Sunday, June 30, 2024

You never know where you martial journey is going to take you.

Back around 1988 I entered the internet world with my pc and AOL.



One of the individuals I met was Charles Joe Swift and shortly he and I became friends. Eventually learning I had studied French in high school and at Temple University (then a requirement) he eventually asked me if I might translate a French edition of books by Kenwa Mabuhi. At that time they were only in Japanese (and not regularly available there as they were written in the early 1930's). But he found french editions published by his son in France and wondered if I might translate them.

Now I was not a French major, but I had spent one summer in Reims, France as the Universitie de Reims with the Foreign Language League.

It had been over 30 years since I had studied French. I while really got to know the champagnes of Reims I really was only an average student. But I was curious and I told Joe I would try. I  found my old dictionaries and then got to work.  

I even sought advice from a Tuttle Martial Arts editor, George Donahue,  who worked worked on Patrick McCarthy's books, to seek advice how to best translate books.

After much work and even more swearing  I completed Joe's request. The first book was about  Sanchin and Seiunchin katas. The second book was about Seipai kata. The french editions did not contain the complete texts. That was ok for my own interests. 

Following Ginchin Funakoshi's lead, Kenwa Mabuni wrote about the Shitoryu kata, in contrast to the kata Funakoshi wrote about. It became obvious he was writing for the Japanese martial establishment about his Shito Ryu, choosing his works to show the Goju side of Okinawan karate.

Mabuni


Now to shorten the story, he told Patrick McCarthy what I had done for him. Shortly there after Patrick (who did not read French) asked me if I could translate a message from Roland Habsetzer, who had also published his own book on the Bubishi (also in french).

Habsetzer -
 


I did so, In return Patrick asked if I might translate Roland Habsetzers book on the Bubishi. At that time I was much interested in the Bubishi and wall willing to try, just to see the book. Patrick sent is to me where by I photocopied the book and returned it to him.

Then for next year I spent my spare time on that translation effort, all in my spare time. Frequently yelling at my dictionary. Not about the Karate terms, but I discovered the french I had studied for 6 years was french for American students, where the books were written in french for native french speakers. They were vastly different and that  is what took the most work.

Eventually I completed my translation effort. The book was quite different from the Penland and Alexander Bubishi and from the McCarthy Bubishi.

I then sent my translation to Patrick. He thanked me and asked if I wanted to try another book, that being Kenki Tokitsu’s work “Historie Du Karate”.

 




I worked on that book. Again it became very clear that the French I had studied had nothing in common with the way French was used in book for the French.

The prime example was one passage where Tokitsu compared various karate systems to types of cheese.

If you have trouble understanding that, it would only make sense if you had actually been to France and understood the passion of the French for cheeses.

Eventually I sent my translation to Patrick. That was the conclusion of my career as a translator.

Then many years later a friend who was also in Patricks organization wrote to congratulate me. So I asked him why. He told me that Patrick had named me translator for the year in his organization. I did not know that as I was never a member of that organization.

It seems Patrick published my translation of Habazeter's Bubishi 49 Self defense drawings. My friend even sent me a copy of that issue.

Interestingly I was never told about either event. The publication of my translation efforts or that I was awarded that prize Translator of the Year."

None of which bothered me, as that was not why I did those translations. I really just wanted to read them for free.

Eventually I published some of my translation efforts on my blog.

I guess I am a very sharp cheese!


Kyozai kata use in Bushi No Te Isshinryu

Kyozai kata was created in the Okinawan school system for use in youth gym classes.


The form while created by a team of teachers who were also martial artists. It contains Shorin, Goju and Tomari techniques within the form.


It is not commonly seen in American videos. This is one of those available.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLWqv97nS4s





Basic Kata vs Advanced Kata


Thanks Gordon for your reasoned response. As an Okinawan Gojuryu practitioner, I don't practice the Taikyokyu series, although I do practice what is called Kyozai kata which is an introductory kata in our organization. Just a variation on the typical h-pattern kata. It's fun for the kids, quick to learn. Do I spend any time teaching applications with it? No. It's primary purpose is to teach movement in combination with techniques. In fact I don't teach it to the adults as it is only a kata I began to teach after seeing it done in Okinawa at Hokama Sensei's dojo. We concentrate on the 12 Gojuryu kata. Miyagi was known to have taught Saifa as the first kata to children before introducing Gekisai kata after WW2.

You stated that Taikyoku has all of the techniques found in Gekisai. I question the usefulness of the Taikyoku because it is so repetitive. Chudan and Jodan are exactly the same, just a different block. Gedan just trains shiko dachi, haraitoshi and oizuki. Mawashi at least throws in an elbow, backfist, block and a reverse punch after the mawashiuke. Kakeuke is just a clone of mawashi uke. All of these techniques are covered in our classes during kihon ido. Gekisai Ichi also includes a sweep, arm bar, shuto, soto uke and add in Gekisai dai ni, you also get neko ashi dachi, all of the things you state are in 5 Taikyoku can be found in 2 Gekisai. These are of course just the obvious techniques.

As for striking certain areas of the body, our best weapon in the dojo, the one we train a lot, is a whipping, smashing shin kick to the thigh. The shin, ankle, calf, knee are other areas we target. We are shown vital areas and pressure points, but if the area that you strike hurts the opponent, it is not necessarily a classical pressure point. When you gave a friend a charley horse when you were a kid, did that mean you knew what and where a pressure point was? Doing "pressure point knockouts" against someone standing still, allowing you to "knock them out" is a far cry from someone intent on kicking your ass. So in those cases, a headbutt and knee stomp are sure and effective techniques (seiunchin and sanseru) to use rather than strike sp** but only after the hour or the horse and only against a monkey stylist. :-)

3/4 punch is more effective than full twist punch? Having studied Isshinryu for a couple of years, I was a fan of the vertical or 3/4 punch. You ever watch an Isshinryu person break boards? He uses a full twisting punch. Ever see a boxer knockout an opponent in the ring? It's not a vertical or a 3/4 punch. It is usually a hook, uppercut or straight/cross punch. Now I do use the vertical punch as well, it has it's uses, but to say it is more effective is not realistic. An uppercut works better in a situation where an uppercut is called for. A hook punch is more effective when a hook punch is called for.

I did not state that we do not work bunkai, I stated that we train in bunkai for every technique in every kata plus variations on the basic bunkai. I just think that there are those who try to come up with some ridiculous bunkai just to be able to say, look at what I discovered. A new bunkai. I think that bunkai should be quick, simple, easy to learn and foremost, effective. If it takes you an entire class to learn it, I don't see the value in it.

