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Chiune Sugihara
Japanese diplomat and Holocaust rescuer
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
72/100
Raw Score
61/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Strong
About
Sugihara's public record centers on a rare wartime decision: he repeatedly issued transit visas against restrictive instructions, helping refugees flee through Japan while accepting major personal and professional risk.
The observable pattern is strongly positive on social care, integrity, and pressure response. Scores stay below the very top because public evidence is thinner on regular worship, family-specific obligations, and some postwar details remain contested.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Sugihara grades very strongly where the evidence is clearest: practical help to trapped strangers, reliable moral action under pressure, and a willingness to absorb personal cost. The total stays below the highest tier because his public record is less detailed on routine worship, family obligations, and some postwar facts remain partly disputed.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public record supports sincere theistic commitment through Russian Orthodox conversion and later moral language.
His choices imply moral accountability beyond career self-interest, though explicit doctrinal detail is thin.
He acted as if human dignity outranked state convenience, suggesting belief in a deeper moral order.
Orthodox Christian identification supports a positive score without enough public detail for the top mark.
His rescue conduct aligns with scriptural neighbor-love patterns more than with public theological commentary.
Contribution to Others
Public sources are focused on diplomatic rescue rather than kin obligations.
The visas directly benefited refugee families and children, though not as a distinct standalone program.
He intervened for people with almost no remaining lawful escape options.
This is among the clearest positive signals in the entire record.
The rescue began with desperate petitioners asking for concrete help at his gate.
His visas helped people escape state and wartime traps they could not break alone.
Personal Discipline
Orthodox Christian commitment is public, but routine practice is not richly documented.
His giving record is positive by moral action, though disciplined charitable obligation is less explicit in sources.
Reliability
He was unusually clear about the moral stakes and accepted consequences for acting on them.
Stability Under Pressure
Postwar modest work suggests steadiness, though direct financial detail is limited.
He endured detention, obscurity, and family hardship without public collapse into bitterness.
The Kaunas visa decision is a very strong pressure-test signal.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Left his Manchukuo foreign-office post after objecting to Japanese mistreatment of local Chinese people
While serving in Japanese-controlled Manchuria, Sugihara left a promising post after deciding the treatment of local Chinese people was unacceptable.
→ He gave up status and career momentum rather than simply normalize abusive conduct.
mediumDefied restrictive instructions and began issuing transit visas to Jewish refugees in Kaunas
After repeated requests to Tokyo were refused or narrowed, Sugihara decided to issue Japanese transit visas anyway so refugees could travel east through the Soviet Union and Japan.
→ Hundreds of families gained a live escape route when few lawful paths remained.
highKept writing visas after the consulate closed, including from a hotel and at the train station
Sugihara continued issuing documents right up to departure, stretching procedure and personal endurance instead of stopping once formal cover ended.
→ The practical rescue operation continued into the final hours of Japan's presence in Kaunas.
highReturned to Japan and left the foreign ministry amid downsizing and a long-running dispute over whether his wartime defiance cost him his post
After Soviet detention and return to Japan, Sugihara's diplomatic career ended. Some sources frame this as punishment for insubordination, while others say it was part of broader postwar staff cuts.
→ He lost official standing and entered years of modest work and relative obscurity.
mediumWas found by survivor Yehoshua Nishri, confirming the human outcome of the Kaunas visas
A man he had helped rescue located him in Tokyo decades later, making the life-saving impact newly visible after years of obscurity.
→ The rescue record moved from private memory toward public recognition and verification.
mediumReceived Yad Vashem recognition as Righteous Among the Nations
Israel's memorial authority recognized Sugihara for risking position and safety to help Jews during the Holocaust, making his rescue record part of a durable public archive.
→ His act gained strong cross-institutional validation and a lasting moral legacy.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Kaunas refugee crisis
1940Refugees arrived in large numbers while Tokyo maintained restrictive visa rules and the consulate itself was nearing closure.
Response: He wrote visas anyway, kept going after formal closure, and took the professional risk onto himself.
positivePostwar detention and ministry exit
1947After Soviet detention and return to Japan, his diplomatic career ended and his family entered a less secure period.
Response: He shifted into modest work, stayed publicly quiet, and did not disown the rescue when later asked about it.
positiveYears of obscurity after the war
1947For decades he lived without broad public acclaim while the moral meaning of his actions remained largely hidden in Japan.
Response: The record suggests steadiness rather than bitterness; he did not publicly leverage victims' gratitude into a cult of personality.
positiveProgression
crisis years
The refugee crisis in 1940 exposed his clearest moral shape: not just sympathy, but disciplined administrative courage under pressure.
upcurrent stage
As a deceased historical figure, his standing is now carried by archival evidence, survivor testimony, and the long afterlife of the people who escaped through his visas.
stableearly years
Independent-minded language study and early diplomacy exposed him to cross-cultural and moral complexity beyond a narrow nationalist path.
upgrowth years
His conscience became more legible in professional choices, including leaving a post over mistreatment and later taking a difficult Baltic assignment.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Chose concrete help for strangers over procedural safety when the human stakes were unmistakable.
- • Accepted long-horizon obscurity rather than recast the rescue into self-promotional mythmaking during his lifetime.
- • Showed a repeated willingness to lose status rather than cooperate comfortably with conduct he judged wrong.
Concerns
- • The public record still centers overwhelmingly on one heroic cluster of actions, so some other moral dimensions are less observable than the rescue legacy.
- • His career remained embedded in Imperial Japan's foreign apparatus, which complicates any overly simple saintly reading.
Evidence Quality
4
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.