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Nejiko Suwa
(23 January 1920 – 6 March 2012)〔 archived at (archive.is )〕 was a Japanese violinist who first rose to prominence as a child prodigy during the inter-war period, and was most active prior to the 1960s. She is most noted today for having been presented with what was claimed to be a Stradivarius by the Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, and the controversy surrounding the gift. ==Early life== Suwa was born as Nejiko Oga in Tokyo in 1920 and was recognized as a violin prodigy by the age of 10. Her first teacher was Nakajima Tazuruko, but she soon progressed quickly enough to study with his teacher, the Russian violinist Anna Bubnova-Ono. Suwa was introduced to Efrem Zimbalist while on his second Asian tour in 1930. Her performance of Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E minor impressed him enough that the meeting made headlines. He recommended that she study abroad and offered his assistance. While she did not take up this offer and continued to remain in Japan for six more years, she did decide to study under another Russian violinist, Alexander Mogilevsky.
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