In recent years, the Lithuania-based diplomat who issued thousands of visas to Jews became a household name - but is his lionization part of a familiar post-Holocaust phenomenon?
The story of the Japanese consulate worker who saved thousands of Jewish refugees in Lithuania in 1940 is now being told in concert halls around the globe - and in NYC on April 19
A Jerusalem ceremony highlights the ever-widening impact of the only Japanese citizen honored as Righteous Among the Nations... and the folly of obtuse adherence to bureaucracy
Founding ToI editor David Horovitz and Startup Israel editor Ricky Ben-David discuss massive capital-raising rounds, cybersecurity threats and drones that deliver
Chiune Sugihara, consul-general in Kovno, issued over 2,000 visas in breach of Japanese policy; his son Nobuki addresses event, having received last-minute visa after ToI report
Diplomatic correspondent Lazar Berman on Bahrainis' trip to Israel and Japanese diplomacy as ToI editor David Horovitz discusses Lebanon, Ron Arad, Cyprus and soccer
Israeli officials help to overcome COVID-19 bureaucracy, enabling Chiune Sugihara's son Nobuki to attend Jerusalem ceremony naming square for Righteous Among Nations father
Organizers say Chiune Sugihara's son Nobuki simply refuses to submit proper COVID-19 forms to attend Jerusalem ceremony naming square for his Righteous Gentile father
Memorial recounts the story of Chiune Sugihara, who issued transit visas to nearly 6,000 Jewish refugees without his government's approval, allowing them to escape the Nazis
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