for sixteen years while his family stayed in Japan nbsp Chiune Sugihara and his son Nobuki in Israel December 1969 nbsp Chiune Sempo Sugihara s plaque in the garden at Yad Vashem Jerusalem In 1968 Yehoshua Nishri an economic attache to the Israeli Embassy in Tokyo and one of the Sugihara beneficiaries finally located and contacted him Nishri had been a Polish teen in the 1940s The next year Sugihara visited Israel and was greeted by the Israeli government Sugihara beneficiaries began to lobby for his recognition by Yad Vashem In 1984 Yad Vashem recognised him as Righteous Among the Nations Hebrew חסידי אומות העולם translit Khasidei Umot ha Olam 43 Sugihara was too ill to travel to Israel so his wife and youngest son Nobuki accepted the honor on his behalf In 1985 45 years after the Soviet invasion of Lithuania he was asked his reasons for issuing visas to the Jews Sugihara explained that the refugees were human beings and that they simply needed help You want to know about my motivation don t you Well It is the kind of sentiments anyone would have when he actually sees refugees face to face begging with tears in their eyes He just cannot help but sympathize with them Among the refugees were the elderly and women They were so desperate that they went so far as to kiss my shoes Yes I actually witnessed such scenes with my own eyes Also I felt at that time that the Japanese government did not have any uniform opinion in Tokyo Some Japanese military leaders were just scared because of the pressure from the Nazis while other officials in the Home Ministry were simply ambivalent People in Tokyo were not united I felt it silly to deal with them So I made up my mind not to wait for their reply I knew that somebody would surely complain about me in the future But I myself thought this would be the right thing to do There is nothing wrong in saving many people s lives The spirit of humanity philanthropy neighborly friendship with this spirit I ventured to do what I did confronting this most difficult situation and because of this reason I went ahead with redoubled courage 44 When asked by Moshe Zupnik who received one of the visas from Sugihara in 1940 45 why he risked his career to save other people he said simply I do it just because I have pity on the people They want to get out so I let them have the visas Chiune Sugihara died at a hospital in Kamakura on 31 July 1986 Despite the publicity given him in Israel and other nations he had remained virtually unknown in his home country Only when a large Jewish delegation from around the world including the Israeli ambassador to Japan attended his funeral did his neighbours find out what he had done 42 His subsequent considerable posthumous acclaim contrasts with the obscurity in which he lived following the loss of his diplomatic career 46 Honor restored editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message His death spotlighted his humanitarian acts during World War II and created the opportunity to revise his reputation as a diplomat in his own country In 1991 Muneo Suzuki Parliamentary Vice President of Foreign Affairs apologized to Chiune s family for the long time unfair treatment by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 47 Official honor restoration by Japanese Government was made on 10 October 2000 when Foreign Minister Yōhei Kōno set the award plaque and gave a commendation speech at the ceremony for Sugihara at the Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan 48 Family edit nbsp Yukiko Sugihara in 2000 Yukiko Sugihara nee Kikuchi 1913 2008 wife Poet and author of Visas for 6 000 Lives She was the eldest daughter of a high school principal in Kagawa Prefecture and the granddaughter of a Buddhist priest in Iwate Prefecture She was also well versed in German and a member of Kanagawa Prefecture Poetry Committee and Selection Committee for Asahi Shimbun s Kadan poetry section She was the author of Poetry Anthology White Nights