We live in a time of maximum selfishness and greed. It is important to remember that true heroes acted selflessly, doing the right and principled thing with no expectation of honor or reward. We must hold on to those memories so we can reclaim decency, when the opportunity presents itself.
The New York Times recently published a little-known story about a Japanese diplomat who saved the lives of thousands of desperate Jews during the Holocaust. In these dark times, this story might restore your faith in the possibility of human goodness and courage in the worst of circumstances. It was written by Rabbi David Wolfe of Sinai Temple in Los Angeles. If you are able to open the link, you will see a picture of the hero of this wonderful story.
NAGOYA, Japan — “Even a hunter cannot kill a bird that flies to him for refuge.” This Samurai maxim inspired one gifted and courageous man to save thousands of people in defiance of his government and at the cost of his career. On Friday I came to Nagoya at the invitation of the Japanese government to speak in honor of his memory.
The astonishing Chiune Sugihara raises again the questions: What shapes a moral hero? And how does someone choose to save people that others turn away?
Research on those who rescued Jews during the Holocaust shows that many exhibited a streak of independence from an early age. Sugihara was unconventional in a society known for prizing conformity. His father insisted that his son, a top student, become a doctor. But Sugihara wanted to study languages and travel and immerse himself in literature. Forced to sit for the medical exam, he left the entire answer sheet blank. The same willfulness was on display when he entered the diplomatic corps and, as vice minister of the Foreign Affairs Department for Japan in Manchuria in 1934, resigned in protest of the Japanese treatment of the Chinese.
A second characteristic of such heroes and heroines, as the psychologist Philip Zimbardo writes, is “that the very same situations that inflame the hostile imagination in some people, making them villains, can also instill the heroic imagination in other people, prompting them to perform heroic deeds.” While the world around him disregarded the plight of the Jews, Sugihara was unable to ignore their desperation.
In 1939 Sugihara was sent to Lithuania, where he ran the consulate. There he was soon confronted with Jews fleeing from German-occupied Poland.
Three times Sugihara cabled his embassy asking for permission to issue visas to the refugees. The cable from K. Tanaka at the foreign ministry read: “Concerning transit visas requested previously stop advise absolutely not to be issued any traveler not holding firm end visa with guaranteed departure ex japan stop no exceptions stop no further inquires expected stop.”
Sugihara talked about the refusal with his wife, Yukiko, and his children and decided that despite the inevitable damage to his career, he would defy his government.
Mr. Zimbardo calls the capacity to act differently the “heroic imagination,” a focus on one’s duty to help and protect others. This ability is exceptional, but the people who have it are often understated. Years after the war, Sugihara spoke about his actions as natural: “We had thousands of people hanging around the windows of our residence,” he said in a 1977 interview. “There was no other way.”
On Friday I spoke at Sugihara’s old high school in Nagoya, during a ceremony unveiling a bronze statue of him handing visas to a refugee family. After the ceremony, in front of some 1,200 students, I spoke with his one remaining child, his son Nobuki, who arrived from Belgium to honor his father’s memory. He told me his father was “a very simple man. He was kind, loved reading, gardening and most of all children. He never thought what he did was notable or unusual.”
Most of the world saw throngs of desperate foreigners. Sugihara saw human beings and he knew he could save them through prosaic but essential action: “A lot of it was handwriting work,” he said.
Day and night he wrote visas. He issued as many visas in a day as would normally be issued in a month. His wife, Yukiko, massaged his hands at night, aching from the constant effort. When Japan finally closed down the embassy in September 1940, he took the stationery with him and continued to write visas that had no legal standing but worked because of the seal of the government and his name. At least 6,000 visas were issued for people to travel through Japan to other destinations, and in many cases entire families traveled on a single visa. It has been estimated that over 40,000 people are alive today because of this one man.
With the consulate closed, Sugihara had to leave. He gave the consulate stamp to a refugee to forge more visas, and he literally threw visas out of the train window to refugees on the platform.
After the war, Sugihara was dismissed from the foreign office. He and his wife lost a 7-year-old child and he worked at menial jobs. It was not until 1968 when a survivor, Yehoshua Nishri, found him that his contribution was recognized. Nishri had been a teenager in Poland saved by a Sugihara visa and was now at the Israeli embassy in Tokyo.
In the intervening years Sugihara never spoke about his wartime activities. Even many close to him had no idea that he was a hero.
Sugihara died in 1986. Nine years earlier he gave an interview and was asked why he did it: “I told the Ministry of Foreign Affairs it was a matter of humanity. I did not care if I lost my job. Anyone else would have done the same thing if they were in my place.”
