Stan. S. Katz

Author of The Emperor and the Spy

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Read the Intro Posts

INTRODUCTION TO THE ART OF PEACE

WELCOME!

Recent Posts

  • Osher Lifelong Education Institute – UCSD Presentation. Remarkable story, the alliance between a patriotic U.S. Intelligence Agent, Colonel Sidney Mashbir, and a humanitarian Japanese International Statesman, Prince Iyesato Tokugawa, who heroically delayed and attempted to prevent WWII in the Pacific.
  • Tokugawa & Komatsu, Forgotten Heroes / Until his untimely passing, Prince Iyesato Tokugawa held back WWII in the Pacific – After WWII, his protégé, Takashi Komatsu, whom he had mentored, guided the US and Japan to again become friends and allies.
  • Have you ever wondered how US and Japan re-established their friendship and alliance following the trauma of WWII? Here’s a new biography that honors an amazing Japanese American statesman, Takashi Komatsu, who guided this major achievement.
  • EIICHI SHIBUSAWA’S 1909 GOODWILL/BUSINESS JAPANESE DELEGATION VISIT TO AMERICA LIKELY SERVED AS A CATALYST FOR THE CREATION OF THE U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, THE WORLD’S LARGEST BUSINESS ORGANIZATION
  • THE ART OF DIPLOMACY: Exciting News – The inspiring life and accomplishments of Prince Tokugawa have finally come to light!

Archives

Prince Tokugawa as President of the Red Cross Society of Japan, working with US Ambassador Joseph Grew and Jesuit Priest Jacquinot, helped save tens of thousands of Jewish European refugees fleeing the Holocaust and hundreds of thousands of Chinese civilians.

January 26, 2024 by Stan S. Katz Leave a Comment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For decades, Prince Tokugawa Iesato (aka Prince Iyesato Tokugawa – 1863-1940) devoted his life to maintaining peace in Asia and specifically preventing Japan from coming into conflict with China. Tokugawa saw the clouds of war growing in Europe, as well as the militants in his own country pushing Japan towards conflict with China. He resisted these aggressions and wished to protect as many innocent lives as he could. As president of the Japanese Red Cross Society, Prince Tokugawa presided over the 1934 International Red Cross Conference in Tokyo (aka XVth International Conference of the Red Cross), where he urged the delegates to “Serve for Humanity.” It was at this gathering, where there was the first known example in history for the international creation of demilitarized Safe Zones, where civilians could find shelter, as outside warring armies fought one another. Continue Reading...

Filed Under: Tokugawa Archives Tagged With: Bill Davison, Chinese History, Diplomacy, Dr. Gerald Margolis, Historical biography, History of Jews in China, Holocaust, Humanitarian efforts, International diplomacy, International Friendship, International Relations, Jacquinot, Jacquinot Safe Zone, Jacquinot Zone, Japan China relations, Japan Society of New York City Archives, Japanese History, Jesuit Priest saves Chinese lives History, Jewish History, Jews fleeing Holocaust, Kazuo Kodama, Kazuo Kodama Ambassador of Japan to the European Union, Kazuo Kodama Ambassador of Japan to the United Nations, Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, North County Chapter of the San Diego World Affairs Council, Paul Ringwood U.S. Navy Commander, Prince Iyesato Tokugawa, Prince Tokugawa, Prince Tokugawa Archives, Prince Tokugawa Iesato, Prince Tokugawa Iesato Archives, Professor Claire Langham, Red Cross Society of Japan, Safe Zones, Saving Chinese lives, Saving Jewish Lives, Shanghai Ghetto, Shanghai Safe Zone, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Stan S. Katz, Stan S. Katz blog, Suzette Heiman, Taiwan, The Archive of the Jesuits in Canada, The Archive of the Jesuits in Canada / Archives des Jésuites au Canada, The ArchiveArchives des Jésuites au Canada, The art of diplomacy, The Art of Peace, The Missouri School of Journalism at University of Missouri, Tokugawa Archives, U.S. Japan relations, U.S.-Japan History, University of Pennsylvania’s Museum, US Japan relations, World Religions Museum in Taipei, WWII

Colonel Sidney Mashbir’s good friend Colonel Robert F. Warren has just had his autobiography “Only In My America” published highlighting his distinguished military aviation career.

