terça-feira, 11 de outubro de 2011

CHIUNE AND YUKIKO SUGIHARA

CHIUNE AND YUKIKO SUGIHARA
by Eric Saul

Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara, the Japanese consular official serving in Lithuania, saved the second largest number of Jews in the Holocaust. He issued more than 2,000 visas to Polish refugees. This resulted in saving more than 6,000 lives. It is estimated that if the children and grandchildren of people who were saved by Sugihara were counted, there would be more than 40,000 people worldwide who owe their lives to the Sugiharas.

In the course of human existence, many people are tested. Only a few soar as eagles and achieve greatness by simple acts of kindness, thoughtfulness and humanity. This is the story of a man and his wife who, when confronted with evil, obeyed the kindness of their hearts and conscience in defiance of the orders of an indifferent government. These people were Chiune and Yukiko Sugihara who, at the beginning of World War II, by an ultimate act of altruism and self-sacrifice, risked their careers, their livelihood and their future to save the lives of more than 6,000 Jews. This selfless act resulted in the second largest number of Jews rescued from the Nazis.


The Compassion of Consul-General Sempo Sugihara

In March 1939, Japanese Consul-General Chiune Sugihara was sent to Kaunas to open a consulate service. Kaunas was the temporary capital of Lithuania at the time and was strategically situated between Germany and the Soviet Union. After Hitler's invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, Britain and France declared war on Germany. Chiune Sugihara had barely settled down in his new post when Nazi armies invaded Poland and a wave of Jewish refugees streamed into Lithuania. They brought with them chilling tales of German atrocities against the Jewish population. They escaped from Poland without possessions or money, and the local Jewish population did their utmost to help with money, clothing and shelter. Before the war, the population of Kaunas consisted of 120,000 inhabitants, one forth of which were Jews. Lithuania, at the time, had been an enclave of peace and prosperity for Jews. Most Lithuanian Jews did not fully realize or believe the extent of the Nazi Holocaust that was being perpetrated against the Jews in Poland. The Jewish refugees tried to explain that they were being murdered by the tens of thousands. No one could quite believe them. The Lithuanian Jews continued living normal lives. Things began to change for the very worst on June 15, 1940, when the Soviets invaded Lithuania. It was now too late for the Lithuanian Jews to leave for the East. Ironically, the Soviets would allow Polish Jews to continue to emigrate out of Lithuania through the Soviet Union if they could obtain certain travel documents. By 1940, most of Western Europe had been conquered by the Nazis, with Britain standing alone. The rest of the free world, with very few exceptions, barred the immigration of Jewish refugees from Poland or anywhere in Nazi-occupied Europe.

Against this terrible backdrop, the Japanese Consul Chiune Sugihara suddenly became the linchpin in a desperate plan for survival. The fate of thousands of families depended on his humanity. The Germans were rapidly advancing east. In July 1940, the Soviet authorities instructed all foreign embassies to leave Kaunas. Almost all left immediately, but Chiune Sugihara requested and received a 20-day extension.

Except for Mr. Jan Zwartendijk, the acting Dutch consul, Chiune Sugihara was now the only foreign consul left in Lithuanania's capital city. They had much work to do.

Thousands of Jews lined up in front of the Japanese Consulate in Kaunas, Lithuania, in 1939 and 1940, hoping to receive transit visas allowing them to escape to the Far East and to America or Palestine.

The Dutch Connection

Now into summer, time was running out for the refugees. Hitler rapidly tightened his net around Eastern Europe. It was then that some of the Polish refugees came up with a plan that offered one last chance for freedom. They discovered that two Dutch colonial islands, Curacao and Dutch Guiana, (now known as Suriname) situated in the Caribbean, did not require formal entrance visas. Furthermore, the honorary Dutch consul, Jan Zwartendijk, told them he had gotten permission to stamp their passports with entrance permits.

There remained one major obstacle. To get to these islands, the refugees needed to pass through the Soviet Union. The Soviet consul, who was sympathetic to the plight of the refugees, agreed to let them pass on one condition: In addition to the Dutch entrance permit, they would also have to obtain a transit visa from the Japanese, as they would have to pass through Japan on their way to the Dutch islands.

