Auction 88 K2 Online Sale: Hebrew & Judaic Books and Manuscripts
Mar 17, 2020 (your local time)
USA
 Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77 Suite 1108 Brooklyn, NY 11205
The auction has ended

LOT 126:

(HOLOCAUST).
Safe Conduct Pass of Aron Weksler of Białystok, Poland.
Bearing visas for travel from ...

Sold for: $10,000
Estimated price:
$ 12,000 - $15,000
Auction house commission: 25%
VAT: 8.875% On commission only
tags:

(HOLOCAUST).
Safe Conduct Pass of Aron Weksler of Białystok, Poland.



Bearing visas for travel from Lithuania to Curaçao (or other overseas Dutch territory), with transit through Japan. Issued by Japanese Consul in Kaunas, Chiune Sugihara, with his manuscript endorsement and original signature. And by Acting Dutch Consul in Kaunas Jan Zwartendijk, with his endorsed stamp and original signature. Document of Polish citizenship issued by the Polish Interests Section of the British Legation in Kaunas and signed by Charge d’Affaires, Sir Thomas Preston. One printed page containing manuscript entries, verso with stamped endorsements and original signatures, and attached integral blank. Texts in French, Polish, English and Japanese. Photograph of Weksler on first page.
Central folds, rust marks from paper clips. 8 x 11.5 inches.
Kaunas (Kovno), Lithuania: 14th December, 1939 / 30th July, 1940 / 31st July, 1940
A highly rare, original Travel Document issued by Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara and Dutch diplomat Jan Zwartendijk. This single paper allowed the Jewish bearer to escape an otherwise certain death in Lithuania. Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara served as Vice-Consul of the Empire of Japan in Lithuania, based in Kaunas. During World War II, he helped thousands of Jews leave the country by issuing transit visas for travel to Japan. Most of these Jews were refugees from Nazi-occupied Western Poland, or Soviet-occupied Eastern Poland, as well as residents of Lithuania. In the Fall of 1939, after leaving his position as Deputy Foreign Minister in Manchuria, Sugihara was posted to Kaunas to serve as Japan’s Consul with orders to monitor Soviet and German troop movements in the Baltic region. In the Summer of 1940, Lithuania was officially annexed by the Soviet Union as a constituent Soviet republic and all foreign diplomats were ordered expelled. Jewish refugees present in Kaunas were terrified, as now, in addition to their trauma having escaped from Nazism, the threat of Communist control arose. Possibilities for escape were few: All of Western Europe was now occupied by the Nazis, thus any possible gateway to Palestine and the American continent was closed. Any remaining possible option required diplomatic permits – visas – to cross international borders. Agonized by the plight of the Jewish refugees and with the support of L. P. de Decker, the Dutch Ambassador to the three Baltic States, who resided in Riga (Latvia), the part-time acting Dutch consul in Kaunas, Jan Zwartendijk, agreed to help by providing documentation for travel to the Caribbean island of Curaçao. Yet such a journey would require passage through a destination accessible from where those fleeing currently were. Chiune Sugihara aware that these Jewish applicants were in danger the longer they stayed in Lithuania - and with no evidence of support from his Foreign Ministry - began issuing transit visas, for travel eastward, through Japan. Soon he was ordered by Tokyo to cease issuing such paperwork, yet so troubled was Sugihara by the frightening situation of the Jews, he chose to disobey the order all the while receiving warnings from his superiors of personal prosecution. On the 4th September 1940, the Soviets forcibly closed the Japanese legation, yet even from the very train that was to transport him out of Lithuania, Sugihara continued to issue visas - often single documents suitable that saved an entire family. Eleven months later the small window of escape was indeed gone. Lithuania was occupied by Germany and the majority of the Jews that remained in the country were swiftly murdered by the Nazis and their local collaborators. In 1985, the State of Israel honored Chiune Sugihara (1900-86) with the title “Righteous Among the Nations” for his actions, the only Japanese national to be so titled. Later, in 1997, Jan Zwartendijk (1896-1976) the Dutch Consul in Kaunas, was posthumously honored as “Righteous Among the Nations.” By breaking diplomatic protocol, the selfless actions of these two diplomats based in Lithuania in the Summer of 1940 enabled thousands of desperate Jews the possibility of surviving the murderous Nazi onslaught against European Jewry. It is estimated that more than 40,000 Jews (survivors and their descendants) are alive today due to the issue by Zwartendijk and Sugihara of this “Visa for Life.”
A highly rare, original Travel Document issued by Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara and Dutch diplomat Jan Zwartendijk. This single paper allowed the Jewish bearer to escape an otherwise certain death in Lithuania. Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara served as Vice-Consul of the Empire of Japan in Lithuania, based in Kaunas. During World War II, he helped thousands of Jews leave the country by issuing transit visas for travel to Japan. Most of these Jews were refugees from Nazi-occupied Western Poland, or Soviet-occupied Eastern Poland, as well as residents of Lithuania. In the Fall of 1939, after leaving his position as Deputy Foreign Minister in Manchuria, Sugihara was posted to Kaunas to serve as Japan’s Consul with orders to monitor Soviet and German troop movements in the Baltic region. In the Summer of 1940, Lithuania was officially annexed by the Soviet Union as a constituent Soviet republic and all foreign diplomats were ordered expelled. Jewish refugees present in Kaunas were terrified, as now, in addition to their trauma having escaped from Nazism, the threat of Communist control arose. Possibilities for escape were few: All of Western Europe was now occupied by the Nazis, thus any possible gateway to Palestine and the American continent was closed. Any remaining possible option required diplomatic permits – visas – to cross international borders. Agonized by the plight of the Jewish refugees and with the support of L. P. de Decker, the Dutch Ambassador to the three Baltic States, who resided in Riga (Latvia), the part-time acting Dutch consul in Kaunas, Jan Zwartendijk, agreed to help by providing documentation for travel to the Caribbean island of Curaçao. Yet such a journey would require passage through a destination accessible from where those fleeing currently were. Chiune Sugihara aware that these Jewish applicants were in danger the longer they stayed in Lithuania - and with no evidence of support from his Foreign Ministry - began issuing transit visas, for travel eastward, through Japan. Soon he was ordered by Tokyo to cease issuing such paperwork, yet so troubled was Sugihara by the frightening situation of the Jews, he chose to disobey the order all the while receiving warnings from his superiors of personal prosecution. On the 4th September 1940, the Soviets forcibly closed the Japanese legation, yet even from the very train that was to transport him out of Lithuania, Sugihara continued to issue visas - often single documents suitable that saved an entire family. Eleven months later the small window of escape was indeed gone. Lithuania was occupied by Germany and the majority of the Jews that remained in the country were swiftly murdered by the Nazis and their local collaborators. In 1985, the State of Israel honored Chiune Sugihara (1900-86) with the title “Righteous Among the Nations” for his actions, the only Japanese national to be so titled. Later, in 1997, Jan Zwartendijk (1896-1976) the Dutch Consul in Kaunas, was posthumously honored as “Righteous Among the Nations.” By breaking diplomatic protocol, the selfless actions of these two diplomats based in Lithuania in the Summer of 1940 enabled thousands of desperate Jews the possibility of surviving the murderous Nazi onslaught against European Jewry. It is estimated that more than 40,000 Jews (survivors and their descendants) are alive today due to the issue by Zwartendijk and Sugihara of this “Visa for Life.”