礼儀正しさと信念
投稿者: saihikarunogo 投稿日時: 2004/04/27 11:50 投稿番号: [139905 / 280993]
TIMEの記事によると、
今井紀明さんは、礼儀正しい青年らしいですよ。
http://www.time.com/time/asia/magazine/article/0,13673,501040419-610099,00.html
Should Asia Quit Iraq?
The hostage crisis forced Asians to ask whether their involvement is worth the risk
BY HANNAH BEECH
On a blustery February day in the northern Japanese town of Asahikawa, members of the local elite crowded into the warm confines of the Ginneko barbecue shack to discuss the crisis in Iraq. The topic: whether Japan's deployment of troops there was a good idea?an emotive issue, given that many of the departing soldiers were based in Asahikawa. Squeezed in with the mayor and a gaggle of local reporters was a bright-eyed youngster named Noriaki Imai. The 18-year-old had just graduated from high school in a nearby town a few days earlier, and he was washing down his grilled chicken skewers with iced oolong tea instead of the local ale. Although polite to his elders, Imai wasn't afraid to speak up, arguing his antiwar stance with the conviction of a veteran activist. Interviewed by TIME that day, Imai spoke of his dreams: studying in England, and becoming a journalist in order to give voice to the weak. Then, as the beer flowed more freely and the opinions grew rowdier, Imai said he had to get home, and disappeared into the sub-zero night.
今井紀明さんは、礼儀正しい青年らしいですよ。
http://www.time.com/time/asia/magazine/article/0,13673,501040419-610099,00.html
Should Asia Quit Iraq?
The hostage crisis forced Asians to ask whether their involvement is worth the risk
BY HANNAH BEECH
On a blustery February day in the northern Japanese town of Asahikawa, members of the local elite crowded into the warm confines of the Ginneko barbecue shack to discuss the crisis in Iraq. The topic: whether Japan's deployment of troops there was a good idea?an emotive issue, given that many of the departing soldiers were based in Asahikawa. Squeezed in with the mayor and a gaggle of local reporters was a bright-eyed youngster named Noriaki Imai. The 18-year-old had just graduated from high school in a nearby town a few days earlier, and he was washing down his grilled chicken skewers with iced oolong tea instead of the local ale. Although polite to his elders, Imai wasn't afraid to speak up, arguing his antiwar stance with the conviction of a veteran activist. Interviewed by TIME that day, Imai spoke of his dreams: studying in England, and becoming a journalist in order to give voice to the weak. Then, as the beer flowed more freely and the opinions grew rowdier, Imai said he had to get home, and disappeared into the sub-zero night.
これは メッセージ 139842 (t133h177 さん)への返信です.
固定リンク:https://yarchive.emmanuelc.dix.asia/552019567/a5a4a5ia5afa4gffckdcbfm94bab_1/139905.html