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A little about Shotokan Karate-Do
Today, Shotokan remains one of the oldest and most popular styles worldwide:
The earliest organisation propagating Shotokan was the Nihon Karate-do Kyokai, more widely known as the Japan Karate Association (JKA). This was the first formal Shotokan organisation, formed by the Shotokan karate clubs of Japanese universities of the time, members mainly coming from Takushoku university, but also from Hosei, Waseda, Gakushuin and Keio universities. The JKA was headed by Masatoshi Nakayama, with Gichin Funakoshi holding the position equivalent to Professor Emeritus. JKA grew to be one of the biggest karate organisations in the world. Differences between senior instructors and administrators gave rise to a number of breakaway groups, eventually resulting in the JKA itself splitting into two distinct factions.
Aside from the JKA, Gichin Funakoshi is believed to have given direct permission to Tsutomu Ohshima, to start a karate organization in the United States of America. Shotokan Karate of America is a nonprofit organization that has been teaching traditional karate-do in the United States since 1955. SKA is still led by Tsutomu Ohshima to this day. Ohshima is also recognized as the chief instructor of many other SKA-affiliated national Shotokan organizations worldwide. SKA maintains its national headquarters in Los Angeles.
Hirokazu Kanazawa (1931-present), was the first to break away from the JKA to found his own organisation, called Shotokan Karate International. He studied under Masatoshi Nakayama (1913-1987), late headmaster of the JKA and Hidetaka Nishiyama (1928-present), both disciples of Gichin Funakoshi. Kanazawa's group introduced elements of Tai Chi Chuan, particularly in the matter of flow and balance, and actively promoted the evolution of shotokan while maintaining the traditional core of the art. Kanazawa is considered one of the most technically brilliant practitioners of shotokan, and was a top contender in competition. Most notably, he won the Kumite championship at the first JKA open tournament in 1957 with a broken hand. He was awarded 10th Dan in April 2000, and is the only karate practitioner to have held this grade while still alive.
Taiji Kase (1929-2004) also founded his own group, called the World Shotokan Karate Academy, since re-born as the Shotokan-Ryu-Kase-Ha Instructor Academy (SRKHIA). He studied martial arts under his father (a Judo instructor), as well as both Gichin Funakoshi and his son Yoshitaka Funakoshi. He left Japan in 1964 to teach karate internationally, but started teaching his own style of Shotokan to avoid the power struggles in the art. The SRKHIA is an organisation for 3rd Dans and above as individual members; it does not register national associations and as such its mission is for the technical development of its members to continue.
Keigo Abe (1938-present) born from a very old and highly respected samurai family, in the town of Iyoshi in Ehime prefecture on the island of Shikoku, Japan , he is seen by many traditional karate-ka as being one of the most senior and innovative Shotokan instructors in the world today. As a student at the Japan Karate Association honbu, Keigo Abe's tutelage came directly under Masatoshi Nakayama a situation which is reflected in his deference to Masatoshi Nakayama, as being his only headmaster. Keigo Abe was a former senior instructor at the JKA Honbu, having graduated from the world renowned instructors class and as a senior member of the JKA, held the office of Director of Quaifications in the original, pre-split Japan Karate Association. However after the split in 1990, he became the Technical Director of the JKA (Matsuno Section) a position which he held during some of the association's most turbulent years. In his youth with the JKA he was deemed a highly competent and aggressive tournament fighter, and took 3rd place in the very first JKA National Championships; was the captain of the Japanese team at the second World Championships in Paris, France; won 1st place at the JKA international Friendship Tournament in 1973, and took 1st place in the second and third JKF National Championships as a representative of Tokyo. Renowned for his strong traditional approach to Shotokan karate which is reflected in his instruction, he retired from the JKA in 1999 to form his own international organisation, the Japan Shotokan Karate Association (JSKA) based in Japan, which has a large following worldwide. It is represented by regional groups in each country. A highly respected karate-ka both in Japan and internationally, Abe is one of a few senior Shotokan instructors alive today, who truly teaches the concepts and methodology of his former teacher, Masatoshi Nakayama. He was also responsible for formulating the Shobu Ippon tournament rules, used by most Shotokan stylists in the world today.