Great discussion Gordon,
Regards George Yanase

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Hi Victor-san,

Thanks for the words :D

It was indeed a fascinating study.

Regarding the Kyozai-gata, I learned it from Hokama Sensei, who is one of the ones who invented it.

There is a Kyozai-gata 2 that was created and published in the school karate manual but never made it into use.

It's somewhat between the Fukyu-gata of Nagamine, and the Pinan / Gekisai series, in terms of technical content.

1. Saluation & ready posture
2. LF to L into zenkutsu and LH side block.
3. RFF along same line and RH middle level punch.
4. RF to R (180 degrees) into zenkutsu and RH side block
5. LFF along same line and LH middle level punch
6. LF to front in zenkutsu and LH down block
7. RFF and RH upper level punch
8. LFF and LH upper level punch
9. RFF and RH upper level punch
10. Spin to L of RH to face rear right diagonal in LFF zenkutsu and LH down block
11. RFF on same diagonal line and RH shuto-uke
12. RFF to the R to face rear left diagonal in RFF zenkutsu and RH down block
13. LFF on same diagonal line and LH shuto-uke
14. LF to rear of kata line into zenkutsu and LH down block
15. RH middle level reverse punch
16. RF front kick
17. Set RFF and LH middle level reverse punch
17. LF front kick
18. Set LFF and RH middle level reverse punch
19. RF front kick
20. Set RFF and spin to the L to face the front and perform a LH down block
21. Drop to the right knee and RH punch
22. Stand up and bring RF to the LF, stack hands at R hip.
23. Perform a LF front kick and LH punch directly to the L
24. Set LFF on the same line and perform a RH reverse punch
25. Pull the LF to the RF and stack the hands at the L hip
26. Perform a RF front kick and RH punch directly to the R
27. Set RFF on the same line and perform a LH reverse punch
28. Face the L forward diagonal in LFF cat stance and perform a mawashi-uke & push (LH down, RH up)
29. Quickly face the R forward diagonal in RFF cat stance and perform a mawashi-uke & push (RH down, LH up)
30. Leaving the LF in place, bring the RF and the hands to face the direct front on RFF cat stance.
31. RFB to LF in attention stance and perform ending salutation.

Pretty straight forward.

Joe

After receiving the above post from Joe, eventually I decided it could be a reasonable form for my own students. I was interested in the youth learning what was being taught in Okinawa in gym class.  I taught it between our kata sho and our annaku.


I never took many videos of our use of Kyozai kata. My videotaping my students was never to show a perfect form, rather to show what they were doing at that time.


This video shows some of the differences I made to the form.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuVcLAdSbyE


 


Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue have a dialogue on the old CD - Part 5

 


Back in 1997 I was new to the internet and the CyberDojo. Almost immediately I found a lengthy dialogue between  Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue.

Patrick was a well known competitor, practitioner and author on his arts. He knew George as his book editor at Tuttle, but not as a martial artist.

George had been raised in Japan, was on an old Samuri tv series as a youth playing the younger version of the samurai for flashbacks when he learned various lessons. He later trained in karate on Okinawa. Established a Kashiba Juku group in the states and eventually became the martial arts editor  for Tuttle Publications.

Knowing that Patrick was in a somewhat heated discussion on the CD when George weighed in. Beginning what would be a lengthy discussions of an extremely erudite level of discourse. I do not know of another discussion of similar character. A discussion that does not exist  today.

This will be challenging but well worth the effort.

Because of it's length I am breaking it into several parts.
===============================================================




From Digest 1378 Sat,  2 Aug 1997 00:13:49 CDT

Date: Fri, 1 Aug 1997 21:30:36 -0400
From: gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi continued (another long post),
    tardy part two of two
Message-ID: <19970801.215810.3798.0.gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com>

Hello everyone,

Here is the continuation of my discussion regarding propriety of issued titles, which is really just the point of departure.  Sorry for the delay, but I actually had to do some work in the office and at home for a change.

Patrick McCarthy wrote:

> Mr. Donohue wrote "it never seriously represented
> Okinawan martial arts or martial artists unless the
> Okinawan arts or artists made tremendous efforts to
> "fit in" with the prevailing Yamatunchu mentality."  
>
> Well, first, if I could just play devil's advocate for a
> moment, exactly what Okinawan arts is Mr. Donohue
> referring to? The only "arts" that I am familiar with that
> fall into this jurisdiction, are the eclectic interpretations
> of those loosely practiced "Chinese-based" defensive
> methods introduced to the mainland by Motobu Choki,
> Matayoshi Shinko, Funakoshi Gichin, Gima Shinken,
> Miyagi Chojun, Mabuni Kenwa, Uechi Kanbun, Kiyoda
> Juhatsu, Toyama Kanken, and Chitose Tsuyoshi. .)
>
> On the other hand, I have heard the misinformed speak of
> the infamous Tomarite, Nahate, and Shurite, "indigenous
> arts" which allegedly date back hundreds of years into
> Uchina history. Actually, Tomarite, Nahate, and Shurite
> were names thought up by a local festival planning
> committee in Okinawa during the winter of 1926 in
> preparation to host Kano Jigoro's visit in January of 1927.
> The entire idea, in addition to a small myriad of related
> activities, was to have local experts from Tomari, Naha,
> and Shuri present the much talked about Toudijutsu
> (Chinese "Martial Arts") which was Okinawa's contribution
> to Japan's war machine; in the same way that kendo
> and judo was being used as a political vehicle to funnel
> nationalism:
> Toudijutsu helped patriots foster physical fitness and
> fighting spirits. The reason that the village names were
> used in place of the prefix of "Tou," (China) was to
> conceal its foreign origins and promote its local
> cultivation.

If I understand properly, Mr. McCarthy is saying that there is no such thing as unique Okinawan martial arts.  Just Chinese martial arts practiced by Okinawans.  This is the equivalent of saying that the United States, or Australia, or Canada have no native traditions (other than those held by the indigenous inhabitants before the arrival of the Europeans) because they (either the people or the incipient traditions) originated in European venues.  I know that it was expedient for the Okinawans to downplay the Chinese origins of much of their martial arts. This was an era when the Japanese empire was subjugating China -- an era when Chinese residents of Okinawa, or Okinawans who showed too much enthusiasm for anything Chinese, were apt to be crushed by the government or its stooges for the slightest indiscretion.  I know also that it is highly distasteful for many Okinawans to acknowledge that some of their skills may have been handed down by the conquering Japanese.  A point can be seen in Yamane Ryu bojutsu.  The Okinawans with whom I've discussed this system always insist that this system is indigenous, despite the startling similarity to the sojutsu systems found in the main islands of Japan, which were no doubt well represented in the martial arts of the conquering Soga family and the Satsuma hanWhatever the origins of the techniques, the Okinawans have definitely put their own stamp on them and made them uniquely theirs.  That, to me, suffices to brand their martial arts as Okinawan.

