Skip to main content

4

Three figures born on this date carved their notoriety across very different arenas. Ryōichi Sasakawa rose through Japanese ultranationalist politics in the 1930s, was imprisoned as a Class A war crimes suspect, and later reinvented himself as a philanthropist of considerable influence. Hosni Mubarak commanded Egypt for nearly three decades, presiding over a security state whose systematic use of detention and torture was well documented before his fall during the 2011 Arab Spring. The Italian organized crime figure Renato Vallanzasca operated in Milan's criminal underworld in the 1970s, amassing a record of kidnappings, robberies, and killings that made him one of postwar Italy's most wanted men. Power exercised through violence, institutional or otherwise, connects all three.

May 4, 1950 - Renato Vallanzasca

Vallanzasca built his reputation through a sustained campaign of robbery, kidnapping, and murder that made him one of the most prominent figures in Milan's criminal underworld across the 1970s. The scale of his convictions — four consecutive life sentences plus nearly three centuries in additional prison time — reflects the breadth of harm attributed to him. What complicates his legacy is the public fascination that followed: in Milan, he became something of a folk antihero, a reminder of how notoriety can accrue its own cultural weight independent of the violence that created it.

Read more …May 4, 1950 - Renato Vallanzasca

  • Hits: 33

May 4, 1899 - Ryōichi Sasakawa

Few figures of the twentieth century managed so complete a reinvention: from financing paramilitary operations in wartime Japan to receiving international honors for philanthropy, Sasakawa's trajectory traced one of the era's more unsettling arcs. His postwar rehabilitation — built on gambling revenues and anti-communist networks — allowed him to move through respectable circles worldwide while his wartime record remained a source of serious historical dispute. The tension between his charitable legacy and his earlier activities makes him a singular case in the study of how power, money, and memory interact.

Read more …May 4, 1899 - Ryōichi Sasakawa

  • Hits: 32

May 4, 1928 - Hosni Mubarak

Egypt's longest-serving modern leader held power for three decades through a combination of emergency law, rigged referendums, and the systematic suppression of political opposition — conditions that ultimately produced the 2011 uprising that ended his rule. His government was documented by human rights organizations for widespread torture, arbitrary detention, and the crushing of dissent, even as he presented Egypt to the West as a pillar of regional stability.

Read more …May 4, 1928 - Hosni Mubarak

  • Hits: 37