and other works She also converted to Russian Orthodoxy upon her marriage to Sugihara citation needed Died on 8 October 2008 Hiroki Sugihara 1936 2002 eldest son Studied in California upon graduating from Shonan High School in Kanagawa Prefecture in Japan Translated his mother s book Visas for Life into English Chiaki Sugihara 1938 2010 second son Born in Helsinki Studied in California Haruki Sugihara 1940 12 November 1947 third son He was born in Kaunas Died in Japan aged between six and seven of leukemia Nobuki Sugihara 1948 fourth son Attended Hebrew University in Israel in 1968 at the invitation of the Israeli Foreign Ministry and the Jewish Fund Represents the Sugihara family as the only surviving son of Chiune Since his attendance at the award ceremony of the Sugihara Righteous Forest in the outskirt of Jerusalem on behalf of Chiune in 1985 Nobuki has been actively attending Chiune related events around the world as the family s spokesperson Nobuki also heads NPO Sugihara registered in Belgium in order to promote peace in the Middle East Grandchildren Chiune Sugihara had 9 grandchildren 8 still alive and 9 great grandchildren Legacy and honors edit nbsp The Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum in Tsuruga Fukui Japan contains a Sugihara Chiune corner Sugihara Street in Vilnius Lithuania Chiune Sempo Sugihara Street in Jaffa Israel and the asteroid 25893 Sugihara are named after him In 1992 the town of Yaotsu opened the Park of Humanity on a hill overlooking the town In 2000 the Chiune Sugihara Memorial Hall was opened to the public Since its establishment more than 600 000 visitors Japanese and foreign visited and studied about Sugihara and his virtue A corner for Sugihara Chiune is set up in the Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum near Tsuruga Port the place where many Jewish refugees arrived in Japan in the city of Tsuruga Fukui Japan 49 nbsp Sugihara Street Netanya The Sugihara House Museum is in Kaunas Lithuania 50 The Conservative synagogue Temple Emeth in Chestnut Hill Massachusetts US built a Sugihara Memorial Garden 51 and holds an Annual Sugihara Memorial Concert When Sugihara s widow Yukiko traveled to Jerusalem in 1998 she was met by tearful survivors who showed her the yellowing visas that her husband had signed A park in Jerusalem is named after him Sugihara appeared on a 1998 Israeli postage stamp The Japanese government honored him on the centennial of his birth in 2000 1 In 2001 a sakura park with 200 trees was planted in Vilnius Lithuania to mark the 100th anniversary of Sugihara clarification needed 52 In 2002 a memorial statue of Chiune Sugihara by Ramon G Velazco titled Chiune Sugihara Memorial Hero of the Holocaust was installed in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles California US The life size bronze statue depicts Sugihara seated on a bench and holding a hand written visa Adjacent to the statue is a granite boulder with dedication plaques and a quotation from the Talmud He who saves one life saves the entire world Its dedication was attended by consuls from Japan Israel and Lithuania Los Angeles city officials and Sugihara s son Chiaki Sugihara 53 In 2007 he was posthumously awarded the Commander s Cross with the Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta 54 and the Commander s Cross Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland by the President of Poland in 1996 55 Also in 1993 he was awarded the Life Saving Cross of Lithuania He was posthumously awarded the Sakura Award by the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre JCCC in Toronto in November 2014 In June 2016 a street in Netanya Israel was named for Sugihara in the presence of his son Nobuki as a number of Netanya s current residents are descendants of the Lithuanian Jews who had been given a means of escaping the Third Reich 56 There is also a street named Rua Consul Chiune Sugihara in Londrina Brazil The Lithuanian government