Sugihara's Choice

On a summer morning in late July 1940, Consul Sempo Sugihara and his family awakened to a crowd of Polish Jewish refugees gathered outside the consulate. Desperate to flee the approaching Nazis, the refugees knew that their only path lay to the east. If Consul Sugihara would grant them Japanese transit visas, they could obtain Soviet exit visas and race to possible freedom. Sempo Sugihara was moved by their plight, but he did not have the authority to issue hundreds of visas without permission from the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo.

Chiune Sugihara wired his government three times for permission to issue visas to the Jewish refugees. Three times he was denied. The Japanese Consul in Tokyo wired:

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 INQUIRIES EXPECTED STOP (SIGNED) K TANAKA FOREIGN MINISTRY TOKYO


Human life is very important. Being virtuous in life is also very important. My husband and I talked about the visas before we issued them. We understood that both the Japanese and German governments disagreed with our ideas, but we went ahead anyhow.
--Yukiko Sugihara, wife of Chiune Sugihara

Visas For Life

After repeatedly receiving negative responses from Tokyo, the Consul discussed the situation with his wife and children. Sugihara had a difficult decision to make. He was a man who was brought up in the strict and traditional discipline of the Japanese. He was a career diplomat who suddenly had to make a very difficult choice. On one had, he was bound by the traditional obedience he had been taught all his life. On the other hand, he was a samurai who had been told to help those who were in need. He knew that if he defied the orders of his superiors, he might be fired and disgraced, and would probably never work for the Japanese government again. This would result in extreme financial hardship for his family in the future.

Chiune and his wife Yukiko even feared for their lives and the lives of their children, but in the end, could only follow their consciences. The visas would be signed.

For 29 days, from July 31 to August 28, 1940, Mr. and Mrs. Sugihara sat for endless hours writing and signing visas by hand. Hour after hour, day after day, for these three weeks, they wrote and signed visas. They wrote over 300 visas a day, which would normally be one month's worth of work for the consul. Yukiko also helped him register these visas. At the end of the day, she would massage his fatigued hands. He did not even stop to eat. His wife supplied him with sandwiches. Sugihara chose not to lose a minute because people were standing in line in front of his consulate day and night for these visas. When some began climbing the compound wall, he came out to calm them down and assure them that he would do his best to help them all. Hundreds of applicants became thousands as he worked to grant as many visas as possible before being forced to close the consulate and leave Lithuania. Consul Sugihara continued issuing documents from his train window until the moment the train departed Kovno for Berlin on September 1, 1940. And as the train pulled out of the station, Sugihara gave the consul visa stamp to a refugee who was able use it to save even more Jews.

After receiving their visas, the refugees lost no time in getting on trains that took them to Moscow, and then by trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok. From there, most of them continued to Kobe, Japan. They were allowed to stay in Kobe for several months, and were then sent to Shanghai, China. Thousands of Polish Jews with Sugihara visas survived in safety under the benign protection of the Japanese government in Shanghai. As many as six thousand refugees made their way to Japan, China and other countries in the following months. They had escaped the Holocaust. Through a strange twist of history, they owed their lives to a Japanese man and his family. They had become Sugihara Survivors.

Despite his disobedience, his government found Sugihara's vast skills useful for the remainder of the war. But in 1945, the Japanese government unceremoniously dismissed Chiune Sugihara from the diplomatic service. His career as a diplomat was shattered. He had to start his life over. Once a rising star in the Japanese foreign service, Chiune Sugihara could at first only find work as a part-time translator and interpreter. For the last two decades of his life, he worked as a manager for an export company with business in Moscow. This was his fate because he dared to save thousands of human beings from certain death.


The Miracle of Chanukah 1939

The makings of a hero are many and complex, but Sugihara's fateful decision to risk his career may have been influenced by a simple act of kindness from an 11-year-old boy. He lived with his family in Lithuania, and his name was Zalke Jenkins (Solly Ganor).