The fact that many of the martial arts systems practiced in Okinawa were or are substantially Chinese has never been disputed.  Naha te has never been anything more than a euphemism for Toute.  The subdivision of other arts as Tomari te and Shuri te is arbitrary and just about as meaningless.  The contributions of the Okinawans in transforming what have often been rather florid and relatively ineffectually executed
Chinese systems, in conjunction with native fighting skills, into useful, practical fighting arts, on the other hand, are hard to deny.



> Additionally, Mr. Donohue also wrote, "Many of them were
> unwilling or had no desire to submit their traditional and
> personal arts to the whims of a quasi-governmental
> organization. That didn't in any way invalidate the quality
> of their arts or detract from the skill of the practitioner."
>
> My own Okinawan karate/kobudo teacher, Kinjo
> (Kanagusuku) Hiroshi, [a direct disciple of Hanashiro
> Chomo (Koryu Uchinadi, and Oshiro Chojo, Yamaneryu
> Kobudo] who was a former representative of the DNBK,
> and also presently regarded as one of Japan's most
> senior authorities of Uchina "martial arts" history and
> culture, sadly maintains that few "native" defensive
> methods were little more than loosely practiced
> "traditions" during the turn of this century.  

I'm not sure what exactly Kinjo-sensei meant by "loosely practiced 'traditions,'" but this sounds pretty good to me.  Certainly preferable to rigidly practiced traditions.  I think that one of the biggest contributions my own senseis have made to my training is to restore the "looseness" to the practice.  We have fun, we train in a relaxed informal manner, we don't concern ourselves with the rigid hierarchy imposed upon the Okinawan culture by the Japanese, we don't try to impose uniformity of technique among the various practitioners, and -- most important – we learn a lot of effective fighting skills within a milieu of cooperation, friendship, and good will.  Our training has all the urgency and formality of a family backyard barbeque.  We have no certificates, but we have nice handwritten scrolls of encouragement from our sensei, and, aside from those we may have earned before being accepted as students, we have no ranks, just black belt.  This is terribly disorganized, and would cause an organization minded karateka to despair, but it is traditional for many loosely practiced traditions.  (As a matter of fact, we have no organization records whatsoever -- which is sometimes a problem when professional karateka claim falsely to be students of our teachers).  It's also a very effective way to learn and transmit martial skills. When my teachers are long dead, there will be no evidence of their skill and the only evidence of the effectiveness of their martial arts teaching skills will be the skill of their students and the subsequent generations of students.  Very hard to document!

> Some of the Uchinachu (Okinawans) who did comply, and
> were active members of the DNBK, in both Okinawa, and
> on the mainland, went on to apply for and recieve titles
> from the DNBK like Renshi and Kyoshi were Mabuni
> (Shitoryu,) Miyagi (Gojuryu) and Funakoshi (Toudijutsu).

And a good part of the reason for their success and the popularity of their systems may have been their willingness to compromise with the government and the dominant socio-political currents of the times – to bend with the wind.  Whether this helped their martial arts systems is highly questionable.  In some cases, it seems clearly to have been harmful.  Popularity and prodigious spread of a system often go hand in hand with dilution of its worth as a set of fighting skills.


> Mr. Donohue wrote "For most Okinawan martial artists, and
> many in the rest of Japan, particularly "uchi no bujutsu"
> lineages (private ryuha that were never opened to the
> general public), the Dai Nippon Butokukai was almost
> totally irrelevant.  If it had any relevance at all, it was
> merely as a body that set examples or standards for
> voluntary compliance."
>
> No doubt that there were such people, and, I for one would
> support such rationale, as it seems totally plausible if, in
> fact it ever existed. However, I have gone to great lengths
> to study Okinawan history and its culture at its source, and
> cannot concur with Mr. Donohue's opinions. With the
> exception of a handful of loosely practiced defensive
> "traditions," some of which have only surfaced in the last
> generation, I can't for the life of me figure out what people
> or "traditions" he is speaking about.

The "handful of loosely practiced defensive 'traditions'" is exactly what I am speaking aboutI find that the quality of this sort of traditional martial art often far exceeds the quality of the more codified and "modernized" sort.  Mere quantity is not a factor for me in considering whether or not a martial art is worthwhile.  House karate (uchi no bujutsu or uchinadi) is almost always better than dojo (commercial, public) karate.


> Moreover, virtually every defensive tradition practiced in
> Okinawa today has, in one way or another, been
> influenced by the Japanese.

Agreed.  Sometimes for the better, too, but often not.

> I do not personally know Mr. Donohue, but am certain that
> he must have evidence of such claims. I for one, and I am
> certain that there are others too that would be equally
> eager to read his response. Therefore I respectfully ask
> him to provide it so that we all may learn from him.

Mr. McCarthy and I are comparing apples to oranges.  He is talking of quantified, codified information of the sort available in libraries and government document repositories.  This is the meat of reality for historians.  However, much of human experience is not recorded on paper, even in these times of intrusive government, insurance companies, and direct merchants.  And much of what has been recorded has been subsequently lost, particularly in Okinawa, but also in Japan and China. I'm dealing with oral tradition provided to me by my teachers, by my family, and by the evidence presented to me when I see the effectiveness of the techniques my teachers have shared with me.  It was never written in stone.  If it was, it would have lost its meaning to me and to the world.  This is the same sort of divergence of opinion that occurs between Theravada Buddhists, who study the written sutras with great energy and devotion, and Zen Buddhists, who would burn the sutras for heat in the winter so that they could continue their meditation practice.

I have to confess that I'm a lover of data and statistics too.  I studied modern Japanese history (1850 to 1950s) in graduate school.  My concentration was on the political systems and the interactions with and reactions to Western imperial aggression, as well as on religion and philosophy.  -- My lineage as a history scholar is George Sansom to George Lenson to George Donahue.  I guess that makes me George III, the crazy one.   ;-)  -- I also have to admit that in my work as an editor I've often beaten authors into submission by dumping facts and organizational strictures on them.  