declared 2020 The Year of Chiune Sugihara promising to erect a monument to him and issue postage stamps in his honor 57 A monument to Sugihara featuring origami cranes was unveiled in Kaunas in October 2020 58 nbsp Sugihara Way in front of Congregation Beth David Saratoga CA US Since October 2021 there is a Chiune Sugihara Square in Jerusalem as well as a Garden named for him in the Kiryat Hayovel neighborhood of the city 59 Biographies edit nbsp Sugihara s widow with Lithuania s president Valdas Adamkus at a tree planting ceremony in Vilnius Lithuania in 2001 nbsp Memorial Sugihara Park Vilnius nbsp Sakura cherry trees Sugihara Park Vilnius Levine Hillel 4 November 1996 In Search of Sugihara The Elusive Japanese Diplomat Who Risked his Life to Rescue 10 000 Jews From the Holocaust Free Press ISBN 978 0684832517 Yukiko Sugihara Visas for Life translated by Hiroki Sugihara San Francisco Edu Comm 1995 Yukiko Sugihara Visas pour 6000 vies traduit par Karine Chesneau Ed Philippe Picquier 1995 A Japanese TV station in Japan made a documentary film about Chiune Sugihara This film was shot in Kaunas at the place of the former embassy of Japan Sugihara Conspiracy of Kindness 2000 from PBS shares details of Sugihara and his family and the fascinating relationship between the Jews and the Japanese in the 1930s and 1940s 60 A Special Fate Chiune Sugihara Hero of the Holocaust 2000 by Alison Leslie Gold is a book for young readers grades 5 10 The book draws on interviews with Sugihara s wife and other witnesses and weaves in the stories of two Jewish refugee families The epilogue describes how Sugihara was finally honored in his own country and in Israel On 11 October 2005 Yomiuri TV Osaka aired a two hour long drama entitled Visas for Life about Sugihara based on his wife s book 61 Chris Tashima and Chris Donahue made a film about Sugihara in 1997 Visas and Virtue which won the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film 62 A 2002 children s picture book Passage to Freedom The Sugihara Story by Ken Mochizuki and illustrated by Dom Lee is written from the perspective of Sugihara s young sons and in the voice of Hiroki Sugihara age 5 at the time The book also includes an afterword written by Hiroki Sugihara In 2015 Japanese fictional drama film Persona Non Grata 杉原千畝 スギハラチウネ was produced Toshiaki Karasawa played Sugihara Notable people helped by Sugihara editLeaders and students of the Mir Yeshiva Yeshivas Tomchei Temimim formally of Lubavitch Lyubavichi Russia relocated to Otwock Poland and elsewhere Yaakov Banai commander of the Lehi movement s combat unit and later an Israeli military commander Joseph R Fiszman professor emeritus of Political Science at the University of Oregon 63 Robert Lewin a Polish art dealer and philanthropist Leo Melamed financier head of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange CME and pioneer of financial futures John G Stoessinger professor of diplomacy at the University of San Diego Marcel Weyland translator Zerach Warhaftig an Israeli lawyer and politician and a signatory of Israel s Declaration of Independence George Zames control theorist Bernard and Rochelle Zell parents of business magnate Sam ZellSee also editIndividuals and groups assisting Jews during the Holocaust Aristides de Sousa Mendes Ho Feng Shan Varian Fry Tatsuo Osako Setsuzo Kotsuji Giorgio Perlasca Thomas Hildebrand Preston 6th Baronet John Rabe Abdol Hossein Sardari Oskar Schindler Raoul Wallenberg Nicholas Winton Jan Zwartendijk Persona Non Grata 2015 film Nansen passport Lados Group Mir Yeshiva Belarus Portals nbsp History nbsp Judaism nbsp Biography nbsp JapanReferences edit a b c d e f Tenembaum B Sempo Chiune Sugihara Japanese Savior The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation Retrieved 3 April 2011 a b Levine Hillel 4 November 1996 In Search of Sugihara The Elusive Japanese Diplomat Who Risked his Life to Rescue 10 000 Jews From the Holocaust Free Press p 69 