Solly Ganor was the son of a menshevik refugee from the Russian revolution in the early 1920s. After the Russian revolution the family moved to Kaunas, Lithuania. The family prospered for years before World War II in textile import and export. Young Solly Ganor, concerned about Polish Jews entering Kaunas, gave most of his allowance and savings to the Jewish refugee boards. Having given away all of his money, he went to his aunt Annushka's gourmet food shop in Kaunas. He went there to borrow a Lithuania lit (Lithuanian dollar) to see the latest Laurel and Hardy movie. In his aunt's store he met Japanese Consul Chiune Sugihara. Consul Sugihara overheard the conversation and gave young Solly two shiny lit. Impulsively, the young boy invited the Consul with the kind eyes to his family celebration of the first night of Chanukah 1939.

The surprised and delighted Consul gratefully accepted the young boy's offer, and he and his wife Yukiko attended their first Jewish Chanukah celebration.

Mr. Sugihara commented on the closeness of the Jewish families and how it reminded him of his family, and of similar Japanese festivals. Fifty-four years later, Mrs. Sugihara remembers with delight the cakes and cookies and desserts offered to them during this Jewish festival of lights.

Solly Ganor and his father were soon friends with the Consul-General and they conversed in Russian. Later Solly Ganor and his father witnessed Consul Sugihara in his office calling the Russian officials to get permission to issue visas across the Russian borders. Solly Ganor and his father later received Sugihara visas but were unable to use them because they were Soviet citizens.

Most of the Ganor family were murdered in the Holocaust. Solly's sister Fanny and Aunt Anushka survived the war. Aunt Anushka returned to Lithuania and died in 1969. Fanny married Sam Skutelsky from Riga and eventually settled in the United States. Their son Robert, Solly's only living nephew, now lives in Boulder, Colorado.

Solly and his father spent over two years in the Kaunas ghetto before being deported to the Landsberg-Kaufering outer camps of Dachau in late 1944. They survived the war and moved to Israel. The older Ganor died peacefully in Tel Aviv in 1966.

Ironically, in May 1945, Solly Ganor was liberated by Japanese American soldiers of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, men who had been interned in their own country.

To Solly, the Japanese face has come to symbolize kindness and liberation.

Who Was Chiune Sugihara?

For the last half century people have asked, "Who was Chiune Sugihara?"

They have also asked, "Why did he risk his career, his family fortune, and the lives of his family to issue visas to Jewish refugees in Lithuania?" These are not easy questions to answer, and there may be no single set of answers that will satisfy our curiosity or inquiry.

Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara always did things his own way. He was born on January 1, 1900. He graduated from high school with top marks and his father insisted that he become a medical doctor. But Chiune's dream was to study literature and live abroad. Sugihara attended Tokyo's prestigious Waseda University to study English. He paid for his own education with part-time work as a longshoreman and tutor.

One day he saw an item in the classified ads. The Foreign Ministry was seeking people who wished to study abroad and might be interested in a diplomatic career. He passed the difficult entrance exam and was sent to the Japanese language institute in Harbin, China. He studied Russian and graduated with honors. He also converted to Greek Orthodox Christianity. The cosmopolitan nature of Harbin, China opened his eyes to how diverse and interesting the world was.

He then served with the Japanese-controlled government in Manchuria, in northeastern China. He was later promoted to Vice Minister of the Foreign Affairs Department. He was soon in line to be the Minister of Foreign Affairs in Manchuria.

While in Manchuria he negotiated the purchase of the Russian-owned Manchurian railroad system by the Japanese. This saved the Japanese government millions of dollars, and infuriated the Russians.

Sugihara was disturbed by his government's policy and the cruel treatment of the Chinese by the Japanese government. He resigned his post in protest in 1934.

In 1938 Sugihara was posted to the Japanese diplomatic office in Helsinki, Finland. With World War II looming on the horizon, the Japanese government sent Sugihara to Lithuania to open a one-man consulate in 1939. There he would report on Soviet and German war plans. Six months later, war broke out and the Soviet Union annexed Lithuania. The Soviets ordered all consulates to be closed. It was in this context that Sugihara was confronted with the requests of thousands of Polish Jews fleeing German-occupied Poland.

