Nihon Essay Essay Akira Kurosawa, the man called Kissinger of Yamaguchi-gumi, His Turbulent Life / Shigeki Yamadaira

※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.
Japanese title: 単行本(実用) 日本エッセイ・随筆 山口組のキッシンジャーと呼ばれた男 黒澤明 その激動の生涯 / 山平重樹
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Item number: BO4452368
Released date: 30 May 2024

Product description ※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.

Japanese Essays and Essays He risked his life and spent one year and two months to save a young Japanese man who was abducted by anti-government Islamic guerrillas on the Philippine island of Horo and abandoned by the Japanese government.
Of course, he did not gain a penny, was not a name, and was acting under the orders of Gikyo's mind, which can be said as his instinct, but he did not say such a vulgar thing.
Then, for what reason? He replied :
He went to the Philippines to fill the void in his heart.
He went to the Philippines to find out his passion and where it burned.
There, he paints directly into the "Hostage Incident of Japanese Cameraman" by anti-government guerrillas.
He was likened to an American "master of diplomacy" because of his ability to bring down tension with organizations that had once been at odds with him. He then went to the Philippines in search of his passion and where it burned.
The police did not leave him alone.
He was accused of being the mastermind of the "Glico Morinaga Incident" that shook the world and faced harsh criticism.
In addition, he became a witness to the will of Masutatsu OYAMA, who had a connection with him. He was also accused of being the mastermind of the "Glico Morinaga Incident" that shook the world.
Ironically, he became involved in the division of Kyokushin Karate.
He became a witness to the will of Masutatsu OYAMA, who had a relationship with him. He was born in Yamagata in 1953. After graduating from Hosei University, he became a freelance writer.
In addition to the series of "Learning from the Yakuza," which became a best-selling book, he wrote many filmed works such as "The Man Who Stabbed Rikidozan" (by Kaya Shobo), "Toei Ninkyo Eiga to That Era" (by Seidansha Publico), and "The Portrait of 41 Bosses who Passed through the Showa" (by Tokuma Shoten).
Akira Kurosawa Katsushi Murata