ISBN 978 0684832517 Mochizuki Ken Lee Dom 1997 Passage to Freedom The Sugihara Story 1st ed New York Lee amp Low Books Afterword ISBN 1880000490 OCLC 35565958 Liphshiz Cnaan 23 May 2019 Holocaust hero Chiune Sugihara s son sets record straight on his father s story Times of Israel Retrieved 25 April 2020 The birthplace is recorded as Kouzuchi town Mugi district in the family registry of the Sugiharas Pulvers Roger 11 July 2015 Chiune Sugihara man of conscience The Japan Times Online ISSN 0447 5763 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Sugihara Conspiracy of Kindness Interactive Timeline text only PBS www pbs org Masha Leon Remembering Yukiko Sugihara forward com in French Anne Frank au Pays du Manga Diaporama Le Fils du Juste Archived 29 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Arte 2012 Horovitz David 14 October 2021 81 years later Chiune Sugihara s humanity continues to enable new lives www timesofisrael com Retrieved 2 March 2022 a b c Yukiko Sugihara 1995 Visas for life Edu Comm Plus ISBN 978 0 9649674 0 3 a b Sugihara Seishiro 2001 Chiune Sugihara and Japan s Foreign Ministry between Incompetence and Culpability Lanham MD University Press of America Polish Japanese Secret Cooperation During World War II Sugihara Chiune and Polish Intelligence Asiatic Society of Japan March 1995 Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Chiune Sempo Sugihara Righteous Among the Nations Chiune Sempo Sugihara Cassedy Ellen We Are Here Facing History In Lithuania Bridges A Jewish Feminist Journal 12 no 2 2007 77 85 JDC Aiding Jews Overseas Report of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee Inc for 1940 and the first 5 months of 1941 Archived 2 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine pp 27 28 39 JDC Aiding Jews Overseas Report of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee Inc for 1941 and the first 5 months of 1942 Archived 2 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine pp 15 16 33 JACAR B04013208900 I 0881 0244 JACAR B04013209400 I 0882 0102 Marthus Jurgen Jewish Responses to Persecution vol III 1941 1942 p 43 Warhaftig Zorach 1988 Refugee and Survivor Rescue Efforts during the Holocaust Yad Vashem ISBN 978 965308005 8 Watanabe Katsumasa 2000 真相 杉原ビザ The truth Sugihara Visa in Japanese Tokyo Taisyo Syuppan Jewcom Emigration from Japan July 1940 November 1941 Miscellaneous documents relating to problems of ethnic groups Problem of Jews Vol 11 Division 3 Japan Center for Asian Historical Records ja Ref B04013209600 JACAR B04013209600 0882 0245 Wolpe David The Japanese Man Who Saved 6 000 Jews With His Handwriting New York Times 15 October 2018 15 October 2018 Interview with Ann Curry on 22 May 2019 at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in NYC Sakamoto Pamela Rotner 1998 Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees a World War II dilemma New York Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96199 2 Guryn Andrzej Tadeusz Romer Help for Polish Jews in Far East Japan Times and Asahi on 19 January 1985 as 6 000 Nikkei and Mainichi on 17 January 1985 as 4 500 Altman Ilya The issuance of visas to war refugees by Chiune Sugihara as reflected in documents of Russian Archives 2017 JACAR B04013209400 i 0882 0036 JACAR B04013209100 I0881 0448 Kanno Kenji 2018 The Arrival of Jewish Refugees to Wartime Japan as reported in the local newspaper Fukui Shinbun Part I 1940 PDF ナマール in Japanese 22 Kobe Yudaya Kenkyukai ushmm Polish Jews in Lithuania Escape to Japan JACAR B04013209700 I 0882 0326 Aleksandra Hadzelek University of Technology Sydney Australia 2016 The memory of Sugihara and the visas for life in Poland PDF rcin org pl a b c Levine Hillel 1996 In search of Sugihara the elusive Japanese diplomat who risked his life to rescue 10 000 Jews from the Holocaust New York Free Press ISBN 978 0 684 83251 7 The Asiatic Society of Japan Archived from the original on 6 January 2015 Retrieved 26 May 2014 Zdenek