August 27, 2021 by Stan S. Katz Leave a Comment

 

 

 

 

As an author and historian who has studied and written about Colonel Sidney Mashbir, it was my good fortune when Marine Colonel Robert Warren and his son Marine Captain William Warren contacted me three years ago in 2018 to discuss their close friendship with Colonel Mashbir decades earlier. Continue Reading...

Filed Under: Mashbir Archives Tagged With: Colonel Mashbir, Colonel Mashbir Archives, Colonel Robert F. Warren, Colonel Robert Warren, Colonel Sidney Mashbir, Heroes of World War Two, Korean War, Marine Lt. William Warren, Michigan Aviation Hall of Fame, ONLY IN AMERICA, ONLY IN AMERICA By Robert (Bob) Warren, Robert F. Warren, Robert Warren, Sidney Mashbir, Stan S. Katz, Stan S. Katz blog, The Air Zoo, The Emperor and the Spy, TheEmperorAndTheSpy.com, Vietnam War, World War Two, WWII

Colonel Sidney Mashbir’s widow Alice gifted her husband’s portrait of General MacArthur to his good friends Marine Captain William Warren and Marine Colonel Robert F. Warren…Robert and William shared their personal experiences with their friend Sidney.

April 11, 2020 by Stan S. Katz 1 Comment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Having studied and written about Colonel Sidney Mashbir, it was my good fortune when Robert Warren and his son William Warren contacted me in 2018 to discuss their close friendship with Colonel Mashbir many years earlier.

William and Robert generously shared various historical materials linked to Colonel Mashbir (1891-1973). This blog post will present a number of those items, as well as Robert and William’s recollections of Colonel Mashbir. Also included is biographic material about Robert and William Warren, who being younger than Mashbir, were inspired and influenced by Colonel Mashbir’s heroic dedication to our nation. Continue Reading...

Filed Under: Mashbir Archives Tagged With: Alice Mashbir, Allied Translator and Interpreter Section, American Spies, Army and Navy Club, Army and Navy Club in Washington DC, ATIS, Bernard Cornwell, Brad Meltzer, Charles Willoughby, Charles Wyatt, CIA, Colonel Mashbir, Colonel Mashbir Archives, Colonel Robert F. Warren, Colonel Robert Warren, Colonel Sidney Forrester Mashbir, Colonel Sidney Mashbir, Don Mashbir, Donald Mashbir, Douglas MacArthur, Dwight D. Eisenhower, first U.S. Military all-helicopter squadron, Forrester Mashbir, General Charles Willoughby, General Douglas MacArthur, General MacArthur, General Pershing, General Pershing in Mexico, General Willoughby, Great Kanto Earthquake, Helicopter Squadron 161, Heroes of World War Two, History of the CIA, HMH-363, Hotel Manager Inmaru, https://www.airzoo.org/, James Moriarty, Japanese Surrender Signing Ceremony, Jeff Sharra, Julian Kitchen Lamar Miller, Julian Lamar, Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum, Kelvin Bailey, Korean War, Lieutenant Charles Wyatt, Lord Louis Mountbatten, Lt. Colonel Don Conroy, Lt. General Kawabe, Marine Attack Squadron-331, Marine Corps League, Marine Corps League Toys for Tots, Mashbir Archive, Mashbir Archives, Michael Sharra, Michigan Aviation Hall of Fame, Mickey Mouse One, ONLY IN AMERICA, ONLY IN AMERICA By Robert (Bob) Warren, Pan-Pacific Club of Tokyo, Sands Hotel/Casino in Las Vegas, Sidney F. Mashbi, Sidney Mashbir, South Korean President Syngman Rhee, Stan S. Katz, Stan S. Katz blog, Takashiro, The Air Zoo, The Elephants of Trabong, The Emperor and the Spy, Toys for Tots, V-J Day, Viet Nam War, Vietnam War, VMA-331, Walt Disney, Walt Disney and Toys for Tots, William Warren, Willoughby, World War Two, WWII

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