Safe Passage: The Untold Story of Diplomatic Intrigue, Betrayal, and the Exchange of American and Japanese Civilians by Sea During Wo#8;

Evelyn Iritani

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Book cover for Safe Passage: The Untold Story of Diplomatic Intrigue, Betrayalโ€‹, and the Exchange of American and Japanese Civilians by Sea During Wโ€‹o#8;
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Book cover for Safe Passage: The Untold Story of Diplomatic Intrigue, Betrayalโ€‹, and the Exchange of American and Japanese Civilians by Sea During Wโ€‹o#8;
Image for variant 9781250468727

Safe Passage: The Untold Story of Diplomatic Intrigue, Betrayal, and the Exchange of American and Japanese Civilians by Sea During Wo#8;

Safe Passage: The Untold Story of Diplomatic Intrigue, Betrayal, and the Exchange of American and Japanese Civilians by Sea During Wo#8;

Evelyn Iritani

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Description

An untold story of idealism, betrayal, and behind-the-scenes American-Japanese contacts in World War II.

Safe Passage tells one of World War II's great and neglected stories. In the fall of 1943, amid the Pacific theater's bloodiest battles, the United States and Japan pulled off an unlikely diplomatic coup: the warring nations agreed to exchange civilian nationals via two ocean liners. Nearly fifteen hundred Allied civilians who'd been trapped in Asia since the attack on Pearl Harbor sailed through dangerous waters to the port city of Goa, India, where they were traded for an equivalent number of Japanese diplomats and immigrants, sent from the Americas. The future return of some ten thousand Americans still in Japan would depend on the mission's success.

In this revelatory history, Evelyn Iritani tells a dramatic tale of humanitarian action in wartime and its darker complications. She reveals the herculean efforts of the U.S. diplomat James Keeley to repatriate civilians despite stiff resistance from within and outside his government; the shipboard adventures of passengers, including hymn-singing missionaries, drunken revelers, and sharp-tongued journalists such as the New Yorker's celebrated Emily Hahn; and the fraught compromises involved in securing their safe passage. Faced with too few bodies to trade and desperate to free Americans from perilous conditions, the United States uprooted and repatriated Latin American citizens of Japanese descent, sometimes against their will, while also forcing some Japanese Americans who had been held in internment camps to choose between expulsion to a war zone or remaining behind barbed wire. Intimate, energetic, and enriched by previously untapped archives and sources, Safe Passage is a crucial addition to the moral history of World War II.

About the Author

Evelyn Iritani is the author of An Ocean Between Us: The Changing Relationship of Japan and the United States, Told in Four Stories from the Life of an American Town. She is a former reporter for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Los Angeles Times, where her reporting garnered numerous awards, including the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for a series she coauthored on Walmart.

Critical Reviews

"What an amazing story Evelyn Iritani tells in this groundbreaking book. It pulses with life, unknown historical details, and characters who leap from the page in dimensions of heroism and tragedy. This true-life tale of desperate and likable people caught in the whirl of world war was impossible to put down."
--Timothy Egan, author of A Fever in the Heartland

"In Safe Passage, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Evelyn Iritani pulls back the curtain on one of the little-known humanitarian stories of World War II. In a world that overflows with innocents who find themselves the victims of today's senseless wars, the lessons in this gripping story resonate with stunning clarity. This is history as it should be written--richly detailed, authoritative, meaningful, and yet as compellingly readable as the best fiction."
--Ken Cuthbertson, author of Nobody Said Not to Go: The Life, Loves, and Adventures of Emily Hahn

"Evelyn Iritani's Safe Passage resurrects a lost chapter of World War II: a prisoner swap that saved American lives but also entangled Japanese families from Latin America. It is a gripping portrait of idealism colliding with desperation and compromise. Told with deep humanity and meticulously researched, this stunning narrative reveals the hidden cost of wartime mercy--and the kinds of impossible choices that haunt us still."
--Vanessa Hua, author of Forbidden City

"Evelyn Iritani's immersive and powerfully written investigation reveals an unusual moment of cooperation in a bitter war. She shows how people of Japanese ancestry in the United States and Latin America were shockingly uprooted and expelled from countries where they had made their homes. She has unearthed a stunning story of diplomatic intrigue, wartime racism, and moral compromise."
--Gary J. Bass, author of Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia

"Finally, someone has written the human story of the passengers aboard the Gripsholm and other prisoner-exchange ships and the desperate backchannel negotiations on both sides of the Pacific to rescue citizens stranded by Japan's war of imperialism. Evelyn Iritani writes with the dramatic flair and narrative arc of a novelist to fill in a missing piece of the Japanese American experience. Safe Passage is a meticulously researched page-turner, and one that is urgently needed at a time when we're seeing American citizens abducted from the streets, held in illegal detention, and sent to countries where they've never lived before."
--Frank Abe, lead author of We Hereby Refuse: Japanese American Resistance to Wartime Incarceration

Publishing Information

Publisher: Picador USA
Pub date: 2027-03-09
Length: 496 pages

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