I used to approach my martial arts training in the same way and I came up originally in a karate system whose founder considered himself as much a karate historian as a karate practitioner.  It was very hard for me to lighten up and really learn the good stuff: the meat of the technique, the poetry of the motion, the joy of the practice.  My teachers have been very patient.

The written history and the speculation upon it that Mr. McCarthy deals with is as fascinating to me as it seems to be to him.  I get all his books as soon as they come into print, and I read the source material listed in his bibliographies, when I have time.  However, I don't feel that this sort of information has much to do with my actual training or with anyone else's.  Nor do I feel that any organization anywhere can provide anything to match what can be provided by a single simple dedicated teacher who is willing to go to the trouble to teach you his stuff, however loosely the tradition may have been passed on to him and however loosely it may be passed on to you.  

Many martial artists aren't fortunate enough to find this sort of real teacher.  For them, organizations and books have to serve as meager substitutes.

> I agree with Mr. Donohue's conclusion threat
> "Organizations' use of titles are matters solely for the
> discretion of the  organizations themselves. Ultimately,
> the government doesn't own the language.  Many
> organizations are lax or commercial or cynical in their
> issuance of titles.  Many are not.  As long as no fraud is
> committed on the general public, it's none of the
> government's business.  Government (particularly the
> Japanese government) has generally acted to
> suppress martial arts that don't conform to the
> government's political agenda."
>
> A Japanese maxim which aptly describes how things
> or people that do not conform to the inflexible social
> guidelines so well know in Japan goes, "Deru kugi
> wah utareru" (A protruding nail ultimately gets pounded down.)

This is, unfortunately, still the prevailing attitude in Japan.  An attitude that forces the more creative and talented young Japanese to move to New York.  ;-)  Rather than propagating this attitude among Western martial artists, or attempting to fit in with Japanese organizations that have played a part in maintaining that attitude, those Western bujutsuka who are familiar with Japanese culture and polity would better employ their precious training time in adapting what is useful from the Japanese, Okinawan, and Chinese traditions to more humane standards of honor, probity, and individual freedom.  Take with gratitude and humility what is good in the Eastern tradition, mix it with what is good and true in the Western tradition, and leave the rest to wither away.

> Mr. Donohue spoke of "Martial artists, in general and
> particularly in Okinawa, have often been at the forefront
> of resistance to government repression."
>
> The only historical testimony that I am aware that might
> even fit the bill is the folklore surrounding Jana Uekata,
> whose character served as the star of the 43 part NHK
> drama entitled "Ryukyu no Kaze."

Available in Japanese video shops in NYC!  (No subtitles, though.)

> However his plight surrounded Uchina Odori (Okinawan
> dance) rather than Toudijutsu. Then there was Teijusoku
> Uekata who a statesman from Nago who also spoke of
> "te." However, he was never involved with such a
> political problem with the Japanese.
<other good citations cut>
> I wonder if this is what Mr. Donohue is referring to?

Actually, I shouldn't have made the statement.  It was bombastic and, upon reconsideration, only slightly true.  I was thinking of a few specific cases that loom large in my consciousness, but that don't necessarily loom large in the collective memory.  I apologize for letting my mouth (fingers, in this case) run ahead of my mind.  Most martial artists in the era of Japanese imperialist adventurism were just as cowardly and concerned with keeping the government from hammering them down as was the public in general.  Japan has not had many heroes in modern times.

> Mr. Donohue concluded with "The proliferation of gaudy
> titles for martial artists of little real accomplishment is
> indeed unfortunate, if those things bother you, but it's
> just a minor irritation. Far better to have a dozen hanshi
> operating dojos in your town than to have a government
> bureaucracy determining standards for what you can
> learn and teach within your art."
>
> I wonder if the same thing could be said of other
> professions? "That it's just a minor irritation." I am a
> professional master-level accredited instructor and am
> deeply concerned about those who run around making a
> mockery of karate and kobudo with the use of such titles.
> It undermines all that which reputable organizations, like
> the DNBK, have worked so hard to establish and perpetuate.

I'm an amateur martial artist, as are my teachers, as were their  teachersI do respect some professional martial artists, but in general I hold amateur martial artists in higher regard.  It is professionals who feel the need to organize and govern, to restrict admission to the profession to those who share similar beliefs and goals, and to keep the skills and services -- in the language of economics -- a scarce commodity.  This is fine, as long as the professionals don't attempt to interfere with or influence the amateurs.  Some professions obviously must be heavily regulated.  I wouldn't want to have my appendix removed by an amateur surgeon or a graduate of the Acme "Surgery in One Easy Lesson" correspondence course.  Martial arts, however, are just that -- arts -- and not professions.  To try to force an art into the mold of a profession can only diminish the value of the art.


> Contrary to Mr. Donohue, I strongly believe that it has been
> because of untimely historical phenomena, and a lack of
> government intervention, that common outcomes and
> standardized assessment criteria, necessary in the
> accreditation process of the tertiary titles in question,
> might have otherwise continued on
>
> Presently such universal standards do not exist in
> karate/kobudo anywhere and teaching curricula vary from
> one teacher to another based primarily upon the individual
> experience of the person(s) most responsible for
> imparting the method.

Diversity is good and exciting, uniformity is numbing.  Part of the fun in being a martial artist is in the quest for the real thing – holding out for the chili dog or cheese dog among the ordinary wiener dogs of life.  For you vegetarians, think of the difference between a garden grown tomato and a hothouse, gassed, pink rock you can get in any supermarket.  The garden variety has blemishes, is bumpy, and is inconveniently sized, but the taste is real.  Anything we can buy packaged and sanitized, standardized and smoothed to a common denominator (whether the lowest or not) is hardly worth having.

This pertains especially to martial arts.  Standardization breeds mediocrity.  Having to deal with someone who is junior to you chronologically, in training time, and in martial skill being awarded the title of hanshi, while you remain a mere generic black belt, is a trifling price to pay.

> I respect your input, thank you for your patience, and look
> forward to your (Mr. Donohue) reply.

Thank you Mr. McCarthy.  I respect your work and talents as well.  I suppose we'll never agree on many things, but agreement is not a necessary commodity for harmonious co-existence.  I'm glad that you've made your presence felt in this forum -- it's a great stimulus for me. ;-)

I'm looking forward to reading your next book.

Gambatte!