Sugihara, the Man

Sugihara's personal history and temperament may contain the key to why he defied his government's orders and issued the visas. Sugihara favored his mother's personality. He thought of himself as kind and nurturing and artistic. He was interested in foreign ideas, religion, philosophy and language. He wanted to travel the world and see everything there was, and experience the world. He had a strong sense of the value of all human life. His language skills show that he was always interested in learning more about other peoples.

Sugihara was a humble and understated man. He was self-sacrificing, self-effacing and had a very good sense of humor. Yukiko, his wife, said he found it very difficult to discipline the children when they misbehaved. He never lost his temper.

Sugihara was also raised in the strict Japanese code of ethics of a turn-of-the-century samurai family. The cardinal virtues of this society were oya koko (love of the family), kodomo no tamene (for the sake of the children), having gidi and on (duty and responsibility, or obligation to repay a debt), gaman (withholding of emotions on the surface), gambate (internal strength and resourcefulness), and haji no kakete (don't bring shame on the family). These virtues were strongly inculcated by Chiune's middle-class rural samurai family.

It took enormous courage for Sugihara to defy the order of his father to become a doctor, and instead follow his own academic path. It took courage to leave Japan and study overseas. It took a very modern liberal Japanese man to marry a Caucasian woman (his first wife; Yukiko was his second wife) and convert to Christianity. It took even more courage to openly oppose the Japanese military policies of expansion in the 1930s.

Thus Sempo Sugihara was no ordinary Japanese man and may have been no ordinary man. At the time that he and his wife Yukiko thought of the plight of the Jewish refugees, he was haunted by the words of an old samurai maxim: "Even a hunter cannot kill a bird which flies to him for refuge."

A Final Tribute: Righteous Among the Nations

Today, more than 50 years after those 29 fateful days in July and August of 1940, there may be more than 40,000 who owe their lives to Chiune and Yukiko Sugihara. Two generations have come after the original Sugihara survivors, all owing their existence to one modest man and his family. After the war, Mr. Sugihara never mentioned or spoke to anyone about his extraordinary deeds. It was not until 1969 that Sugihara was found by a man he had helped save, Mr. Yehoshua Nishri. Soon, hundreds of others whom he had saved came forward and testified to the Yad Vashem (Holocaust Memorial) in Israel about his lifesaving acts of courage. After gathering testimonies from all over the world, Yad Vashem realized the enormity of this man's self-sacrifice in saving Jews. And so it came to pass that in 1985 he received Israel's highest honor. He was recognized as "Righteous Among the Nations" by the Yad Vashem Martyrs Remembrance Authority in Jerusalem.

By then an old man near death, he was too ill to travel to Israel. His wife and son received the honor on his behalf. Further, a tree was planted in his name at Yad Vashem, and a park in Jerusalem was named in his honor.

Forty-five years after he signed the visas, Chiune was asked why he did it. He liked to give two reasons: "They were human beings and they needed help," he said. "I'm glad I found the strength to make the decision to give it to them." Sugihara was a religious man and believed in a universal God of all people. He was fond of saying, "I may have to disobey my government, but if I don't I would be disobeying God."

Consul Chiune Sugihara, age 86, died on July 31, 1986. Mrs. Yukiko Sugihara had her 88th birthday on December 17, 2001. She now lives in Fujisawa, Japan.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Source: Copyright © 1995-1997 Ron Greene. VISAS FOR LIFE: The Remarkable Story of Chiune and Yukiko Sugihara. Photographs Copyright © 1995-1996 Eric Saul and the Sugihara Family Trust. All Rights Reserved.

Written by Eric Saul from

Copyright © 1995-2001
Photos courtesy of The Sugihara Family Trust Copyright © 1995-1998

IRENA SENDLER

IRENA SENDLER
by Kelly from Spokane

Irena Sendler
(Photo credit: East News Poland)
Irena Sendler was raised in a home of compassion. Her father was a doctor, and her mother was a social worker. Her father died of Typhus, which he contracted by caring for the Jewish patients that his fellow doctors refused to treat.