Slanina Japonsky Schindler Ciune Sugihara v Praze 1940 41 a b Lee Dom Mochizuki Ken 2003 Passage to Freedom The Sugihara Story New York Lee amp Low Books ISBN 978 1 58430 157 8 Hauser Zvi 28 October 2020 Persona non grata no more Chiune Sugihara analysis Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Levine Hillel 1996 In search of Sugihara the elusive Japanese diplomat who risked his life to rescue 10 000 Jews from the Holocaust New York Free Press p 259 Goldberg Carey 8 November 1995 The Honors Come Late For a Japanese Schindler A Month of Tribute to Savior of Thousands The New York Times Fogel Joshua A The Recent Boom in Shanghai Studies Journal of the History of Ideas 71 no 2 2010 313 333 Sugihara Chiune Japan s Schindler nippon com 26 June 2015 Retrieved 12 February 2024 Reitman Valerie 20 October 2000 Honors Some Say Belated for the Japanese Schindler Los Angeles Times Retrieved 12 February 2024 Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum Tmo tsuruga com Retrieved 29 October 2016 Sugihara House Museum Archived from the original on 5 February 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Inside Our Walls Archived from the original on 27 June 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Chiune Sugihara sakura park Vilnius wikimapia org Retrieved 29 July 2019 Kyodo News International Inc Sugihara statue dedicated in L A s Little Tokyo The Free Library Retrieved 5 March 2020 2007 Order of Polonia Restituta PDF Retrieved 3 April 2011 1996 Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland PDF Retrieved 3 April 2011 Israel names street after diplomat Sugihara who issued visas for life to Jews during WWII japantimes co jp The Japan Times 8 June 2016 Archived from the original on 8 June 2016 Retrieved 8 June 2016 A ceremony on a planned street named after the late Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara was held in Netanya Israel on Tuesday Sugihara issued transit visas to thousands of Jews people during World War II which later came to be known as visas for life as they saved many from Nazi persecution Netanya is known as a place where many Jews arrived after fleeing from the oppression thanks to visas issued by Sugihara The plan to build the street marks 30 years since Sugihara s death It s such an honor I wish my father was here said Sugihara s fourth son Nobuki 67 Rankin Jennifer 4 January 2020 My father the quiet hero how Japan s Schindler saved 6 000 Jews The Guardian Retrieved 5 January 2020 Chiune Sugihara Statue Unveiled in Kaunas Lithuanian Jewish Community 20 October 2020 Archived from the original on 5 December 2020 Retrieved 26 July 2021 Jerusalem square dedicated to Chiune Sugihara Japanese diplomat who helped Jews escape Nazis The Japan Times 12 October 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Sugihara Conspiracy of Kindness PBS PBS Retrieved 3 April 2011 Visas that Saved Lives The Story of Chiune Sugihara Holocaust Film Drama Archived from the original on 18 December 2010 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Visas and Virtue 2001 IMDb IMDb 20 April 1997 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Fiszman Rachele In Memoriam PS Political Science and Politics 33 no 3 2000 659 60 Further reading editAyirtman Sugihara Esin 2020 Chiune Sugihara ISBN 978 9464007862 Chapman J W M Japan in Poland s Secret Neighbourhood War in Japan Forum No 2 1995 Ganor Solly 2003 Light One Candle A Survivor s Tale from Lithuania to Jerusalem Kodansha America ISBN 978 1 56836 352 3 Gold Alison Leslie 2000 A Special Fate Chiune Sugihara Hero Of The Holocaust New York Scholastic ISBN 978 0 439 25968 2 Goldstein Jonathan The Case of Jan Zwartendijk in Lithuania 1940 in Deffry M Diefendorf ed New Currents in Holocaust Research Lessons and Legacies vol VI Northwestern University Press 2004 Iwry Samuel 2004 To Wear the Dust of War From Bialystok to Shanghai to the Promised Land an Oral History Palgrave Studies in Oral History Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 6576 9 Johnstone George Japan s Sugihara came to Jews rescue during WWII in Investor s Business Daily 8 December 2011 Kaplan Vivian Jeanette Ten Green Bottles The True Story of One Family s Journey from War torn Austria to the Ghettos of Shanghai St Martin s Press 2004 ISBN 0 312 33054 5 Kaplan William One More Border The True Story of One Family s Escape from War Torn Europe ISBN 0 88899 332 3 Kowner Rotem 2023 A Holocaust Paragon of Virtue s Rise to Fame The Transnational Commemoration of the Japanese Diplomat Sugihara Chiune and Its Divergent National Motives The American Historical Review Volume 128 Issue 1 Pages 31 63 Kranzler David 1988 Japanese Nazis and Jews The Jewish Refugee Community of Shanghai 1938 1945 Ktav Pub Inc ISBN 978 0 88125 086 2 Krebs Gerhard Die Juden und der Ferne Osten at the Wayback Machine archived 5 November 2005 NOAG 175 176 2004 Krebs Gerhard The Jewish Problem in Japanese German Relations 1933 1945 in Bruce Reynolds ed Japan in Fascist Era New York 2004 Mitsui Hideko Longing for the Other traitors cosmopolitanism in Social Anthropology Vol 18 Issue 4 November 2010 European Association of Social Anthropologists Palasz Rutkowska Ewa amp Andrzej T Romer Polish Japanese co operation during World War II in Japan Forum No 7 1995 Paldiel Mordecai 2007 Diplomat heroes of the Holocaust Jersey City NJ distrib by Ktav Publishing House ISBN 978 0 88125 909 4 Saul Eric 1995 Visas for Life The Remarkable Story of Chiune amp Yukiko Sugihara and the Rescue of Thousands of Jews San Francisco Holocaust Oral History Project ISBN 978 0 9648999 0 2 Shiraishi Masaaki 2021 Sugihara Chiune The Duty and Humanity of an Intelligence Officer Tokyo Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture Staliunas Darius Stefan Schreiner Leonidas Donskis Alvydas Nikzentaitis 2004 The vanished world of Lithuanian Jews Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 978 90 420 0850 2 Steinhouse Carl L 2004 Righteous and Courageous How a Japanese Diplomat Saved Thousands of Jews in Lithuania from the Holocaust Authorhouse ISBN 978 1 4184 2079 6 Sugihara Seishiro amp Norman Hu 2001 Chiune Sugihara and Japan s Foreign Ministry Between Incompetence and Culpability University Press of America ISBN 978 0 7618 1971 4 Sugihara Yukiko 1995 Visas for Life translation by Hiroki Sugihara and Anne Hoshiko Akabori Edu Comm Plus Editors ISBN 978 0964967403 Taniuchi Yutaka 2001 The miraculous visas Chiune Sugihara and the story of the 6000 Jews New York Gefen Books ISBN 978 4 89798 565 7 Watanabe Takesato 1999 The Revisionist Fallacy in The Japanese Media 1 Case Studies of Denial of Nazi Gas Chambers and NHK s Report on Japanese amp Jews Relations in Social Sciences Review Doshisha University No 59 Lithuania at the beginning of WWII External links editThis section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chiune Sugihara category The Chiune Sugihara Memorial Hall in Yaotsu Town NPO Chiune Sugihara Visas For Life Foundation in Japan Jewish Virtual Library Chiune and Yukiko Sugihara Revisiting the Sugihara Story from Holocaust Survivors and Remembrance Project Forget You Not Immortal Chaplains Foundation Prize for Humanity 2000 awarded to Sugihara in 2000 Foreign Ministry says no disciplinary action for Japan s Schindler Foreign Ministry honors Chiune Sugihara by setting his Commemorative Plaque 10 October 2000 Chiune Sempo Sugihara Righteous Among the Nations Yad Vashem United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Online Exhibition Archived 23 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Chiune Sempo Sugihara Yukiko Sugihara s Farewell on YouTube Sugihara Museum in Kaunas Lithuania Interview Nobuki Sugihara Chiune Sugihara at Find a Grave nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chiune Sugihara amp oldid 1219696973, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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