Shimabuku Tatsuo Sensei(1908-1975)Tatsuo Shimabuku, the founder of Isshinryu karate, was born in the village of Chan (nowadays: Kinaka, a part of Gushikawa city) on Okinawa, Japan at the 19th of September 1908. His parents were farmers and Tatsuo helped them since his youth at the farm. At his birth he first received a girls name. This was a Okinawan custom, adopted by the Chinese, to fool evils spirits who would be looking for a girl instead of a boy.After the evil spirits were fooled, the baby received the Okinawan name Kana and the Japanese name Shinkichi. The Japanese name Shinkichi can be found in Shimabuku's koseki
At the age of
twenty-three he married his wife Uto. From this marriage four children were
born, in the following sequence: two daughters, Matsuko and Yukiko and two
sons: Kichiro and Shinsho. Shimabuku named his two sons after himself: Kichiro
and Shinsho; his name Shinkichi split in two parts.
Only about his
Thirty-ninth age he took the name Tatsuo (around the time he starts giving
karate lessons). Tatsuo means in English 'dragon man'. The dragon is on Okinawa
a symbol of happiness and prosperity. His second daughter Yukiko married Angi
Uezu, who shall be important too for Isshinryu later. His first born son
Kichiro is nowadays the official heir of Tatsuo, but many people, including
Arcenio J. Advincula, regard his second born son Shinsho as a better heir and
only acknowleged tenth dan Isshinryu karate.
At his
thirteenth year Kana received his first karate training with his uncle Ganeku,
who also lived in the village of Chan. Ganeku mainly learned him Chinese
philosophy and literature, like the 'I'Ching' and astrology, and a little
karate. According to Shinsho Shimabuku (Tatsuo's second born son) Ganeku stayed
two years in Fuzhou, China, where he learned fortune telling (sumuchi) and
Shorinji kempo.
Because
Shimabuku's uncle had to little knowledge of karate, he later introduced him to
Chotoku Kyan, who lived in Kadena. This became his first teacher of three very
famous karate teachers he trained with: Chotoku Kyan, Chojun Miyagi and Choki
Motobu.Chotoku Kyan (1870-1945) was a student of master Yasutsune 'Ankoh'
Itosu, who taught him Shuri-te, and of master Kosaku Matsumora, who taught
Tomari-te. These two styles were combined to Shorin-ryu (named after the
Shaolin temple tradition).
Chotoku Kyan is
one of the most famous Shorin-ryu teachers. Kyan was a perfectionist and
Shimabuku became one of his best students. Around 1931/32, Shimabuku was about
23 or 24 years old, he walked barefoot to Kadena where Kyan lived. He trained
six hours a day and after arrival home he helped his parents on the farm.Kyan
was a traditional teacher and taught as first kata Seisan and not the beginner
kata which his teacher Itosu since 1904 had introduced on the Okinawa schools.
Karate is a martial art and not meant for children. Shimabuku trained for four
years with Chotoku Kyan and learned from him the following kata: Seisan,
Naihanchi, Wansu, Chinto, Kusanku, a sai kata: Kyan no Sai and the bo kata
Tokumine no Kun.
Chojun Miyagi
(1888-1953) was the top student of Naha-te grandmaster Kanryo Higaonna.
Higaonna formed Naha-te by combining Okinawa karate with Chinese kempo (Chu’an
Fa / Kung Fu). Miyagi, like his teacher, went to China to study kempo. Back on
Okinawa he formed his own style of karate, which he later called Goju-ryu (hard
/ soft style). Goju Ryu is taken out of a line of the book Bubishi (eight
precepts of Chu'an Fa).Since 1936 Shimabuku received lessons from Miyagi.
Miyagi lived in Naha, which was much further than Kadena.
Also this much
longer distance Shimabuku walked. With Miyagi he trained for three years.
Miyagi was known for his powerful grips and power training. From him learned
the kata Seiunchin and Sanchin.
The next teacher
became Choki Motobu (1871-1944). Motobu was a less formal teacher then his
former teachers. This famous Shorin-ryu teacher was also known as someone who
practiced his techniques in street fights. Motobu became famous in the twenties
in Japan, as he picked op a bout with a price boxer who challenged the public
to fight with him. Motobu, already in his fifties, took the challenge and
eleminated the boxer with a knock-out. About this happening the Japanese news
papers wrote articles and Motobu became instantly (with one strike!) a famous
karateka in Japan.
Tatsuo trained
in 1938 for about a year with Choki Motobu, who lived in Naha, just like
Miyagi. Motobu stressed the importance of Makiwara ( = punching board ) -
training. Shimabuku's most important lessons were the practical applications
from karate (street fighting techniques) and Motobu's version of Naihanchi
kata.In 1939 Shimabuku traveled to the Philippines, he stayed there for two
years.