When the Nazis occupied Poland, the Jews of Warsaw were confined to a ghetto. Because there were so many people in such a small area, disease began to spread. Worried that the diseases would kill Germans too, Irena was allowed in and out of the tightly guarded camp to distribute medicines and vaccinations.

She smuggled the Jewish children out of the ghetto in boxes and bags in the back of delivery trucks and ambulances. Hopeful that the children could reunite with their families after the war was over, she kept records of the children’s names, and their new identities, on tissue paper that she put in glass jars and buried in the yard. Unfortunately, many of the parents of the smuggled children were killed.

Irena Sendler
(Photo credit:Mariusz Kubik)
When the Nazis caught Irena they did not find the records. In fact, they mistakenly thought she was working alone, and not the leader of a well-organized team that had saved the lives of over 2,500 children. She was sentenced to death but escaped execution only after she was beaten and, with her arms and legs broken, she was left for dead in a vacant field, where her team rescued her. She spent the rest of the war working to help save Jewish children in secret under an assumed name.

Irena, who died in May 2008 at the age of 98 in Warsaw, Poland, is my hero. She is an example of pure religion, “to visit the fatherless in their affliction.”

I believe that Irena Sendler is an example of the “Caring” pillar of character. She was truly concerned for the welfare of others and felt the pain of the Jewish families in the Warsaw ghetto with great empathy.

Written by Kelly from Spokane
Last changed on: 9/24/2008

MIEP GIES

HERMINE SANTROUSCHITZ
(MIEP GIES)
by Student from RSM

My hero is Hermine Santrouschitz, more commonly known today as Miep Gies. She risked her life to save the lives of others. She hid Anne Frank and her family and many others from the Nazis, providing them with food and other necessities, as well as news from the outside world. Most of all, she provided them with courage, hope, and a friendship that will never be lost.

I think that being able to make a difference in someone’s life and taking advantage of that opportunity is what makes a hero. We all have the potential to be heroes.

Miep Santrouschitz was born February 15, 1909 in Vienna, Austria. Unfortunately, she suffered from malnutrition during World War One and was sent away to Amsterdam, Holland. The Nieuwenhuises nursed her back to health. By the time she was healthy again, she had become accustomed to her new life and family. She had become Dutch at heart, and did not wish to return home to Vienna to her blood relatives, so she lived on with her adoptive family. She remained an Austrian citizen.

She became very independent and wished to find work for herself. Finally, she found work at a company called Travies & Company, which specialized in products for the homemaker. There she learned that her new boss, Mr. Otto Frank, had moved to Holland from Germany because he was a Jew and wanted to escape Adolph Hitler and the Nazis. His family was to be arriving shortly.

Miss Santrouschitz and Mr. Frank quickly became friends and Miep was excited to meet Anne and Margot, Mr. Frank's daughters, and his wife, Edith Frank. The whole Frank family arrived and immediately liked Miep. At the same time Miep was falling in love with a Dutchman named Henk Gies. They had both found that they had much more in common than they originally thought. They enjoyed going to the movies, and when Mr. Frank invited Miep over to dinner he would always send out an extra invitation to Henk. Eventually Henk proposed. They were looking forward to a wonderful life together.

Unfortunately, one day Miep received a letter from the Nazis asking her to report to the German Consulate. Word had traveled to the Nazis that she had refused to join a Nazi Girls' Club. They invalidated her passport and told her that she must return to Vienna within 3 months. In order to avoid going back to Vienna she would have to marry a Dutchman. However, she could not do this without her birth certificate, which was located in Vienna.

She quickly wrote a letter to her uncle asking him to send her certificate as soon as possible. Another problem arose when her uncle wrote to her that he needed her passport in order to receive the certificate. Miep could not tell her uncle that she had refused to join a Nazi Girls' Club and was to be sent back to Vienna because it would put him and the rest of her relatives in danger.

