LevelTen Hit Counter - Free PHP Web Analytics Script
LevelTen dallas web development firm - website design, flash, graphics & marketing
Home Archives Japan FAQts Photos Links Friends
Advertise with us!
Japan Time:
Home :: Archives :: 9th Edition, September 2004
E-mail this page
Print this page
Hana's Suitcase
Teaching Japanese Children about the Holocaust
by Dan Bloom
 

Hana's Suitcase by Karen Levine

A 60-year-old suitcase has changed Fumiko Ishioka's life in Japan forever.

The well-worn brown bag is no ordinary piece of luggage -- it survived the German Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz, while its owner, 13-year-old Hana Brady, did not -- and it is now the subject of a worldwide bestseller titled "Hana's Suitcase."

The book, written by a Canadian named Karen Levine, has been translated into over 20 languages. For Ishioka, who started the Tokyo Holocaust Education Resource Center in 1998, Hana's suitcase has become a bridge between a beautiful little Czech girl who died in a Nazi gas chamber in October 1944 and the children of the world.

Through learning about the Holocaust, Ishioka hopes children worldwide will embrace the path of peace. It's not an easy mission for the 33-year-old Ishioka. There is very little funding to help her center, so she works out of the office of the firm that published her Japanese translation of the book -- a Canadian bestseller in children's literature. Ishioka spends most of her time touring schools in Japan and overseas with the suitcase.

"Other than 'The Diary of Anne Frank,' which is very popular in Japan, what happened to the Jews in Europe during the Holocaust is not that well known in the Land of the Rising Sun. There is only a small mention of it in Japanese history books," said Ishioka.

"Although the Holocaust happened a long time ago and is not related directly to Japan's history, the process of thinking about why such a thing happened is very important for children living today in Japan. It gives them a chance to think about why human beings act in such a way."

Born in Tokyo, Ishioka graduated from Temple University in the USA and went off to study at the University of Leeds in the UK. Returning to Japan in 1997, she joined an NGO to create a Holocaust exhibition center. She requested an artifact that she could use for peace education in Japan and to her delight, the Auschwitz Museum in Poland agreed to lend her Hana's suitcase.

To her further delight, Ishioka learned that Hana's older brother George was alive and well in Canada. He visited Japan in March 2001 and saw his sister's suitcase for the first time in 57 years. Since then, Ishioka has been to Canada three times and the U.S., visiting schools, synagogues and churches with Karen Levine (the Canadian author of "Hana's Suitcase").

 

Comments to date: 33. This is page 1 of 4.

Sandy   Cairo 

Posted at 2:59am on Thursday, May 29th, 2008

right now i want to throw something hard and pointed at hitler

Eloise   Sydney 

Posted at 2:56am on Thursday, May 29th, 2008

How the HELL can you say Hitler could have been nice...he was a bloody pcyhopath...any one with even hjust half a brain knows that!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Anna   Odessa 

Posted at 4:25pm on Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

I hope all the people who read this book felt the pain and horror Hana felt!!!!!

Ana   Toronto 

Posted at 7:25pm on Friday, November 16th, 2007

HITLER IS THE MEANEST PERSON I EVET HEARD ABOUT!!!!!!!!

Rosie   Australia 

Posted at 5:02am on Thursday, November 15th, 2007

When I picked up the book I thought it was really boring but around the end it made me cry, it's so sad and I hope everyone hears Hana's story.

Maddie Lodfres   Whitby 

Posted at 7:54pm on Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

I love tyhis book because it express it's angry and pain of what Hana and George's life.!!! Peace!

tom   wisconsin 

Posted at 9:58am on Monday, November 12th, 2007

i agree with james

James   Miami 

Posted at 9:41am on Monday, November 12th, 2007

why do you all give hitler a hard time, he mite of been nice. Give him a chance.

DK   Ukraine 

Posted at 9:37am on Monday, November 12th, 2007

Hana's Suitcase is a book that taght people about the holocaust, hitler and the poor, sweet souls taht died. It's abook taht everyone needs to read.

mcvickkies   ireland 

Posted at 1:48pm on Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

i am doing a special topic on hana brady i was inspired by her story and the amount of effort it took to make her story heard.fair play peoples hitler was an evil genius and a cowrad.peace out!

Next

Your name:

Your location:

Country (flag):

Your comments:

Security check *

 
Featured Profiles of the Day
 
advertisements
spacer
 
spacer
spacer
Vote for Us at Topsites Japan
Sections   Interactive   Webmasters   Information
Home
Archives
Photo Essays
Japan FAQts
Links Directory
  Friends   Advertising
Linking to us
  Who we are
Contact information
Submitting material
Site-map
Valid XHTML 1.0 Valid CSS 2.0 PHP Powered RSS-XML News Feed