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May Shigenobu : Daughter of the Japanese Red Army

jamahir

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May Shigenobu: Daughter of the Japanese Red Army

Published 27 October 2011

May Shigenobu

May Shigenobu is a journalist in Japan

As the daughter of the Japanese Red Army's founder and a Palestinian freedom fighter, May Shigenobu grew up on the run.

She kept her identity secret and spent long periods without her mother throughout her childhood, but it was a happy one.

She now lives in Japan where she works as a journalist for a broadcaster in the Middle East.

"At first, when I was very young we would move house every month or so, especially when I was living with members of the Japanese Red Army.

Their Asian features stood out in Middle Eastern society and someone could leak information, intentionally or unintentionally, about us being in the neighbourhood.

I did see my mother, but not as much as a normal family. I was with her for about a total of four or five years, but it was all quality time so it was ok.

I had a brother and a sister, though we weren't related by blood - they were children of my mother's comrades - we felt like family.

Whenever my mother was around she was very keen on teaching us Japanese. And there was time to do fun things like writing and acting in plays, composing music for it or going on small picnics and trips within the country.

No friends​

I asked her once who my father was, when I was quite young. She promised that she would tell me when I was 16 years old and she kept her promise.

He was a Palestinian fighter like my mother - I actually knew him and had suspicions that he was my father because of the special love and attention he would show. It wasn't really difficult to guess.

He has passed away now and I'm not sure he was aware that I knew about him.

I used to use several names per year when I was very young, depending on security and how many times I had to change schools and neighbourhoods.

The difficult thing was that people in the Middle East are very friendly, but they also tend to ask a lot of personal questions, about your family and your history, so every time I had to change my identity I had to think hard about all the details of that identity.

I didn't have long-lasting friendships because I couldn't stay in one place for long, and I couldn't stay in touch with people once I left. I always had to disappear suddenly and remove any trace of myself.

Danger​

We spent time living in refugee camps but just for a short periods; while I was doing volunteer work in clinics or while we were looking for a new place to live.
I sometimes lived in Palestinian refugee camps to be more in contact with the reality of what my mother and her group were fighting for.

I did ask her once, rhetorically, why we had to live in that kind of situation, where we were always unstable and always worried about not making security mistakes.

She tried to explain as best she could how it was important for all of us to protect each other. She seemed very sorry and sad that I had to live this way.
Seeing her feel sad for me made me realise I should have never asked that question.

At any time I could have been kidnapped or even killed with my mother. There were Palestinian leaders who were assassinated with their children, so it was always a possibility.

Still, I have always thought that she was a good mother. I'm not sure that I could be as enduring and calm, and as reasonable and realistic under all the stress that she was carrying.

She was responsible, not just for me, but also for the other children in the Japanese Red Army and the whole group. I'm sure that was a difficult thing for anybody to be able to handle.

Fusako Shigenobu and Kozo Okamoto

Fusako Shigenobu set up the Japanese Red Army to support Palestinian freedom fighters

As an adult it became even harder to have close friends when I was attending university in Lebanon. I felt more strongly towards my friends and had a stronger urge to create an honest bond with them, but at the same time I had the obligation of never revealing who I was - because this would put others in danger.

In 2000, I found that my mother had been arrested in Japan, it was a shock. Even though I was prepared to hear this someday, I really didn't expect it to happen. I was shocked but I was also relieved that she had not been assassinated.

Last hug​

My mother's arrest was the reason I came to Japan for the first time. I had mixed feelings; even though I had never been there it felt a little nostalgic. I had seen a Japanese society at work in a minuscule way inside the house when I was growing up, coming to Japan brought me back those memories.

After she was arrested I revealed my true identity officially and openly, I went back to my friends in Lebanon and explained my past to them. All of them were understanding and my university friends are still very close friends now.

On 8 March 2006, my mother was jailed for 20 years. I used to visit her every week but now that she has received her final sentence and finished all court procedures, she can only have two 15-minute visits a month - one from me and one from other relatives and friends.

It was her birthday on 28 September and the guard gave us about 20 minutes. We always talk in a rush because we have plenty of things to tell and ask each other.

She comes prepared with written notes in order not to forget what to ask and tell. I also write things down too, if there is something I want to tell her about and don't want to forget.

Since she was arrested I haven't been able to have physical contact with her, except once.

She had an operation for intestinal cancer a year and a half ago. When I went to visit her after the operation she was still immobile in her hospital bed.
I was allowed to see her in her room, so I had the chance to hug her for the first time in more than ten years. That was the only time I could hug her in a very long time.

I'm not sure I could be as strong, as patient, and as steadfast as she was. But I try to be, she is a role model for me."

---

Jamahir's comment : The revolutionary mother, Fusako, was released from Japanese jail after 20 years there. She is now 76. Another revolutionary Carlos the Jackal is still in jail, a French jail, after being kidnapped from Sudan by French government criminals in 1994. He is a prisoner of conscience and must be released and allowed to guide the world's politics and socio-economics and social spheres.

The Japanese Red Army agitated for a world revolution to bring in world Communism by allying with various Communist and Socialist movements including the PFLP ( Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine ) which the JRA also allied to stand against Israeli establishment's terrorism. Groups like JRA and PFLP were supported by leftist countries like the Libyan Jamahiriya guided by Muammar Gaddafi. This was the world in the 1970s and before and later, Japanese and Muslims collaborating for justice and world revolution. I quote from this article too which you must note is a NATO-aligned source :
At the time, Soviet and North Korean spies brought two very disparate forces, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and the Japanese Red Army Faction (JRAF), into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and other regional issues. Arguably the most important event of this budding alliance involved the leader of the Japanese Red Army Faction, a woman named Fusako Shigenobu, becoming close friends with an influential member of the PFLP, Leila Ahmed. The two women formed a powerful relationship that defined their Marxist, anti-imperialist movements. Together, their mission was “to consolidate the international revolutionary alliance against the imperialists of the world.”
This movement also has substantial connections to North Korea and the Soviet Union. Much of the PFLP leadership was funded and armed by the Soviets. For example, the JRAF landed hijacked planes in Pyongyang, as I have mentioned in a previous article, and received covert funding and weapons through the Chongryon Korean advocacy group. These webs of government-sponsored terrorism call into question what, or how many, terrorist attacks throughout the Cold War may have germinated in the walls of the Kremlin or in the confines of Pyongyang. Later, in the 1980s, Colonel Gaddafi of Libya commissioned the Japanese Red Army to launch terrorist-style assaults on British and US interests globally, culminating in attacks on the US, Canadian and Japanese embassies in Jakarta, a bombing of a Neapolitan nightclub for US soldiers that killed five and other attacks. A member of the Japanese Red Army, Yu Kikumura, was arrested in New Jersey for planning to bomb a naval recruitment office on the anniversary of the US bombing of Libya in response to the Berlin discotheque bombings in 1986.
According to Yoshihiro Kuriyama, these movements decried what they considered to be Western imperialism, especially in regards to the events of the Cold War and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Their desire for massive world revolution was embraced and reciprocated by Leila Ahmed and the secularized, Marxist PFLP. The leader of the Japanese Red Army Faction, Shigenobu, remained in Lebanon and throughout the Middle East for decades before turning herself in for a huge show trial in Japan.
This was what educated Muslims were doing in previous decades. What "educated" Muslims do now is harass people on the internet and London parks and do tableegh based on their anti-Islamic perverted interpretation of Islam.

Leila Khaled was the revolutionary Islam-origin female then :
leila2.jpg


Angry Indian Burqa Girl Muskan bibi is the "revolutionary" Muslim female now :lol: :
MUSKAN.jpg


This is a good interview of Leila from 2014, the interviewer being NATO-aligned somewhat.

These Japanese, German and Palestinian Communists and their leftist supporter governments like from Libya, Syria, Iraq, East Germany, Cuba and USSR did more for Palestine than any mullah-burqa rot in India, Pakistan, Iran etc rushing down the street carrying banners reading "Israel Murdabad" and burning Israeli flags and burning themselves in the process :rofl: :

---

Laal Salaam !

---

@Joe Shearer @Atlas @Indos

@MultaniGuy ( learn your history here and burn your "political science" degree ) @Black Vigo @Mujahid Memon @Wergeland @kingQamaR

@Wolfhunter, COMMIES ! :enjoy:
 
Last edited:

May Shigenobu: Daughter of the Japanese Red Army

Published 27 October 2011

May Shigenobu

May Shigenobu is a journalist in Japan

As the daughter of the Japanese Red Army's founder and a Palestinian freedom fighter, May Shigenobu grew up on the run.

She kept her identity secret and spent long periods without her mother throughout her childhood, but it was a happy one.

She now lives in Japan where she works as a journalist for a broadcaster in the Middle East.

"At first, when I was very young we would move house every month or so, especially when I was living with members of the Japanese Red Army.
Their Asian features stood out in Middle Eastern society and someone could leak information, intentionally or unintentionally, about us being in the neighbourhood.

I did see my mother, but not as much as a normal family. I was with her for about a total of four or five years, but it was all quality time so it was ok.
I had a brother and a sister, though we weren't related by blood - they were children of my mother's comrades - we felt like family.

Whenever my mother was around she was very keen on teaching us Japanese. And there was time to do fun things like writing and acting in plays, composing music for it or going on small picnics and trips within the country.

No friends​

I asked her once who my father was, when I was quite young. She promised that she would tell me when I was 16 years old and she kept her promise.
He was a Palestinian fighter like my mother - I actually knew him and had suspicions that he was my father because of the special love and attention he would show. It wasn't really difficult to guess.

He has passed away now and I'm not sure he was aware that I knew about him.
I used to use several names per year when I was very young, depending on security and how many times I had to change schools and neighbourhoods.
The difficult thing was that people in the Middle East are very friendly, but they also tend to ask a lot of personal questions, about your family and your history, so every time I had to change my identity I had to think hard about all the details of that identity.

I didn't have long-lasting friendships because I couldn't stay in one place for long, and I couldn't stay in touch with people once I left. I always had to disappear suddenly and remove any trace of myself.

Danger​

We spent time living in refugee camps but just for a short periods; while I was doing volunteer work in clinics or while we were looking for a new place to live.
I sometimes lived in Palestinian refugee camps to be more in contact with the reality of what my mother and her group were fighting for.

I did ask her once, rhetorically, why we had to live in that kind of situation, where we were always unstable and always worried about not making security mistakes.

She tried to explain as best she could how it was important for all of us to protect each other. She seemed very sorry and sad that I had to live this way.
Seeing her feel sad for me made me realise I should have never asked that question.

At any time I could have been kidnapped or even killed with my mother. There were Palestinian leaders who were assassinated with their children, so it was always a possibility.

Still, I have always thought that she was a good mother. I'm not sure that I could be as enduring and calm, and as reasonable and realistic under all the stress that she was carrying.

She was responsible, not just for me, but also for the other children in the Japanese Red Army and the whole group. I'm sure that was a difficult thing for anybody to be able to handle.

Fusako Shigenobu and Kozo Okamoto

Fusako Shigenobu set up the Japanese Red Army to support Palestinian freedom fighters

As an adult it became even harder to have close friends when I was attending university in Lebanon. I felt more strongly towards my friends and had a stronger urge to create an honest bond with them, but at the same time I had the obligation of never revealing who I was - because this would put others in danger.

In 2000, I found that my mother had been arrested in Japan, it was a shock. Even though I was prepared to hear this someday, I really didn't expect it to happen. I was shocked but I was also relieved that she had not been assassinated.

Last hug​

My mother's arrest was the reason I came to Japan for the first time. I had mixed feelings; even though I had never been there it felt a little nostalgic. I had seen a Japanese society at work in a minuscule way inside the house when I was growing up, coming to Japan brought me back those memories.

After she was arrested I revealed my true identity officially and openly, I went back to my friends in Lebanon and explained my past to them. All of them were understanding and my university friends are still very close friends now.
On 8 March 2006, my mother was jailed for 20 years. I used to visit her every week but now that she has received her final sentence and finished all court procedures, she can only have two 15-minute visits a month - one from me and one from other relatives and friends.

It was her birthday on 28 September and the guard gave us about 20 minutes. We always talk in a rush because we have plenty of things to tell and ask each other.

She comes prepared with written notes in order not to forget what to ask and tell. I also write things down too, if there is something I want to tell her about and don't want to forget.

Since she was arrested I haven't been able to have physical contact with her, except once.

She had an operation for intestinal cancer a year and a half ago. When I went to visit her after the operation she was still immobile in her hospital bed.
I was allowed to see her in her room, so I had the chance to hug her for the first time in more than ten years. That was the only time I could hug her in a very long time.

I'm not sure I could be as strong, as patient, and as steadfast as she was. But I try to be, she is a role model for me."

---

Jamahir's comment : The Japanese Red Army agitated for a world revolution to bring in world Communism by allying with various Communist and Socialist movements including the PFLP ( Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine ) which the JRA also allied to stand against Israeli establishment's terrorism. Groups like JRA and PFLP were supported by leftist countries like the Libyan Jamahiriya guided by Muammar Gaddafi. This was the world in the 1970s and before and later, Japanese and Muslims collaborating for justice and world revolution. I quote from this article too which you must note is a NATO-aligned source :



This was what educated Muslims were doing in previous decades. What "educated" Muslims do now is harass people on the internet and London parks and do tableegh based on their anti-Islamic perverted interpretation of Islam.

Leila Khaled was the revolutionary Islam-origin female then :
leila2.jpg


Angry Indian Burqa Girl Muskan bibi is the "revolutionary" Muslim female now :lol: :
MUSKAN.jpg


This is a good interview of Leila from 2014, the interviewer being NATO-aligned somewhat.

These Japanese, German and Palestinian Communists and their leftist supporter governments like from Libya, Syria, Iraq, East Germany, Cuba and USSR did more for Palestine than any mullah-burqa rot in India, Pakistan, Iran etc rushing down the street carrying banners reading "Israel Murdabad" and burning Israeli flags and burning themselves in the process :rofl: :

---

Laal Salaam !

---

@Joe Shearer @Atlas @Indos

@MultaniGuy ( learn your history here and burn your "political science" degree ) @Black Vigo @Mujahid Memon @Wergeland @kingQamaR

@Wolfhunter, COMMIES ! :enjoy:
Personally I don't have time to deal with Heretical Muslims such as your self, who manipulate Islam to suite their whims, desires, opinions, or interests.
 
Personally I don't have time to deal with Heretical Muslims such as your self, who manipulate Islam to suite their whims, desires, opinions, or interests.

Funny isn't it that it is us "heretical Muslims" who are sabotaged, assassinated, regime changed and subverted by NATO using proxies that is always you "Pure Islamic Muslims" : "Muslim" Brotherhood, Al Qaeda, Taliban, Afghan "Mujahideen", Tableeghi Jamaat, "Mard-e-Momin" etc ? :)
 
Funny isn't it that it is us "heretical Muslims" who are sabotaged, assassinated, regime changed and subverted by NATO using proxies that is always you "Pure Islamic Muslims" : "Muslim" Brotherhood, Al Qaeda, Taliban, Afghan "Mujahideen", Tableeghi Jamaat, "Mard-e-Momin" etc ? :)

You prefer, to your enslavement than freedom. You do sound very much like a house negro who the master kept indoors for his house chores . Why, of your very good obedience to him and his rules While , others toiled in the field or got whipped, became amputee for fighting back. Pakistan was like the Yankee north fighting southern white slave states . In 1947 let in your runaway slaves gave them freedom and rights. You should Thank us hard core Pakistanis:-) for this not whinge and cry about us revolutionary muslims
 
No friends
I wonder why? :lol::lol:
Jamahir's comment : The Japanese Red Army agitated for a world revolution to bring in world Communism by allying with various Communist and Socialist movements including the PFLP ( Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine ) which the JRA also allied to stand against Israeli establishment's terrorism. Groups like JRA and PFLP were supported by leftist countries like the Libyan Jamahiriya guided by Muammar Gaddafi. This was the world in the 1970s and before and later, Japanese and Muslims collaborating for justice and world revolution. I quote from this article too which you must note is a NATO-aligned source :
Stop pretending you're sympathetic to the plight of Muslims you just want communism that's your commie murtad kind's agenda nothing else

These Japanese, German and Palestinian Communists and their leftist supporter governments like from Libya, Syria, Iraq, East Germany, Cuba and USSR did more for Palestine than any mullah-burqa rot in India, Pakistan, Iran etc rushing down the street carrying banners reading "Israel Murdabad" and burning Israeli flags and burning themselves in the process :rofl: :
What did they achieve? Is Palestine a powerful communist state? Is Israel gone forever? Did Palestine conquer USA? Before barking at least take a good look at your pathetic situation first atheist ape :lol::lol:
 
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