By Jesse
Enkamp
The
following article is composed from different quotes and teachings of the late
Shuri-te Karate expert Chibana Choshin (1885-1969), founder of
the Kobayashi-ryu (Kobayashi Shorin-ryu) style of Karate (one
of the most widely practised in Okinawa today).
The
article was put together by somebody unknown, and has
simply been passed down to several senior practitioners of
Shorin-ryu whom apparently often makes use of it in different
publications. I threw in a little editing myself too.
Butoku
(Martial Virtue)
The
great master Itosu Anko studied Karate
very hard. He was not only a great Karate expert, but a scholar and excellent
calligrapher. I first visited Anko Itosu in 1899 and asked him to teach me Uchinan-no-te [old name for
Karate].
Twice he refused me,
leaving me waiting at his entrance gate. Only upon asking him for the third
time did he finally accept me as a personal student.
He
taught Karate secretly at his home to a select group of about six or seven
followers. They trained in Bu (Karate as a
martial art), not as sport, as they do now. During that period of time I, too,
kept my training a secret, even from my family. In 1903, or 1904, Itosu sensei
began to publicly teach Karate in
the school setting. It was at this time that I told my parents that instead of
going to school I had been practicing the art of “te.”
In
1918 a group of Karate enthusiasts (Hanashiro Chomo, Kyan Chotoku, Miyagi
Chojun, Mabuni Kenwa, Go Kenki, Oshiro Chojo, Yabu Kentsu, Kyoda Juhatsu,
Yabiku Moden and myself) formed
a group
for Karate study since the two greatest teachers had died (Itosu Anko and
Higaonna Kanryo both died in 1915). It was called the Karate (written as Tode) Kenkyukai which was established in Shuri
City.
This
was the first time that practitioners of different methods (Shuri, Naha
and Tomari styles) met to train together and exchange information. Each time we
met one senior would lead the training and all would benefit from their
knowledge. This lasted until 1929 when, because of the popularity of this art,
we all became too busy with our own students to train collectively.
I
first began to teach Shuri-te Karate-jutsu in 1920 but by 1929, at the age of
44, I opened my first training hall (dojo) in Shuri City. In 1933 my good
friend and colleague, Magusuku (Miyagi) Chojun, and I registered the names of
our respective teachings with the Dai Nippon Butokukai (Greater Japan Martial
Virtue Association). I called my teachings Shorin-ryu meaning the “small forest
style.” My colleague, Chojun-sensei, called his style the Goju-ryu meaning “the half hard and half
soft style.”
We
were good friends and he died in 1953. He was a good colleague and a friend to
all Shorin practitioners. He is missed.
Both
Bucho (Bushi) Matsumura and Itosu Anko were poor. When I spoke of this to Itosu
he told me that this was not a universal
truth, that is that a martial person is poor. He stated that Okinawan bushi
(warriors) were poor because they did not know how to handle money, as was the
custom back then.
A
true Okinawan martial artist makes his living away from the martial arts. They should
not concern themselves with the making of money out of teaching the martial
arts. A martial person must make their living away from the martial arts so as
not to contaminate it through the influence of “making money” in order to “make
a living.”
This is the
Okinawan way.
Karate,
as it is transmitted, changes every few
years. This is a common phenomenon. It happens because a teacher must continue
to learn and adds his personality to the teachings. There is an old Okinawan
martial arts saying that states that Karate is much like a pond. In order for
the pond to live, it must have infusions. It must have streams that feed the
pond and replenish it. If this is not done then the pond becomes stagnant and
dies. If the martial arts teacher does not receive infusion of new ideas and/or
methods, then he, too, dies. He stagnates and, through boredom, dies of
unnatural causes.
I
remember learning the kata Tawada Patsai (Passai/Bassai) from Tawada-sensei. At
that time I was receiving instruction from Itosu and he, too, taught a version
of Patsai kata which he called the Matsumura Patsai, which I learned.
In
1913 or 1914, having practiced the Tawada-no-Patsai with all my heart, as was
the custom back then, I approached Itosu and advised him of this. He asked me
to demonstrate the kata for him. I did and Itosu then stated to me that was the
finest performance of this rarely seen form that he had ever witnessed.
He
then told me that this form must be preserved and passed on to future
generations and to add it to his (my) teachings. So
[in Kobayashi-ryu] the Matsumura Patsai is now called the
Patsai-no-sho and the Tawada Patsai is called Patsai-no-dai.
Many
of today’s practitioners are too timid
in their training. They train with only the thought of being able to finish and
not with the thought of progressing – pushing yourself to become better. You
must train hard if you want to progress otherwise you are just a mediocre practitioner, and there are many of them.
If you wish to
learn mediocre karate, go some place else and do not waste my time.
If
a teacher teaches with his
heart
he can only expect the student to train with their heart. It is only right – then both the
teacher and the student progress. The student motivates the teacher and the
teacher teaches the student the correct attitude and spirit of the Okinawan
martial arts. This is good training – the student and the teacher progressing
together!
When
you train you have to devote yourself only to the way of Karate – think of nothing
else. Do not think of others, or what they may think. You must develop the
ability to focus your mind, hands and feet strongly. You must not only learn body movements but also
research and study the art itself [Bun Bu
Ryo Do].
You
should develop and improve yourself before you reach the age of fifty. Your body
naturally begins to deteriorate after fifty
years old so you must then adjust your training accordingly. If after fifty you
still train every day then you may not decline so much. I noticed a slight
decline at age fifty, but I don’t think I declined much at all between fifty
and sixty years of age.
Of
course, you cannot help deteriorating to a degree but if you continue training
you will not age so rapidly, even between seventy and eighty years of age.
Therefore, train continuously.
In
the old days we trained at Karate as a martial art, but now they train at Karate as
a gymnastic sport [remember, this
was written a long time ago in Okinawa!] I think we must avoid treating
Karate as a sport – it must be a martial art at all times!
Your
fingers and the tips of your toes must be like arrows, your arms must be like iron. You have to think that if you kick,
you try to kick the enemy dead. If you punch, you must thrust to kill. If you
strike, then you strike to kill the enemy [Ikken Hissatsu].
This is the spirit
you need in order to progress in your training. The effort
required is great, and you can strain the body by doing too much. So keep in
mind your own physical condition and train accordingly.
Years
ago I decided that through my own hard training I wanted to leave my name
connected with Okinawan Karate-do. I trained hard and taught to the best of my
ability and talent. Now I think that my name will remain a little in the
history of Okinawan Karate-do.
Not
only do we need physical training, we need to think for ourselves, studying and
researching the kata and their applications.
It
is vitally important to understand kata and train your body to develop the core
of Karate. You can achieve a five
or six times
increase in your body power if you train hard. Naturally, if you do this you
will be pleased with the result, so train very hard.
Whether
you become great depends on only
two factors
– effort and study. Your movements must be sharp – never be slow – and when you
train at kata your eyes will get sharper and your blocking and striking will
get stronger. Even when you reach the age of seventy or eighty you must
continue your research with a positive attitude, always thinking “not yet, not yet…”
Chibana
Choshin passed away in 1969, from throat cancer, at the age of 83.
He never stopped training.
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