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A secret Japanese history

July 14, 2016 12:32
14072016 VJCA15030

By

Monica Porter,

Monica Porter

4 min read

I have just returned from my second trip to Japan (I have family there) and once again, I've been amazed by those most impressive of peoples and their glittering, futuristic capital. Tokyo is the city of dog lovers where you won't see dog's mess on a pavement. Its high-density streets are bustling but you'll never be jostled, let alone find any litter. And it's the metropolis in which it is safe even for six-year-olds to go to school on their own.

But on my recent trip I discovered something even more remarkable. I was curious about the background to Japan's tiny Jewish community, so I did a little digging and learned about an astonishing episode of history.

We all know how cruel Japanese soldiers were to POWs during the Second World War, and how appallingly they treated the Chinese.

But less well known is the fact that - despite its alliance with Nazi Germany - Japan offered Jews a refuge from the Holocaust. Many thousands were rescued by a Japanese government which consistently resisted Nazi demands to implement anti-Jewish policies, much less to deport Jews to the concentration camps.