George Donahue

 

 

==========================================

 Note: These 5 posts represent 1/2 of this discussion. To save yur minds  I am going on to other posts  that I have for a while, then I will resume the rest of this discussion. IMO I have really never heard these things discussed ever since that time.

 

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue have a dialogue on the old CD - Part 4



Back in 1997 I was new to the internet and the CyberDojo. Almost immediately I found a lengthy dialogue between  Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue.

Patrick was a well known competitor, practitioner and author on his arts. He knew George as his book editor at Tuttle, but not as a martial artist.

George had been raised in Japan, was on an old Samuri tv series as a youth playing the younger version of the samurai for flashbacks when he learned varrious lessons. He later trained in karate on Okinawa. Established a Kashiba Juku group in the states and eventually became the martial arts editor  for Tuttle Publications.

Knowing that Patrick was in a somewhat heated discussion on the CD when George weighed in. Beginning what would be a lengthy discussions of an extremely erudite level of discourse. I do not know of another discussion of similar character. A discussion that does not exist  today.

This will be challenging but well worth the effort.

Because of it's length I am breaking it into several parts.

===============================================================
 

 

Date: 25 Jul 97 16:53:21
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Dai Nippon
Message-ID: <199707252051.AA24275@interlock.randomhouse.com>


Jon Tupitza wrote:

> In response to Mr. Donahue's post:
>
<<snip>> The very name Dai Nippon Butokukai screams
> out me -- and others of my background -- cultural
> aggression and repression.  "Dai Nippon" was the name
> used to denote the greater Japanese empire, including
> possessions in Korea and Manchuria and, a bit later, the
> East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere (that is, subjugated
> Asian neighbors).  This term was used by many patriotic
> organizations, all up to little good for the world in general.
> To romanticize an era and to aggrandize an organization
> that played a part, however small, in a sordid historical
> undertaking, is not productive for the further development
> of martial arts or world peace. <<end snip>>
>
>
>Please exercise patience with any ignorance I may
> express, but...
>
> If I am not mistaken, the name "Dai Nippon BuToku-Kai"
> was first coined during the 800's A.D. when the present
> Emperor founded an organization meant simply to serve
> as a centralized forum for Bushi to refine their skills for the
> good of all Yamato. (Patrick; feel free to jump in here at
> any time).
>
> Later, during the Tokugawa Shogunate (Edo Period),
> the name Dai Nippon BuToku Kai resurfaced in the
> form of an organization dedicated to the preservation
> of Nippon Bujutsu (primarily Kenjutsu). The peace of the
> Tokugawa era threatened the social dominence of the
> Samurai class and the "combat savy" of their various
> jutsu. The bushi did not like this, as they feared their
> skills would be needed again.
>
> Of course the only commonality between these
> organizations is the name Dai Nippon BuToku Kai, as
> there is no contiguous hierarchy or lineage between the
> DNBK  of the 800's, 1700's to 1945, or 1953 to Present.
>
> Bearing the above in mind, would it not then be incorrect
> to project a "WW II era emperialist" stigma upon an
> organization named/founded much earlier.
>
> Of course "Dai Nippon" does mean Greater Japan (this
> is immutible), but I believe this title refers to the kingdom
> of Yamato and its earlier holdings (Okinawa), and is
> meant to express the idea that the organization was to
> be made up of, by, and for all (or at least the majority)
> of the Japanese Budoka.

The term "Dai Nippon" does indeed antedate the modern era and was in use far before the subjugation of Okinawa.  The term wasn't tainted until the current century.  Even though we can explain the origin of the term in a manner satisfactory to the disinterested intellect, the explanation doesn't appease the emotions.

I can liken it to the swastika.  Before the Nazi party used this emblem, it had a long history of benign use.  It was evident in two traditions that I know of -- Christianity and, particularly, Buddhism.  On modern Japanese maps, for example, Buddhist temples are indicated by a swastika.  The swastika is often read as the kanji "ji," meaning temple.

We share our dojo with a group of Shorinji Kempo stylists.  Shorinji Kempo is a Buddhist sect (rather Zen-ish in some ways) in addition to a martial arts system, and it uses the swastika as the emblem for the martial arts style.  It's found on their patches, stationery, etc.  In our dojo, there are two Buddhist swastikas on display at all times.

On several occasions, prospective students have felt so uneasy in a dojo displaying swastikas that they have decided solely on that basis that our school is not for them.  This despite my pointing out to them that the swastikas in our dojo point the other way from the German version (mirror image).  Two of my students who are Jewish have also expressed unease at the display.  Unfortunately for us, the swastikas are important to the Shorinji Kempo group, and they're not coming down.  If I remember to do so, I cover them up temporarily when our group is using the deck for special occasions, so that we don't cause any discomfort for our guests.  Because it's troublesome, we don't normally cover them, though, and my Jewish students have decided that the training is worth the discomfort.  They'd be much happier if the emblems would come down permanently.

In the same manner, many people, especially those from the countries victimized by the Imperial Japanese forces, have this gut reaction to the use of the term "Dai Nippon."  Some Okinawans detest the term, too, for similar reasons, as do modern Japanese pacifists and internationalists.

When I was younger and overly proud of my illustrious bujin ancestors, the idea of "Dai Nippon" was sort of a badge of pride and honor to me.  In those days I also hoped, each evening as I went to work in the nightclub where I tended bar and did a little bouncing, to get the chance to try out the latest neat technique I'd picked up in the dojo.  One of the two advantages of growing older (first being that it beats the alternative) is that you get the chance to grow up, at least a little, and to learn to try to avoid that which causes unnecessary harm to others and to yourself.  These days, I hope that my martial arts training will never again be needed and that if it is needed that it will help me in dangerous situations to use no more than the absolute minimum force necessary to escape unharmed.  I also try to pick my words carefully and say nothing that causes harm, whether intentional or not.  Even though I don't always succeed, life is richer and sweeter for me in the trying.

But hey, that doesn't mean I've slowed down my training any.  In fact, I've got to speed it up, because I figure I've only got another fifty years or so to get in the fifty million strokes I need for personal fulfillment.

Gambatte!


George Donahue
----------
gdonahue@randomhouse.com / gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
Kishaba Juku of New York City at the Ken Zen Institute of Japanese Martial Arts
and Culture
Okinawa Karate-Do Shorin Ryu Kishaba Juku / Matsubayashi Ryu / Ryukyu Kobujutsu
Nana korobi, ya oki.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Digest 1372  Sun, 27 Jul 1997 00:10:52 CDT



Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 18:06:45 +1000
From: "Patrick McCarthy" <Bujin@bigpond.com>
To: <karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu>
Subject: Titles, "Dai Nippon" & Karatedo
Message-ID: <08125718700400@onaustralia.com.au>

Greetings from the "Land of Oz."

