Aida Yūji (会田 雄次, 5 March 1916 – 17 September 1997) was a Japanese historian specialising in the Renaissance. He was active as a conservative thinker, commentator and major exponent of the Nihonjinron. He was born in Kyōto on 5 March 1916. He graduated from Kyoto University in 1940 and had his master's degree in history interrupted in 1943, when he was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army. He fought on the Burmese front against the British as an infantryman. He surrendered to the British Army at the war's end and was detained at Ahlone Camp in the British-controlled Burma. His experiences, especially mental torture in the hands of his captors through their cruel nonchalance towards the Japanese PoWs, are vividly described in his best-selling memoir, Aaron Shūyōjo (1962) On his repatriation in 1947, he began to teach at Kobe University. He was appointed full professor at Kyoto University's Humanities Department in 1952. He retired from the University in 1979, when he became an emeritus professor. He died of pneumonia on 17 September 1997.
Archangels In Black
The sun is dying day by day
After the rain, before the pain
Dead legions storming on the way
To the war, Roar to better slay
I can barely see the end
May the angels look for me
The Armageddon legacy
And if I see the stars above
Then I will cross my arms in peace
Be with me, at my side
Don't leave me take me away
Masses are coming from the north
The undead smiles behave with pride
Now hords of doom announce the end
I'll meet you some day farwell
I can barely see the end
May the angels look for me
The Armageddon legacy
And if I see the stars above
Then I will cross my arms in peace
Be with me, at my side
Don't leave me take me away
And if the sun cries forever
Then I will mourn those glorious days
Be with me, at my side