According to
Shinsho Shimabuku (Tatsuo's second born son) his father gave on the Philippines
karate lessons to a theater group. Prior before Japan gets involved in world
war 2, in 1941, he went to Osaka where he worked as a general supervisor until
1944. At that time Shimabuku went back to Okinawa to get his family and take
them to Kyushu, Japan, to protect them against the war. Since than he earned
his living as a farmer.One year after the 'Battle for Okinawa' (1945), he
brings his family back to Okinawa.
From age 39
Tatsuo starts giving karate lessons. According to Shinsho in the following
dojo: Konbu Dojo in Tengan (1946), Tairagawa Dojo (1947) and Chan Dojo (1948).
At that time he called his style Chan Migwa karate, after Chotoku Kyan's nickname
(Chan Migwa = small-eyed Kyan in Okinawa hogen; Kyan wore glasses).
After 1951 he
called his karate style Sun nu su karate after the nickname he received from
the mayor of Chan. In Tatsuo's family there was a dance called Sun nu su, which
means 'son of old man'. Later Shimabuku shortened Sun nu su to Sunsu, also the
name of the kata he created: Sunsu kata.At a special gathering with his
students held at January 15, 1956 he declared that his style of karate should
be called: Isshinryu karate.
Isshinryu means:
one-heart or one-mind method. Eiko Kaneshi, Tatsuo's right hand man said:
"Why Isshinryu, why such a funny name?", and Shimabuku replied:
"Because all things begin with one".Isshinryu stems from three
different martial arts. One of the interpretations of the three stars in the
Isshinryu emblem, the Megami / Mizu Gami (which has been designed with Tatsuo
Shimabuku's approval in 1961 by Arcenio J. Advincula), is that they stand for
Shorin-ryu, Goju-ryu and Kobudo. Tatsuo Shimabuku once said that Shorin-ryu's
naihanchi the mother, Goju-ryu's sanchin the father and the result Isshinryu
was. Shimabuku analyzed and perfectioned all kata, techniques and applications
he learned from his diverse teachers. He took what he regarded the best and
most effective out of Shorin-ryu, Goju-ryu and Kobudo and together formed that
into a new system.
Shimabuku had
developed a karate system with fast, direct and powerful punches and kicks,
without every superfluous movement. He replaced the traditional twisted punch
with the trademark of Isshinryu karate: the vertical punch. A punch with a
vertical fist is faster and has more impact. In a real fight the - in many
other styles learned - horizontal fist is most of the times replaced with the
more effective and faster vertical fist (as you also can see in a boxing
match).
Tatsuo
instructed the people of Okinawa and also many American soldiers, who were
stationed on Okinawa after the war. In 1956 he starts to use the Agena dojo,
giving him the opportunity to be nearer to the American bases. From the
American marines he got a contract for $250 a month (which was much money that
time) to train the Americans. Because of that Shimabuku became one of the first
professional karate teachers.
Tatsuo Shimabuku
learned in the years 1951 to 1961 Kobudo (old wapen arts) from Shinken Taira
(1898-1970) to deepen his knowledge in this fighting art. He already learned
diverse kobudo-kata from his first important teacher Chotoku Kyan (Kyan no Sai
en Tokumine no Kun). From Taira's kobudo he added the following kata to
Isshinryu: Chatan Yara no Sai, Urashi Kun, Shishi no Kun and a tuifa (tonfa)
kata Hamahiga no Tuifa. Beside these wapen kata Isshinryu karate has Kusanku
Sai kata, which was developed by Shimabuku himself.
Many American
marines, who had trained with Shimabuku, brought Isshinryu karate over the
ocean and were important for Isshinryu karate's growth and popularity
worldwide. In 1960 the first international Isshinryu association was founded;
first called Okinawan American Isshinryu Association (OAKA) and later changed
to American Okinawan Karate Association (AOKA). The founders of the AOKA were:
Tatsuo Shimabuku, Harold Mitchum, Kinjo Chinsaku, Ralph Bove, William Blond and
Steve Armstrong. Later also Don Nagle and Harold Long shared the AOKA.It's a
pity that in the following years many international organizations were founded.
This happened because of disagreement or contradictionary interests.
Some of these
organizations are: IWKA, OIKKA, IIKA, UIKA en UIC. Anyway: their shared interest
is promoting Isshinryu karate! The official Dutch organization is the NIKA,
which was founded in 1986 by Steve Armstrong and Fred van de Vijver.Tatsuo
Shimabuku twice visited the U.S.A.: 1964 and 1966.
In 1966 a film
was made of Shimabuku's executions of the Isshinryu kata. At this visit he
promoted Steve Armstrong, Don Nagle and Harold Long to 8th dan. Harold Mitchum
already was promoted to 8th dan before.In 1971 Shimabuku stopped teaching
karate and kobudo, but still promoted students and did some dojo functions.On
the 30th of May 1975 Tatsuo Shimabuku died of stroke. Let us remember him and
honour him with good Isshinryu karate!
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