Tani Yutaka was born in
Minami-ku,
Fukuoka, and moved to Malaya with his family. After he took his education in Japan, his family returned to Malaya, where he lived at
Kuala Terengganu where they worked at a shop. There, he converted to Islam after being influenced by the local Malay culture of his friends, and adopted the name Mohd Ali bin Abdullah. He also secretly married a Malay woman, but they later divorced. In 1931, when he was 20 years old, he returned to Japan for a military inspection. Although he worked for a shoe company, he missed his home and returned to Malaya. On 6 November 1933, a Chinese man killed and beheaded Tani's two sisters over the
Mukden Incident. Seeking revenge against the man and his gang, he became a bandit known as Harimau (
Malay word for "Tiger"). Tani attacked some Chinese gangs and British officers, and gave away what he looted from richer officials to the poor, which made him into a local hero. He was then arrested at
Hat Yai and imprisoned for two months. Before
World War II, he became a
secret agent for the
Imperial Japanese Army, sabotaging the British war effort. ==Death and legacy==