Courage and Consequence – The Japanese Schindler Who Wrote Visas Until the Train Left
Two armies closing in. A government that said no. Three cables to Tokyo, three refusals. A crowd of refugees at his gate every morning, mothers holding children, men gripping the fence. Chiune Sugihara was a Japanese vice-consul with orders to stay out of it. He picked up a pen instead. For a month he hand-wrote transit visas eighteen hours a day, and when the train carrying him away began to move, he was still throwing them through the window. The officials who ordered him to stop are forgotten. The ministry that ended his career is a footnote. Sugihara sold light bulbs for decades while the people he saved searched the world to thank him. One man, one pen, more than six thousand lives. Chiune Sugihara needs to be remembered.
Read More…