Tuesday, March 8, 2022

On Valor and Virtue

                                                                                              

                                                            
 

If you're not familiar with Chiune Sugihara, the Japanese  diplomat posted in Lithuania during World War II who saved 6,000 lives by issuing visas to Jews, you can learn about him and find references to look up here: ushmm.org/collections/bibliography/chiune-sugihara.

For the sake of this post, I'd just like to quote what he said about his own heroism in reply to the question the author of Pepper, Silk & Ivory: Amazing Stories about Jews and the Far East (p. 189) asked about it:
"Everyone in life as an opportunity to do a good deed. Do it and leave it alone. Don't write about it or publicize it; don't make money from it. Just do what's right because it's right."


The book also recounts that he had no way of knowing at the time if the visas would accomplish his aim of saving lives. Sugihara's son Hiroki reported that when his father found out how successful his rescue efforts proved, he said, "This is the happiest day of my life."                                                                   

Thoughts on WW II Posters

 


I'm now reading The Splendid and the Vile by Erik Larson. As I remember from reading Dead Wake and Devil in the White City, Larson's style infuses the feel of a novel on  straight history (though he's not quite as much fun to read as the somewhat fictionalized Kopp Sisters series). 

One thing that struck me early on (p. 75) was why Churchill so valued Frederick Lindemann  AKA The Prof, as summed up in one brief observation:

 The Prof delighted in coming up with ideas that turned conventional beliefs upside down. Once, as he walking with a colleague, Donald MacDougall, he saw a poster that admonished, "Stop that dripping tap," an exhortation meant to conserve water and thereby save the coal that fueled the water-distribution system. As he walked, the Prof began calculating the cost in energy, wood pulp, and shipping needed to produce the paper for the poster. "and Of course," MacDougall recalled, "Prof was right in his initial suspicions that it all added up to enormously more than was going to be saved by the posters' advice being followed."

Yet, those who put up the poster feel they are fulfilling a patriotic duty and would delight in castigating the waste of others. We see that over 75 years later, we repeat the same exact error. If anything, we've gotten worse at elevating virtue-signaling that actually takes up more resources than the ones that are saved by the recommended actions.

Related: Hopping Around History


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