Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees : a World War II dilemma

書誌事項

Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees : a World War II dilemma

Pamela Rotner Sakamoto

Praeger, 1998

タイトル別名

Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees : a World War Two dilemma

Japanese diplomats and Jewish refugees : a World War 2 dilemma

この図書・雑誌をさがす
注記

Bibliography: p. [171]-182

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, European Jews traveled east to seek refuge in the West. Three thousand refugees transited Japan and China, and more than 21,000 spent the war in Japanese-occupied Shanghai. Japanese diplomats in Europe were caught off guard by the flood of visa applicants, and the Foreign Ministry belatedly confronted a refugee problem. Unexpected visitors became uninvited guests. Vice Consul Sugihara Chiune might have faded into history as a minor diplomat in Lithuania had he not issued thousands of transit visas to refugees, including those who fulfilled few visa requirements. Sakamoto demonstrates how he helped thousands escape Europe; in the end, as she points out, a number of Japanese diplomats saved Jews by issuing visas, but very few issued visas to save Jews. Sakamoto focuses on the extensive archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which have not been treated at length before. By examining the cable traffic between diplomats and the ministry headquarters, she reveals the uncensored reactions of Japanese diplomats to Jewish refugees. Through the files of Jewish organizations and the American government, she presents the dimensions of the crisis as Germany's emphasis on emigration changed to extermination. Interviews with former diplomats, refugees, and those who knew Sugihara give human dimensions to a fascinating and little-known episode of the war.

目次

Preface Introduction Before Japan Had a Jewish Problem Japan's Jewish Problem in 1938 Increasing Restrictions in 1939 and 1940 Sugihara Chiune Jewish Refugees in Japan in 1941 Conclusion Bibliography Index

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