Chiune Sugihara: Presented By: Sophia Ravanzo 7-Pinpin
Chiune Sugihara: Presented By: Sophia Ravanzo 7-Pinpin
SUGIHARA
Presented by: Sophia Ravanzo
7-PinPin
CHIUNE SUGIHARA
A man who defied the
Japanese government
and risked his career
to save the lives of
thousands of Jewish
people (mainly from
Poland) who were
living in Lithuania
during WWII.
■ Chihune Sugihara was born on January 1,
1900, in the Kitayama District of the
village of Yaotsu.
■ His father was a middle-class man, named
Yoshimi Sugihara, and an upper-middle
class mother, Yatsu Sugihara.
■ When he was born, his father worked at a
tax office in Kozuchi-town and his family
lived in a borrowed temple, with the
Buddhist temple Kyōsen-ji where he was
born nearby.
■ He was the second son among five boys and
one girl.
■ In 1912, he graduated with top honors from
Furuwatari Elementary School and entered
Aichi prefectural 5th secondary school.
■ His father wanted him to become a
physician, but Chiune deliberately failed
the entrance exam by writing only his name
on the exam papers.
■ From 1920 to 1922 Sugihara served in the
Imperial Army as a second lieutenant,
though he resigned his commission in Nov.
1922
■ BORN : JANUARY 1, 1900, KOZUCHI TOWN
■ DIED: JULY 31, 1986 (AGED 86)
■ NATIONALITY: JAPANESE
■ OTHER NAMES: SEMPO, PAVLO SERGEIVICH SUGIHARA
■ OCCUPATION: VICE COUNCIL FOR THE JAPANESE EMPIRE IN
LITHUANIA
■ KNOWN FOR: RESCUE OF 5,558 JEWS DURING HOLOCAUST
■ SPOUSE(s) : Kaludia Seminoovna Apollonova (m. 1919; div.
1935) Yukiko Kikuchi (m. 1936)
■ CHILDREN: 4
Kyōsen-ji Temple
This temple was
located at the
address reported as
the birthplace of
Sugihara Chiune,
and there was a
Kōzuchi tax office
that Chiune’s
father served in
the immediate area.
Chiune Bridge
A bridge over
Chiune-cho
which was the
origin of the
name of
Chiune.
• Thousands of people owe their lives
in part to his willingness to buck
authority. For his efforts, he was
imprisoned by the Soviets and fired
from his job by the Japanese Foreign
Ministry.