Dear Mr. Donohue (& Mr. Tupitza) not wanting to push the issue, may I just take this opportunity to briefly interrupt the subsequent argument (which has unfolded from the "Titles" issue) to inquire about part two of your response.

Incidentally, just yesterday I received a communique from Dr. Hamada Hanshi, Director of the International Division of the Dai Nippon Butokukai.The DNBK are tentatively hosting their Kokusai Butokusai (International Martial Arts Festival) at Old Dominion University in Virginia next year. The Japanese delegation (representing the Kyoto honbu) will include all the official Prefectural representatives. Representing Okinawa will be (long standing member) Matayoshi Shimpo, regarded by many as the sole inheritor of the (Go Kenki) White Crane (Kingairyu) system and the weapon tradition his father (Shinko) popularized during the pre-war years.

Regards

Patrick McCarthy


PS  Jon, I'll be happy to "jump-in" later if you'll only promise to stand on the sidelines with a life-jacket.
 
------------------------------------------------------

Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 08:24:54 +0000
From: JANOSND@mail.bay.k12.fl.us
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: KARATE digest 1371
Message-ID: <5B627170405@mail.bay.k12.fl.us>

        Paris, can you elaborate on 'using the compression created in  your koshi'?  
        Thanks!
Dave Fulton

I'd be glad to!

The compression comes from squeezing the koshi together from many  different angles in order to gather the energy together so that it can then be issued in whatever way is appropriate for the circumstances at hand. This is used in conjunction with, and as a
result of rotating and tucking the koshi and hips.
When this kind of compression is understood then we can issue power without having to make big, circular hip rotations that give away our intention and technique to our opponent. The compression is like squeezing a rubber ball our pressing down on a spring in order to use the natural elasticity of the muscle, bones, tendons and internal organs to create live, fluid power that can than be issued in any direction, from any angle, by any limb or body part. This kind of practice also leads to the ability to issue power in multiple directions at the same time. All of these skills are useful in real self defense usage and form the basis of our training in Kishaba Juku Shorin Ryu.Much of this relies on developing the proper "feeling" and is  difficult at times to see when it is done right.


Paris Janos


-------------------------------------------


Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue have a dialogue on the old CD - Part 3

 


Back in 1997 I was new to the internet and the CyberDojo. Almost immediately I found a lengthy dialogue between  Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue.

Patrick was a well known competitor, practitioner and author on his arts. He knew George as his book editor at Tuttle, but not as a martial artist.

George had been raised in Japan, was on an old Samuri tv series as a youth playing the younger version of the samurai for flashbacks when he learned various lessons. He later trained in karate on Okinawa. Established a Kashiba Juku group in the states and eventually became the martial arts editor  for Tuttle Publications.

Knowing that Patrick was in a somewhat heated discussion on the CD when George weighed in. Beginning what would be a lengthy discussions of an extremely erudite level of discourse. I do not know of another discussion of similar character. A discussion that does not exist  today.

This will be challenging but well worth the effort.

Because of it's length I am breaking it into several parts.
===============================================================


From Digest 1369 Thu, 24 Jul 1997 00:08:05 CDT


Date: Wed, 23 Jul 1997 16:23:45 +1000
From: "Patrick McCarthy" <Bujin@bigpond.com>
To: <karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu>
Subject: Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi Titles
Message-ID: <06302509321458@onaustralia.com.au>

Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi Titles continued

Mr. Donohue,

I took pleasure reading the first part of your assertive and frightfully provocative, if only incomplete, response. You sound really switched on and tuned in. I wait with baited breath for part two before responding. One subscriber emailed me today saying that the issues you and I are addressing might very well serve as the foundation of an all-to-needed book on the subject.

Patrick McCarthy


-----------------------------------------------------------
From Digest 1371   Sat, 26 Jul 1997 00:09:07 CDT



Date: 25 Jul 97 12:30:14
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Oshiro seminar in NJ
Message-ID: <199707251628.AA19265@interlock.randomhouse.com>

Hello all,

I was in the middle of composing the second part of my response on titles, etc., when I got overwhelmed by work and family responsibilities.  That response will come along as soon as I can get to it, but first I'll move along to some shorter things.


For those of you who won't be attending the East Coast CBQ, here's a consolation prize:

Sensei Toshihiro Oshiro will be holding his annual Yamane Ryu seminar in this neck of the woods on Saturday, Sept. 6, at the Bloomfield Middle School Gymnasium, 60 Huck Road, Bloomfield, New Jersey.  Clinic A, from 10 to 12, covers bojutsu.  Clinic B, from 1 to 4, covers sai, tuifua, and nunchaku.  Cost
is $55 in advance and $65 at the door.  For registration and information, call Dong Tran at the Asian Arts Center (973) 276-0560.

Oshiro-sensei is the foremost practitioner of Yamane Ryu in the US and has issued the often-mentioned Tsunami Productions tapes on Yamane and Unadi.  His seminars are always fun and informative.

I've committed to the CBQ, but many of my students will be going to this one.


George Donahue
----------
gdonahue@randomhouse.com / gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
Kishaba Juku of New York City at the Ken Zen Institute of Japanese Martial Arts
and Culture
Okinawa Karate-Do Shorin Ryu Kishaba Juku / Matsubayashi Ryu / Ryukyu Kobujutsu
Nana korobi, ya oki.



Date: 25 Jul 97 12:51:57
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Reactive hips and qi flow
Message-ID: <199707251651.AA19976@interlock.randomhouse.com>

Rich Boyden asks:

<cut>
> Now, here's where I get shaky (no pun intended ;^> ).  If I
> understand right, the reactive hip method that is used to
> some degree in, among other styles, most karate schools
> and the Feeding Crane branch of White Crane
> throws/rolls one side of the pelvis forward, then letting the
> force/jin roll up the twisting torso to the shoulder and out
> the arm.  I haven't described it well, but you can see it
> done by an Okinawan named Oshiro on
> Dragon/Tsunami's tape entitled "Uchinadi."
>
> Assuming I understand how it's done (big stretch), here's
> where I get a little confused. If the hip rolls forward and
> the body turns a little with the punch, then I seem to be
> able to do with my punch what my qigong teacher says
> to do with one's push.  Oshiro demonstrates this well.
>
> If I'm punching quickly, however, I feel like my hip has
> already begun to roll backward by the time I make
> contact.  The result of this is that my shoulder also starts
> backward and locks without the benefit of its final
> "oomph" right at the end of the punch.  What's the deal?
> Does one simply have to sacrifice to speed that final
> push?

