Chiune Sugihara: The Japanese Schindler
In 1940, Chiune Sugihara defied his superiors and issued thousands of life saving travel visas that helped Jewish refugees escape the Nazis.
Working as a diplomat in the Japanese Embassy in Kaunas, Lithuania, in 1940, Chiune Sugihara was approached by desperate Jewish refugees seeking transit visas to escape Europe and the Nazis.
Defying orders from his superiors, who refused his requests to issue the visas, he personally wrote and signed thousands of life saving travel documents.
His son Nobuki Sugihara, who remembers how his father eschewed recognition for his actions, and Rochelle Zucker, whose own father was saved by one of Sugihara's visas, speak to Alex Eccleston.
A Whistledown production for BBC World Service.
(Photo: Chiune Sugihara. Credit: Getty Images)
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- Tue 27 Sep 202207:50GMTBBC World Service
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