文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

The truth conveyed by this article shines a powerful light for Japan and the world

2021年05月18日 10時41分58秒 | 全般

One day in 1975, a man came to the Nippon Medical School alumni association office to borrow money, saying he had no train fare to Kagoshima. 
It is a chapter that I reprinted on 2019-01-22 under the title "I will give you my National Health Insurance Certificate as collateral and ask you to lend me for a while."
The chapter titled "Shunsuke Tsurumi, Reijiro Kurata, Yuichi Yoshikawa, and others hold a press conference at GakushiKaikan on Ren Sikkim issue, protesting Ren's arrest and demanding asylum from the government," which I sent out on 2017-01-10, was in the top 10 searches on goo on 2019-01-22.
It is a chapter that should be re-read by every Japanese citizen.
It is a fact that perfectly shows how stupid these people were: Asahi Shimbun, NHK, Beheiren...
It is so ridiculous that it brings tears to my eyes to see how the Korean peninsula has duped them, how the Korean peninsula has used its masochistic view of history, and the anti-Japanese ideology that stems from it.
It is rare to find a paper that so perfectly reveals the reality of the pseudo-moralism of Japan's so-called cultural figures, which is even more stupid and shameful than this one.
The truth conveyed by this article shines a powerful light for Japan and the Japanese people, and the world.

As I have already mentioned, I suddenly realized why I was so devoted to Ryunosuke Akutagawa when I was a high school student one day, long after becoming an adult.
The library of my alma mater used to publish an excellent booklet every year. When I was ordered to write something for the annual Miyagi Prefecture book report contest, I even wrote his "Rashomon."
I thought that the person who posted this laborious work for us on the Internet, the most extensive library in the history of humankind, must be a lover of Ryunosuke Akutagawa, just like me.
It is because the end of this laborious work was like Rashomon.

I first learned Ren Sikkim's name in the chapter that begins with the words, "I searched again for Honda Katsuichi to verify a paper I will write later."
I looked him up on the Internet, the most extensive library in the history of humankind, and instantly found the following valuable article.

It is no wonder that a fraudster appears in the students' self‐government association office.
One day in 1975, a man showed up at the office of the Japan Medical College Alumni Association office to borrow money, saying he had no train fare to Kagoshima.
He presented his National Health Insurance Certificate as collateral and asked for a loan for a while.
After a while, they gave him a loan from the alumni association's funds, and the man left with the insurance card.
The man disappeared, but I never heard what happened to the transaction against putting a dent in the alumni association's funds.
In 1969, Kyoto University Press published <Korea problem series1> "Omura Immigration Center" by Park Jung Kung (Ren Sikkim).
Park Jung Kung (Ren Sikkim) appeared under the pretense of being a South Korean revolutionary who had escaped the dew of the prison by Syngman Rhee and crossed the Genkai Sea.
He went around among the students, claiming that those who supported him were revolutionary and those who did not were reactionaries.
Sects and others may have competed with each other to express their support for him in a revolutionary manner. 
The students firmly held the reputation of North Korea as the land of Stalinists, so they welcomed the emergence of revolutionaries from the South unconditionally.
In the meantime, we heard rumors that he was privatizing the donations to the Omura Immigration Center.
There were also rumors that he was behaving in a self-serving manner with female students, saying that the Japanese people were carrying the original sin of Korean domination. If they listened to him, they would be revolutionary.
I also received an inquiry from Kyoto, but by that time, I had not seen him.
I also heard that he had a wife in Hokkaido.
On August 23, Ren Sikkim was rearrested, and Kyoto Beheiren and others protested to the Kobe Immigration Bureau.
The "Ren Sikkim Supporters' Association," which is probably his alias, was established on April 10, 1969, at Pakuyu Kaikan in Kyoto and is said to have been attended by 40 people.
Shunsuke Tsurumi, Reijiro Kurata, Yuichi Yoshikawa, and others held a press conference at Gakushi Kaikan on the issue of Ren Sikkim and announced their appeal to "protest Ren's arrest and demand asylum from the government.
On the 27th, Ren Sikkim is released on parole.
It is on the 28th, rallies and demonstrations on the Ren Sikkim issue in Sapporo, Tokyo, Kobe, Fukuoka, and other cities. 
On October 10, Ren Sikkim addresses a rally in Kyoto's Maruyama Park attended by 10,000 people from all over the Kansai region.
I don't know what happened to him after that.

 


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