Mikio Yahara, (1947- present) Chief Instructor of the Karatenomichi World Federation (KWF), graduated from Kokushikan University and became an Instructor of the Japan Karate Association during its zenith in the 1970s and 1980s. In over a decade of competition, Yahara distinguished himself as a predatory fighter, monopolizing the high ranks of domestic, international and world championships, but as Kata World Cup Champion, he is probably most famous for his performance of the Unsu and Enpi Katas. Yahara is regarded by some, along with Hirokazu Kanazawa and Tetsuhiko Asai as one of the most technically brilliant, naturally talented and controversial karateka that the Japan Karate Association ever produced. He is also notorious for exploits such as singlehandly beating off 34 local Yakuza in a parking lot, facing down a gangster with a gun, and turning up for a championship competition carrying a knife wound. When Tetsuhiko Asai, Yahara, Keigo Abe, Akihito Isaka and other leading JKA Karateka formed the Matsuno Section of the JKA, Yahara became Assistant Chief Instructor. In 2000, Yahara formed the Karatenomichi World Federation with Isaka and which is represented in over 40 countries. At 59, Yahara is still a dangerous fighter, fracturing three of his opponent's ribs during 8th dan promotion kumite in July 2006. KWF claims that no other senior karate instructor has ever submitted himself or herself to real kumite, in front of juniors and in front of the camera, for his 8th dan.
Tetsuhiko Asai (1935-2006) born in Ehime, Japan in 1935, as a young boy he often practiced Sumo, Judo, Kendo, and the Spear from his father. He studied at the Takushoku University in Tokyo where he studied Shotokan karate. He joined the instructors programme and became an instructor with the JKA. In later years he instructed in China, Hong Kong, America, Europe and Hawaii where he led the Hawaiian Karate Association. Mr Asai was made Chief Instructor of the JKA after Masatoshi Nakayama's death in 1987, however, he along with a number of senior JKA instructors, opposed the appointment of Nakahara as Chairman and they formed a separate JKA (Matsuno Section). Following a lengthy legal battle, the Nakahara group won the rights to the JKA title and Asai's own group adopted the name of the Japan Karate Shotorenmei (JKS) which has a large following both internationally and in Japan itself.
Keinosuke Enoeda was the JKA representative in the United Kingdom for many years, with his organisation, the KUGB acting as the largest British arm of the JKA. The Karate Union of Scotland both North and South represented the JKA in Scotland, and also came under the direct leadership of Mr Enoeda's KUGB. Since his death in 2003, the KUGB has continued as an independent organisation under the leadership of Andy Sherry. The KUS has splintered into many subgroups, with the JKA being represented in Scotland by two groups; the JKA (Scotland) and the JKA World Federation (Scotland). The JKA continues to be represented in England by JKA England headed by Yoshinobu Ohta.
Hidetaka Nishiyama, Chairman of the International Traditional Karate Federation (ITKF) and President of the American Amateur Karate Federation (AAKF), was born in Tokyo in 1928 and began his karate training in 1943 under Gichin Funakoshi at the Shotokan. Two years later, while enrolled at Takushoku University, he became a member of the university's karate team, for which in 1949 he was named captain. He was a co-founder of the All Japan Collegiate Karate Federation and was elected its first chairman. In 1951 he became a founding member of the Japan Karate Association (JKA) and was elected to the JKA board of Directors. In 1952, he was selected as a member of the martial arts combat instruction staff for the Strategic Air Command (SAC) Combat Training Program. The other karate instructors for this program included Gichin Funakoshi, Masatoshi Nakayama, and Isao Obata. He is one of the most senior Shotokan karateka in the world today and lists amongst his former students Hiroshi Shirai and Takeshi Oishi. Mr Nishiyama continues to instruct at the Central Dojo in Los Angeles and conducts a busy schedule conducting seminars and courses around the U.S. and abroad. He also is producing new texts and manuals as well as instructional video tapes concerning traditional karate. Many changes have taken place throughout the years and we at the Maidstone Shotokan Karate Clubs maintain the traditions and principles that were originally laid down by Masters such as Funakoshi Sensei. For me, true Karate is fading fast. It has become more fight orientated and the true principles of the art very rarely implemented. It is all about the next fight, the next trophy and title and yet this is as far from the true art as one can get. Many have become blinded by the new modern rules and regulations. As the true Masters of old fade away, it is us that should carry on their teachings. We should not be waiting for the opportunity to add what we want, change the rules and decide that we no longer need the teachings of our predecessors. The amount of times I have come across students and instructors that say that this is the bunklai for this kata, and that one must learn a combo with perfection to be able to defend themselves but what absolute rubbish. There is absolutely no such thing as a single bunkai for a kata and combos are only good for one thing, to learn how to apply different techniques quickly one after the other and that’s all because an effective combinations can only be applied if one applies a combination that is sufficient in regards to that which our opponent is attacking us with. The odds of someone attacking us in the way that would require on of the combinations practice within the Karate class is virtually nil. True Karate-Do is nothing more than an opportunity to refine ones mind, body and spirit for the long journey along the path of Do and nothing else. For me, a punch is a punch and a kick is a kick. It is not a case of how good I look, but how effective it is. There is no defining line between true Shotokan Karate-Do and that of real life. They are the same, they are both yin and yang. One cannot exist without the other. Anyone who trains to make a name for themselves, to learn how to fight or to just look good is not a true KarateKa. True Karate comes from the three locations. The mind, the heart and the body. Without all three, it is not true Karate-Do.
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