Categories
Society

Yakuza – ヤクザ

Japan, is one of the safest places in the world, there is almost no crime but it is the place where one of the hugest criminal gangs operates, they are the Yakuza. Yazuka is almost a synonym of “organized crime”, it could be translated also as “the Japanese mafia”.

The Yakuza beginnings were during the Edo period (300-400 years ago) when many samurai where not really needed by their daimyo(lord) and were ignored by their people. Those samurai without home, where known as ronin. Some ronin started doing some dirty jobs for high class people, and other where just plain criminals. After some time they started organizing ronin gangs, and offering their services as protectors of little villages. In exchange for the protection they asked for food and a roof, but after some time some groups started asking for money and more things. Other problems were fights between ronin bands trying to “protect” the same village or city area. That’s how the first organized criminal organizations operating in a similar way to nowadays Yakuza appeared in Japan.

The term “Yakuza” appeared at the beginning of the XIX century, when some “bakuto” who liked dirty illegal game businesses were playing a card game where the worst cards you can get are 8, 9 and 3. If you read 8, 9 and 3 using traditional Japanese it’s YA, KU, ZA. The people who managed to win a game having a YA-KU-ZA were considered the best players. Those “bakuto” people had a pretty bad reputation, and who knows how YAKUZA end up being the name for organized Japanese criminals.

During many years gangs trying to make money appeared, but Yakuzas as we know them today started after the WWII when they managed to control prostitution, illegal game business, drugs, illegal commerce etc. Furthermore, some of them started to operate inside political circles.


Picture from Okinawan-shorinryu

Yakuzas are organized in a very strict way, their gangs seem like a company, where everyone belongs to the same “family”. They follow the traditional samurai honor code, if someone fails he would cut his little finger. If you see a Japanese guy without a finger, maybe he is or he was a Yakuza.

The biggest Yakuza gang is called Yamaguchi-gumi, it has 40.000 active members. They have the “honor” of being the biggest criminal band in the world not only because of the number of member but also because of their economical power. They are like a big corporation, they control pachinko companies, restaurants everywhere in the country, pornography production companies, drugs and prostitution.

Yakuza are a big problem in Japan, they keep police and politicians away using their power so they have “space” to do their dirty businesses. This freedom, allows them to act as companies, for example in wikipedia you can read how the Yamaguchi are expanding their business in the Tokyo area and they just absorbed the clan Kokusui-kai last year. It seems like a big company buying a little company, they make it public and everyone knows!


Yamaguchi-gumi logo, it seems they are not into the 2.0 trend yet.

By the way, the Yamaguchi’s boss is a guy called Shinoda and he is now in prison but still controlling the biggest criminal band in the world, he will be free in 2010. Shinoda controls more criminals than Bin Laden but he will be free! And it seems nobody cares.

A “good” thing about Yakuza is that they don’t usually bother “normal” people, they just do their dirty businesses among them and many times they bother companies menacing them. That’s why they don’t have a very bad reputation, I have the impression that Japanese people don’t really care, they know there are Yakuza and that’s all. Not many complains here in Japan; I come from Spain where everyone complains A LOT, and I think it’s one of the keys that allowed us to reduce the power of terrorist groups in Spain.

7 replies on “Yakuza – ヤクザ”

Hi! I’m from Spain too and I know what you are talking about! Japan is a great culture. Even though Yakuza is synonym for organized crime, and everything that comes with that (drugs, prostitution, extortion…) as you said they follow the Samurai code of honor. They won’t normally cause trouble to the people and that’s why society is not as concerned with them as Spanish people is concerned for example with E.T.A. (which specifically uses the technique of intimidating the people to acomplish its objectives) There is a huge difference in this and that’s why many people even respect Yakuza. I think that in many cases they are even more respected thatn the system because of the Samurai honor thing, and they are seen as the last strictly traditional japanese families and so on…

Well I’m getting carried on… Salutations from La Coruña! I love reading every single one of your posts!

Most of the time the way’s people would identify a Yakuza was cause of the fact that he was missing fingers. I think it goes something like if you fail at your job or wrong one of the other members, you must cut your finger off and present it to the head of the gang as a “Please forgive me.” gesture.

Thanks for the info, I never knew about Yakuza history before and now I even know their estimated current numbers. It would be interesting if a chef who mistakenly cut of his finger was mistaken for a Yakuza.

[…] Voir également l’excellent dossier de Kirai (un expatrié Espagnol) sur le sujet. Depuis la loi anti-gang des années 90, il y a comme une nostalgie du Yakusa (cf: Gokusen) car quand on y pense, le phénomène tire ses origines des Ronins et donc des Samurais. De ce fait, leur organisation certes souterraine n’a rien a envier à nos cercles franc maçonnique ou certains milieux que le protocol des sages de Sion rend frileux voire certains cercles bretons (TF1 et Breizh TV fuyez mon regard). […]

Comments are closed.