I would like to
share some of Roland Habsetze’s “Bubishi – the Source of Karate-Do” His introduction sheds light on some issue.
The Bible Of Arts Of The “Empty Hand”
The Ryukyu Kempo Karate Jutsu or Okinawa-Te is
the ancestor of the actual Japanese styles of Karate, the transfer took place
in the years of the 1930’s (1). The technique of combat of the naked hand was
born in the course of the preceding centuries from a mix of Chinese To-de (the “technique of control”, or the “Tang
Hand”, together with techniques that they created today in the Occident with
the generic term most known as Kung Fu), some principles of Chi Kung
(or Qi Gong, controlling ‘the vital energy’), equally coming from the
Middle Kingdom, and from local knowledge. The island of Okinawa, some 600 km to
the south of the Japan, was the link between China and Japan but was equally an
astonishing crucible in itself, where
there came to be the merger of several currents of martial arts and from which
emerged several bodies of technique (Shuri-Te, Naha-Te, Tomari-Te)
completely original of course on several points.
The reality and the circumstances of
this already ancient relationship between China-Okinawa-Japan, are known and
have been studied for a long time by martial arts historians. In their quest for
the roots of the Naked Hand fighting
arts (or ‘Empty’, with this supplementary philosophical connotation given to it
by, certain experts from Okinawa in the 1930’s, such as Ginchin Funakoshi, the
father of the Shotokan, in developing [in
passing along or teaching with <trans.>] the greatest impact of their technique to Japan) the
researchers have very rapidly overtaken the context of Japan, and at the same
time of Okinawa, to go until in Southern China , very exactly in the province
of Foujian (Foukien, in Japanese) where, it seems, all it really
began a longtime ago. At last,
the source… the one that has engender all these currents, often opposite, that
clutter today the Way of the pure Martial Arts, and [happen]
sometimes to doubt the sincere practice when they open the eyes on that which
became his ‘art’ recovered by all these media demonstrations and commercials
that jumble the tracks and make him lose the authentic direction and good found
from his method. The source, to-beyond
of all this pollution… This isn’t true that when leaving (in the measure or, obviously the cycle of
the start of the water well before the source), but it is already a lot. It is effectively in the region of the Foujian,
probably around the city Fuzhou, that are collecting themselves the
first drops of water (filets d’eau) that end by feeding a strong current who
disrupts the knowledge in the domain of
martial arts of the period, less in this part of the world (one knows what
other sources exist again notably in Northern China, but also in other the
other regions of Asia and of the Near Orient). It is that which is born a day,
there of centuries, the stale of combat called White Crane (Bay He
Quan, or Hakutsuru-Ken in Japanese),
linked to the imitation of one (the Crane tr.)
that was done from the attitudes and movements the bird, that leave numerous
traces, same breaking, until, in the actual
Karate techniques (thus certain Kata such as Gangaku/Chinto, or certain
attitudes such as the position tsuru-ashi-dachi (crane stance)…) It is
this style, which is found in the center of the preoccupation of the Bubishi
collection, an illustrated text that was equally elaborated there, and that
was the object of this study.
The Bubishi is small book, of which the author is unknown, and of which the masters returned again and again to study for about 250 or 300 years. This manuscript, written in ancient Chinese language sometimes
(1)
For all the historic points evoked in this work, as
well as personality studies of the old Masters and the genealogies of the
experts from the various schools, refer to, to amplify -----these details, to
the title ‘Koshiki Kata’ by R. Habersetzer to the Amprhoa Editions.
very difficult to translate, and approval(agreement) of some
drawings of technique innocent, is in reality the the fruit of the experience
of several anonymous experts of the art of the Naked Hand. And, if perhaps one cannot be he THE only
source of ALL who made the technique of unarmed combat, the Bubishi
represents all the essential contribution to his knowledge. And then, one knows
not the actual hour other also ancient, with this inestimable value as possessed
all (unknown?) , same if this last has ended
up to become in part illegible. Some part, this same text, part incomprehensible, is living … it is a
messenger. “Bu Bi Shi” (or She) is the Chinese title, preserved
in Okinawa, in reality a title-program that reads in Japanese: Goshin
(idea of protecting oneself), Sonaeru (idea of preparing oneself), Hakitome
Teoku (notices). It is composed of
three parts: the history of the White Crane style, pressed (based) on 48 pictures of techniques to practice
in close combat, rather crude drawings, followed with notices on the correct
use of the hands in relation with the vital points, finally (finishing) some counsels to apply some cares in
cases injury. It seems that these pages, which all the historians of the martial
arts today consider as very precious, had found the way to Okinawa by the
intermediary of Higaonna Kanruo (1853—1916), again that this last wasn’t
very probably the only Okinawan has to have had access to the document. By the continuation (sucession)
, in any case, two currents take root in this common trunk: the direction of
Goju-ryu karate, as parted (idiomatic for taught) by Miyagi Chojun (1888-1953) and the
direction Shito-ryu Karate, as parted (idiomatic
for taught) by Mabuni Kenwa
(1889-1952). These two masters have preserved then transmitted of the different
copies of the Chinese Bubishi, the first having since a long time was the basis
of a work by Ohtsuka Tadahiko Sensei (2), the second, more recently, of
Patrick Mccarthy (3).
The present work has for its base the document that was
confided to me by Ohtsuka Sensei finally (after) publication alongside
of one public non-Japanese (4). It was applied equally on some long
conversations that I had with him at the
time of his last trip to the “Centre of Research Budo”, at Strasburg, in the autumn of
1993, the occassion of which one he taubht notably this Happoren-no
kata of which was mentioned in the Bubishi. I think to have done my best. Notably while not risking myself in
a integral translation of the original text (too many errors of interpretation are possible because of the
former vocabulary utilized and gaps in the appeared transcription to the class
of successive copies and resulting in veritable incomprehension(s) that could
prove to be dangerous) and in not weighing down the document with complimentary
chapters but not from the original. This is why I have preferred not presenter
only the 48 figure (in while risking some personal interpretations), the Kata Hakufa
of the White Crane, at last (finally) the
Kata Happoren.
The Bubishi, it is the genesis of a line of martial arts. Its first stammering. Nothing there is again distorted. It is also a bible, without that all will be there, but it found there the debut (beginning) of all. All is there already, with this freshness and this proper innocence at daybreak. Before the appearance of the agitation of crowds, noise, exaggeration of the false prophets, of all this pollution that erases the varied colors and drowns up to the outlines.
The Bubishi, is well “the infancy of the art”(5), this delicate moment where all appears again possible. Before that interference of all these “things of life”.
(2) “Okinawa-den
Bubishi”, publication of Gojukensha of Tokyo, Ohtsuka Tadhiko, 1975-1978.
(3) “The
Bubishi: an analytical journey”, Patrick McCarthy, International Ryu8kyu Karate
Research Society, Tokyo 1994.
(4) I
have had for 20 years, access to another
exemplary (copy) of the Bubishi preserved by
Ogura Tsuneyoshi Sensei to the Gembukan Kofu. The American George Alexander has
published his proper study based on this copy
(5) Expression
utilized par Serge Mairet to present, in the revue “Arts in Combats” (numbers
12 and 13) autumn 1994) the two articles of R. Habersetzer on the “Bubishi”.
No comments:
Post a Comment