What
RU Learning?
Many styles
of Karate today call themselves "Okinawan" when, in
fact, they are actually Japanese. While historical lineage and genealogical
pedigree make
little difference when it comes to combative functionality, resolving
such historical issues does help put things in proper perspective.
What
is Okinawan Karate?
Knowing the answer to this question may be best
understood by first identifying what Japanese
Karate is. When a handful of Uchinanchu [see
endnote] first introduced the
empty-hand Okinawan fighting art [then referred to as Karate-jutsu
唐手術]
to the mainland of Japan it was, at best, rudimentary and individualistic.
Moreover, it had no established
training uniform nor common standard through which to learn, practice,
and teach, or evaluate the varying competencies of learners. It took the best part of a decade for
Japanese Budo authorities [see
endnote] to identify and set
forth the criteria necessary to transform the rudimentary and individualistic
practices
into an accepted Japanese-like discipline. Borrowing liberally from
both Judo [柔道]
and Kendo [剣道],
standards authorized by the
pre-war Dai Nippon Butokukai [大日本武德會]
included
the dogi
[道着],
the obi [帯],
the
Dan/Kyu [段/級]
system,
and
the ippon shobu [一本勝負]
method of sport fighting used in Kendo and Judo. More than mere cosmetic alterations the
entire fabric of its practice underwent a cultural metamorphosis
thereby eliminating what if any remaining threads of Ryukyu heritage.
Conforming to Japan's inflexible shikata-based
[仕方]
cultural
ideology not only eliminated its original Okinawan identity it also
produced yet another homogeneous microcosm epitomizing every aspect of
accepted social etiquette
and decorum. Formalities from bowing and
blindly revering ones
Sensei [先生]
as
all-knowing, to
all other accepted ways of doing things, both in
and out of the dojo [道場],
became the benchmark of the new tradition. Lingering
anti-Chinese sentiment amidst an unrelenting backdrop of military
escalation, reformation and modernization, provided reason enough to
find a new name with which to describe the now Japanized combative-like
discipline.
In December of 1933
the Dai Nippon Butokukai ratified Japanese Karatedo [日本空手道
--- The Japanese Way of the Empty Hand] as
a new martial art, arguably with the same status as Judo and Kendo.
However, unlike
the hands-on combative premise common in Judo & Kendo, the
potential risk of serious injury from the sheer force of blows
delivered in Karate reduced its application-based practices to theory
as full contact fighting without protective equipment was deemed far too dangerous. To resolve
this issue enthusiasts drew upon the combative theory of
Ikken
Hisatsu [一拳必殺],
to
kill with a single blow.
Architects like Konishi Yasuhiro 小西康裕,
and Ohtsuka Hironori
大塚博紀
[and
later Funakoshi Yoshitaka 船越義豪,
and
Nakayama Masatoshi
中山正敏] of modern Karate reasoned that if a strike was delivered perfectly to an
anatomically vulnerable structure, but without making
actual contact, it could be recognized the same as scoring an ippon in Judo or
Kendo. From
this [untenable] theory followed the development of incongruous
"self-defense" drills, [called ippon kumite 一本組手]
against a multitude of implausible attack scenarios [i.e.
reverse-punches, etc.] which, to this day, identifies the practice as a discipline uniquely
Japanese.
If you're
learning, practicing and or teaching what has just been described,
irrespective of the many names under which it is presented, you're part of a
Japanese Karatedo [日本空手道]
tradition ---even if it's
based in Okinawa [沖縄].
This is to publicly acknowledge the
rarely addressed issue of Japanese Karate reverse influencing the
growth and direction of local Okinawan Karate practices in post-war
Japan. Excerpted from "Legend
of the Fist," by Patrick McCarthy
Karatedo
is a modern and rule-bound
Japanese interpretation of much older and foreign fighting practices. More
precisely, it's actually based upon two remnants of five older fighting
arts practiced during Okinawa's Old Ryukyu Kingdom
Period. A wonderful
cultural recreation and a challenging sport, often referred to as
3K-Karate, after its three principal training features---Kihon,
Kata, Kumite, this new and rule-bound tradition was developed by the Japanese about seventy-five years ago.
[See endnote]
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