Written by Motobu Naoki, translated by Andreas Quast
Recently I wrote a number of articles about Tomari-te
and when I uploaded the articles the number of website accesses increased
noticeably. The number of accesses increased both in Japan and abroad.
Apparently, when compared to Shuri-te and Naha-te, the
image of Tomari-te is still not well known, and seems to stimulate the interest
of people who are interested in the history of karate.
Personally I think that the influence of “modernization”
which Shuri-te and Naha-te have followed was small in Tomari-te, and
correspondingly it still maintains traces of old-style karate.
Well, in the book „Short Biography of Matsumora Kōsaku,
the Ancestor who Rejuvenated Karate (Tomari-te)“ by Matsumora Kōsaku Sensei’s
grandson Matsumura Kōshō, which I introduced in a previous
article, there is a passage entitled „The Differences Between
the Postures of the Fists in Tomari-te and Shuri-te“. Because it is a short
passage I allow myself the privilege of quoting it fully below (from page 45).
•The
Position of the Fist
In Tomari-te the [hiki-te-] fist is
raised to the bottom of the breast. In Shuri-te the fist is positioned at the
height of the belt.
•Tsuki
and Uke
When compared to Shuri-te and
Naha-te, in Tomari-te the Tsuki and Uke are raised somewhat higher.
•The
Posture of the Shoulders
While the definition of ‘like water
running down from the shoulder to the tip of the hand’ is the same, in
Tomari-te it is raised somewhat higher than in Shuri-te and
Naha-te.
The other day I was asked about this passage by German
Karate researcher Andreas
Quast Sensei, who kindly translated some articles for
this blog.
Although I generally agree with the characteristics of Tomari-te
as listed above, they are not limited to Tomari-te. I think they rather have
been general features of old-style Karate.
Since Mr. Matsumura Kōshō wrote the text in 1970, the
term “Shuri-te” in the above given comparison seems to refer to the modern
Shuri-te of Itosu Ankō Sensei and later times.
In short, there was a significant difference between the
Shuri-te of Matsumura Sōkon Sensei and the Shuri-te of Itosu Ankō Sensei, as I
wrote about in the previous article “The
Transition of Naihanchi
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