Going straight: the yakuza gangster who swapped the underworld for udon
As crime syndicates lose their attraction, membership is falling and some are making a new life on the right side of the law
by Justin McCurry in Kitakyushu
Dec 17, 2018
4 minutes
Takashi Nakamoto yells a friendly greeting from the kitchen when he spots a customer slide open the door to his restaurant, his face just visible through the steam rising from pots of stock and boiling water.
As he slices leeks and shakes the residual water from another batch of al dente udon noodles, it is easy to miss the most conspicuous physical reminder of Nakamoto’s life before he opened his restaurant, Daruma-ya, in the gritty southwestern city of Kitakyushu in June last year.
His missing pinkie is the legacy of three decades entrenched in Japan’s underworld, during which he rose from foot soldier to a senior position in the Kudo-kai, one of
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