Oshiro-sensei is my senior as a karate student of Kishaba Chokei.  The punching technique he demonstrates on the Uchinadi tape is what we use in Shorin (Matsubayashi) Ryu Kishaba Juku.  The hip does roll back as you describe.  However, it doesn't roll all the way back, just partially, then moves forward once again to add more drive to the punch.  Although the hip retracts, the punch never does -- its momentum is constantly increasing until it's buried in the target.  The retracting hip doesn't really move backward, either.  It retracts in relation to the rest of the torso, which is moving forward.  The net movement of the hip is all forward.

This is actually much easier to do than to describe.


George Donahue

----------
gdonahue@randomhouse.com / gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
Kishaba Juku of New York City at the Ken Zen Institute of Japanese Martial Arts
and Culture
Okinawa Karate-Do Shorin Ryu Kishaba Juku / Matsubayashi Ryu / Ryukyu Kobujutsu
Nana korobi, ya oki.


Date: Fri, 25 Jul 1997 14:06:51 +0000
From: JANOSND@mail.bay.k12.fl.us
To: tuite@bluegate.com
Cc: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Reactive hips and qi flow
Message-ID: <5A3D9EE022A@mail.bay.k12.fl.us>

Hello,

Rich was inquiring about the intricacies of proper koshi (hip or lower abdomen area) manipulation. The "reactive" hip is really not the best way to describe this action as it implies that the koshi only goes forward, then back. In fact, much more is happening.
 

The real idea is to impart your power when you have made contact with your target. Not before. Most folks rotate their hips and then throw out their punch. The rotation and punch should occur at the same time. This is the "first" hip motion. Relaxation in the shoulders and arms is crucial at this time. Once the fist (or whatever) has made contact and penetrated slightly,  it is time to explode your energy inside your opponent.

This explosion of energy is accomplished by using the compression created in your koshi during your movement and rotation. This action is then a sort of a "reactive" hip. Shocking power is the best way I can describe it. It is not really a push, it should cause a reaction in your target like an electric shock. The push is used to demonstrate the power in a more visually apparent way. Try to think in terms of a whip, or whipping power instead of pushing power which is easier to produce and somewhat less effective. This koshi usage then entails using several "rotations" and tucking or crunching of the pelvis in order to connect the energy throughout your body. As far as stance is concerned, after this concept has been learned, the same power(s) can be issued regardless what stance or position you might find yourself in.When practicing this kind of idea, try to start by using big circular motions in order to connect your koshi to your limb(s). Advanced students may then discharge power from much smaller motions, even while already in contact with the target. You should be able to punch with power from any distance. Of course, this only covers the koshi idea for punching and does not take into account the variations used for blocking, striking, kicking and grappling. Several different powers can be produced by this method , each having it's own function and method.

Paris Janos
Kishaba Juku Shorin Ryu


Date: 25 Jul 97 16:53:21
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Dai Nippon
Message-ID: <199707252051.AA24275@interlock.randomhouse.com>


Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue have a dialogue on the old CD - Part 2



 


Back in 1997 I was new to the internet and the CyberDojo. Almost immediately I found a lengthy dialogue between  Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue.

Patrick was a well known competitor, practitioner and author on his arts. He knew George as his book editor at Tuttle, but not as a martial artist.

George had been raised in Japan, was on an old Samuri tv series as a youth playing the younger version of the samurai for flashbacks when he learned vartious lessons. He later trained in karate on Okinawa. Established a Kashiba Juku group in the states and eventually became the martial arts editor  for Tuttle Publications.

Knowing that Patrick was in a somewhat heated discussion on the CD when George weighed in. Beginning what would be a lengthy discussions of an extremely erudite level of discourse. I do not know of another discussion of similar character. A discussion that does not exist  today.

This will be challenging but well worth the effort.

Because of it's length I am breaking it into several parts.

===============================================================


From Digest 1367 – Tues July 22, 1997

Date: Mon, 21 Jul 1997 22:47:02 +1000
From: "Patrick McCarthy" <Bujin@bigpond.com>
To: <karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu>
Subject: Re: KARATE digest 1364
Message-ID: <12583401519337@onaustralia.com.au>

Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi Titles continued (long post)

I must apologize if part of my response about the Dai Nippon Butokukai was somewhat ambiguous. It would not be the first time that I have inadvertently done such a thing. There is enough ambiguity surrounding the history of karate without me adding to it. I hope that the following might help settle the matter or provoke some more clarity.

Mr. Donohue wrote, "I agree with Mr. McCarthy that indiscriminate use of undeserved titles is unfortunate. However, I don't agree that the Dai Nippon Butokukai has any authority for "overseeing" martial arts.  

Mr. Donohue is correct. Ever since 1945, when the DNBK was officially disbanded, and the government reshuffled, it lost its autonomy. In fact, no one oversaw any form of "martial arts" because of restrictions the occupational forces placed upon such practices throughout the entire country at that time.  

However, from 1895 until the end of the war, the DNBK was THE organization selected and administered by, the government. It was responsible for overseeing ALL of the Japanese "martial arts."  That also included the many interpretations of Uchinadi that vied for recognition on the mainland, and at home too. Of course, they're always exceptions to the rule. Those individuals (Naichi & Uchinanchu alike) who did not care to partake in such bureaucratical jurisdiction refrained from doing so. However, that is not the question of this issue. Only that the DNBK was the organization which established the title system. They did so and exercised exclusivity in issuing them until they were prevented from doing so.

In 1953 the DNBK re-surfaced, as did the practice of many "martail arts." Unlike before the war, the DNBK became a privately funded organization which maintained much of its original membership and its exclusivity. Having been a member of the DNBK (Kyoto honbu) during my many years in Japan, and having conducted much research into its historical role during the Meiji, Taisho and Showa eras, my familiarity with it is more than a passing one. I can assure anyone reading this post that the DNBK continues
on preserving the same virtues, values and principles that it has always perpetuated.

Mr. Donohue also wrote that "this organization, as most, was political from the start."

I concur. Isn't that the nature of government organizations? Being political. Is there some other kind of organization?

Mr. Donohue also mentioned that "it governed only its members, and it had no enforcement authority."