Of course many were in his place — and very few acted like Sugihara. Moral courage is rare and moral greatness even rarer. It requires a mysterious and potent combination of empathy, will and deep conviction that social norms cannot shake.
How would Sugihara have responded to the refugee crisis we face today, and the response of so many leaders to bolt the gates of entry? There is no simple response adequate to the enormity of the situation. But we have to keep before us the image of a single man, overtaxed, isolated and inundated, who refused to close his eyes to the chaos outside his window. He understood the obligations common to us all and heard in the pleadings of an alien tongue the universal message of pain.
On Friday, I told the students that one day in each of their lives there would be a moment when they would have to decide whether to close the door or open their hearts. When that moment arrives, I implored them, remember that they came from the same school as a great man who when the birds flew to him for refuge, did not turn them away.

There is a terrific book about Sugihara: Passage to Freedom: The Sugihara Story (2010). As a former elementary school librarian, I felt it essential to democracy to teach my young students that every person has agency and can use that agency for good. So many excellent children’s nonfiction books feature such folks, women and men, of all shades and ethnicities. Just check with your school or public librarians for these excellent, inspiring biographies.
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Thank you for sharing this with us and thank you Melissa for adding to my reading list.
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Reblogged this on It's Not Easy to Have Faith and commented:
A wonderful story of moral courage
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Similarly, thousands of Austrian Jews were saved by the Chinese consul-general in Vienna Ho Feng Shan, who issued visas during 1938-1940 against the orders of his superior the Chinese ambassador in Berlin, Chen Jie. …
And as World War II intensified, the Nazis stepped up pressure on Japan to hand over the Shanghai Jews.
While the Nazis regarded their Japanese allies as “Honorary Aryans”, they were determined that the Final Solution to the Jewish Question also be applied to the Jews in Shanghai.
Warren Kozak describes the episode when the Japanese military governor of the city sent for the Jewish community leaders. The delegation included Amshinover rabbi Shimon Sholom Kalish.
The Japanese governor was curious and asked “Why do the Germans hate you so much?”
Without hesitation and knowing the fate of his community hung on his answer, Reb Kalish told the translator (in Yiddish): “Zugim weil wir senen orientalim—Tell him [the Germans hate us] because we are Orientals.”
The Japanese governor, whose face had been stern throughout the confrontation, broke into a slight smile. In spite of the military alliance, he did not accede to the German demand and the Shanghai Jews were never handed over.
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The parents of a good friend of mine lived in Shanghai as part of the Jewish community that escaped Germany. Their lives were saved by Chinese hospitality.
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The first known Jewish community in China was the Kaifeng Jews who it is believed first arrived during the Tang Dynasty or earlier.
Even today there are Jewish synagogues in China but China does not list the Jewish religion as one of the religions that its citizens are allowed to practice legally but China does nothing to close or stop the Jews that still live and/or work in China from practicing their religious beliefs.
It is thought among historians that a small community of Sephardic Jews, most likely from Persia or India, or perhaps fleeing the Crusades, arrived either overland or by a sea route, and settled in the city of Kaifeng and built a synagogue in 1163.
Though a small minority, Chinese Jews have had an open presence in the country since the arrival of the first Jewish immigrants during the 8th century CE. Relatively isolated communities of Jews developed through the Tang and Song Dynasties (7th to 13th centuries CE) all the way through the Qing Dynasty (19th century), most notably the Kaifeng Jews (the term “Chinese Jews” is often used in a restricted sense in order to refer to these communities).
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Fascinating. I never knew of the Japanese or Chinese connection to the holocaust. So many of the people who have done great things in history have preferred to not be recognized.
I knew a man who taught Latin. He was Hungarian, and his grandson became a close friend. When he smoked himself to death at age 91, his grandson was asked to bring the address at his funeral. He learned that the old man had, from his position in occupied Hungary, falsified baptismal certificates for Jews during NAZI occupation. After the war, threatened by the Stalinists who “freed” them, he and his family made it to safety in South America before finding their way here.
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Some more good news. I’ve stayed away from the teevee today and only watched a few minutes this morning. This was what I happened to watch:
https://www.msnbc.com/hallie-jackson/watch/-it-will-mean-so-much-if-beto-o-rourke-wins-77-year-old-texas-voter-1363170371950?v=railb&
If this doesn’t bring tears to your eyes, you’re either a Fox Republican or brain dead, but I repeat myself.
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I learned about Chiune Sugihara some years ago.
This posting and the comments following it do him—and others like him—honor.
Thank you.
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My mother (and aunt, and grandmother) got out on Sugihara documents – thanks for helping to publicize this story. Sugihara’s attitude towards strangers in danger is so important for us to know about and learn from.
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