Sugihara Chiune and the Soviet Union: New Documents, New Perspectives
In 1940 with Europe already at war, Japanese diplomat-spy Sugihara Chiune (often called the “Japanese Schindler”) ignored direct orders from Foreign Minister Matsuoka and issued over 2000 Japanese transit visas to Jews stranded in Lithuania after the invasion of Poland. But these visas would have been worthless without Soviet transit visas to cross from Kaunas/Kovno to Vladivostok. Why did Stalin approve this transit, supervised by Molotov, Mikoyan and Beria? How did nearly 4000 Jews travel on 2000 visas? Documents from Soviet and Japanese archives collected, edited and published by Japan’s Slavic-Eurasian Research Center and the Holocaust Research Center in Moscow, provide answers to these questions and more. Sugihara remains the only Japanese citizen designated as a Righteous among the Nations by Yad Vashem.
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The seminar is organized by The Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University, co-sponsored by the Center for Jewish Studies and Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies.