Ryu Ota

Ryū Ōta (太田 龍 [太田 竜] Japanese: Ōta Ryū, 16 August 1930 – 19 May 2009[1]) was a Japanese New Left activist, author, and ecologist. His name is spelled "Ryu Ohta" as well.

Biography

He was born Tōichi Kurihara (栗原 登一) in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Sakhalin. In October 1945, He joined the Democratic Youth League of Japan. In 1947, he joined the Japanese Communist Party. In 1953, he left the Japanese Communist Party. In 1955, he and Kanichi Kuroda established the Japan Revolutionary Communist League, thus becoming leader of the Fourth International in Japan. In 1957, he established the Japanese Trotskyist League (日本トロツキスト連盟 Nihon Trotskyist Renmei).

In 1970, he was sentenced to death by his former fellow members for leaving the Japanese Trotskyist League. In 1971 he attempted to start an Ainu revolution but failed. He and the leader of the Ainu Liberation League were both arrested for inciting a riot and they continuously blamed each other.[2]

In 1986, he established the Japanese Green Party, but it immediately split into two separate parties and both failed. In 1986, he authored a book called Japan Ecologist Proclamation, in which he proclaimed that "we must overthrow all human dictatorship! Free the cockroaches, free the rats, free the earthworms!"[3] Since 1986, he has been a candidate in three elections. In the 1990s he became known as one of the principal publishers of antisemitic materials and Jewish conspiracy theories in Japan, as well as controversial writings on the destructive effects of Westernisation, including the aesthetic and moral superiority of Japanese women over Western women. He was also a self-styled Buddhist philosopher.

Affiliations

He was the leader of the following associations:

He was also the author of UFO Theory and Space Civilization: Prospects for 21st Century Science.[4]

Notes

  1. <訃報>太田竜さん78歳=評論家、社会運動家 (in Japanese). Mainichi Shimbun. 19 May 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  2. Mark Winchester, Hitotsubashi University
  3. 日本エコロジスト宣言―万類共尊の地球へ ISBN 4787786091
  4. ISBN 4795247552

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.