Finally, Mr. Frank came up with the idea to photocopy just the front page of her passport because it did not show that it had been invalidated. Everyone prayed that this would work because time was of the essence. In the mail one day, to everyone's great joy, came Miep's birth certificate. On July 16, 1941, Miep and Henk were finally married. Miep was so excited she carried the marriage license around with her all day. She was finally Dutch. Henk and Miep looked for a place to live and finally came across a small room next to a sweet lady by the name of Mrs. Samson.

Eventually, the time came when the Nazis invaded Holland. This did not affect Miep at first. She had no idea what was about to happen. One day at work, Mr. Frank told her that his whole family was going into hiding. He asked Miep to be their confidante. Miep Gies said she would gladly help the Frank family. In the beginning she didn't know how hard her job would really be. She was to find food for the family living in the Secret Annex (as Anne called it.) Miep and Henk also hid two other Holocaust victims. This meant they had to find food for more people, and food was scarce. Eventually, another family moved into the attic above the office alongside the Franks. Mr. and Mrs. Van Pels came to live in the attic with their son Peter. Later, another soul was brought into hiding, a dentist by the name of Mr. Kraler.

Now Gies had to find food for everyone she was hiding. Henk went into an undercover assistance agency for families and people in hiding. Gies worried every day what would happen to him and was in constant fear. Somehow she always found food for everyone, even if it meant riding her bike five hours out into the country or lying to old friends.

Two years after the Franks had gone into hiding, they were discovered and taken away to a concentration camp. The people who hid the Frank family also went into a concentration camp. Gies however, did not go. The officer who arrested the others did not arrest Gies because she was so polite. The fact that she was born in Vienna was a plus.


Miep lived in fear that the others would die in the camps and never return. Miep gathered up Anne's diary, hid it in the bottom drawer of her desk at work and never looked at it.

One day, while Miep was cooking dinner, Henk came home and told her, "It's over!" That night the meal tasted better than usual. The only one to return out of all the people hiding in the Annex was Mr. Otto Frank. Miep gave Anne's diary to him and since then, The Diary of Anne Frank has been published many times. It took Miep a long time to gain the courage to read the book and when she finally did, she was happy she had. Almost a year later, Miep had a baby boy named Peter.

Not a day has gone by that Miep has not thought of the Frank family and the people in hiding. Every year on the date that the residents of the Secret Annex were taken away to concentration camps, Miep and Henk stay home from work and don't do anything that day.

Gies is an amazing person and deserves a lot of respect. If I could speak to her today, I would shake her hand and say, "Thank you!" with a bright smile. Then, I would tell her how her story touched my heart and how amazing what she did really is. Next, I would tell her how I hope to be as tolerant and wonderful as she is to others.


Miep Gies has helped me to look beyond a person's skin, religion, or beliefs to find out, instead, who they really are and not to judge people. Even when the rest of the world was blaming people for turning in the Frank family, Miep did not blame anyone, even if she disliked them. I believe that Miep has influenced the world with her tragic story and kind heart.

Anne Frank's descriptions of her and Miep's own book, Anne Frank Remembered, have touched many hearts. Her actions have made people realize how they can become better people by being more tolerant of others. Perhaps they will even be able to save someone from the harsh cruelty of racism and lead him or her into freedom.


Personally, I would like to be a hero who protects the lives of others, just like Miep. I would like to be able to say that I was kind to others even when I disliked them. I would like to be able to stand up against laws that I feel are unjust and wrong and protect the rights of others, perhaps even saving them from a horrible fate. One day I hope to be a hero in someone's heart and I hope that I have the chance to make a difference in someone’s life and maybe even the world. I am not a hero. I stand at the end of the long, long line of good Dutch people who suffered during those dark and terrible times years ago. Never a day goes by that I do not think of what happened then.

Written by Student from RSM
Last changed on: 4/22/2005 1:42:08 PM

A Story of Miep Gies

An Interview with Miep Gies


Anne Frank Remembered
by Miep Gies, Alison Leslie Gold