I am not sure what point Mr. Donohue was actually trying to make here that concerns the issue about titles that I brought into question, but, I assume that it is in some way connected to karate. Of course the DNBK governed its membership. There was never a question as to enforcing its authority, as there is no historical testimony to the contrary.  The pre-war DNBK fell directly under the auspices of 5 ministries [Welfare, Education, War, Navy, and National Affairs.] It was THE licensing AUTHORITY for the teacher's
titles in question in Japan. Moreover, it was also the same organization responsible for setting forth the criteria necessary for what is now known as modern karatedo.

Mr. Donohue wrote "it never seriously represented Okinawan martial arts or martial artists unless the Okinawan arts or artists made tremendous efforts to "fit in" with the prevailing Yamatunchu mentality."  

Well, first, if I could just play devil's advocate for a moment, exactly what Okinawan arts is Mr. Donohue referring to? The only "arts" that I am familiar with that fall into this jurisdiction, are the eclectic interpretations of those loosely practiced "Chinese-based" defensive methods introduced to the mainland by Motobu Choki, Matayoshi Shinko,
Funakoshi Gichin, Gima Shinken, Miyagi Chojun, Mabuni Kenwa, Uechi Kanbun,
Kiyoda Juhatsu, Toyama Kanken, and Chitose Tsuyoshi. .)

On the other hand, I have heard the misinformed speak of the infamous Tomarite, Nahate, and Shurite, "indigenous arts" which allegedly date back hundreds of years into Uchina history. Actually, Tomarite, Nahate, and Shurite were names thought up by a local festival planning committee in Okinawa during the winter of 1926 in preparation to host Kano Jigoro's visit in January of 1927. The entire idea, in addition to a small myriad of related activities, was to have local experts from Tomari, Naha, and Shuri present the much talked about Toudijutsu (Chinese "Martial Arts") which was Okinawa's contribution to Japan's war machine; in the same way that kendo and judo was being used as a political vehicle to funnel nationalism: Toudijutsu helped patriots foster physical fitness and fighting spirits.
The reason that the village names were used in place of the prefix of "Tou," (China) was to conceal its foreign origins and promote its local cultivation.

Additionally, Mr. Donohue also wrote, "Many of them were unwilling or had no desire to submit their traditional and personal arts to the whims of a quasi-governmental organization. That didn't in any way invalidate the quality of their arts or detract from the skill of the practitioner."

My own Okinawan karate/kobudo teacher, Kinjo (Kanagusuku) Hiroshi, [a direct disciple of Hanashiro Chomo (Koryu Uchinadi, and Oshiro Chojo, Yamaneryu Kobudo] who was a former representative of the DNBK, and also presently regarded as one of Japan's most senior authorities of Uchina "martial arts" history and culture, sadly maintains that few "native" defensive methods were little more than loosely practiced "traditions" during the turn of this century.  

Some of the Uchinachu (Okinawans) who did comply, and were active members of the DNBK, in both Okinawa, and on the mainland, went on to apply for and recieve titles from the DNBK like Renshi and Kyoshi were Mabuni (Shitoryu,) Miyagi (Gojuryu) and Funakoshi (Toudijutsu).
 

Mr. Donohue wrote "For most Okinawan martial artists, and many in the rest of Japan, particularly "uchi no bujutsu" lineages (private ryuha that were never opened to the general public), the Dai Nippon Butokukai was almost totally irrelevant.  If it had any relevance at all, it was merely as a body that set examples or standards for voluntary compliance."

No doubt that there were such people, and, I for one would support such rationale, as it seems totally plausible if, in fact it ever existed. However, I have gone to great lengths to study Okinawan history and its culture at its source, and cannot concur with Mr. Donohue's opinions. With the exception of a handful of loosely practiced defensive "traditions," some of which have only surfaced in the last generation, I can't for the
life of me figure out what people or "traditions" he is speaking about. Moreover, virtually every defensive tradition practiced in Okinawa today has, in one way or another, been influenced by the Japanese.

I do not personally know Mr. Donohue, but am certain that he must have evidence of such claims. I for one, and I am certain that there are others too that would be equally eager to read his response. Therefore I respectfully ask him to provide it so that we all may learn from him.

I agree with Mr. Donohue's conclusion threat "Organizations' use of titles are matters solely for the discretion of the  organizations themselves. Ultimately, the government doesn't own the language.  Many organizations are lax or commercial or cynical in their issuance of titles.  Many are not.  As long as no fraud is committed on the general public, it's none of the government's business.  Government (particularly the Japanese
government) has generally acted to suppress martial arts that don't conform to the government's political agenda."  

A Japanese maxim which aptly describes how things or people that do not conform to the inflexible social guidelines so well know in Japan goes, "Deru kugi wah utareru" (A protruding nail ultimately gets pounded down.)

Mr. Donohue spoke of "Martial artists, in general and particularly in Okinawa, have often been at the forefront of resistance to government repression."

The only historical testimony that I am aware that might even fit the bill is the folklore surrounding Jana Uekata, whose character served as the star of the 43 part NHK drama entitled "Ryukyu no Kaze." However his plight surrounded Uchina Odori (Okinawan dance) rather than Toudijutsu. Then there was Teijusoku Uekata who a statesman from Nago who also spoke of "te." However, he was never involved with such a political problem with the Japanese.

There is the history of the  "Ishimakuratou" or "Stone Pillow Party in Okinawa." Headed by former Sanshikan statesman Kamekawa Uekata Moritake. The policy of the "Kuruha" or "Black Sect," as it was sometimes called, was to gain independence and share friendly relations with China rather than being consumed by the Naichi (Yamato.)

Other historical testimony I studied included Matsumora Kosaku (Chikudon Pechin,) the prominent expert of Toudijutsu from Tomari, who was politically active during the late part of the 19th century. I know that he believed in using his Toudijutsu to further their political campaign.

In opposition to the Kuruha was Giwan Choho, an Uchinanchu (Okinawan) who represented active participation with the Japanese. His political faction was called the "Kaikatou" or "Open Country Party," and often referred to as the "Shiruha" or "White Sect."  However, he had no connection with Toudijutsu. Nonetheless, such opposition between the two sects provided for some hostility during pre-turn-of-the century Okinawa.  

I wonder if this is what Mr. Donohue is referring to?

Mr. Donohue concluded with "The proliferation of gaudy titles for martial artists of little real accomplishment is indeed unfortunate, if those things bother you, but it's just a minor irritation.Far better to have a dozen hanshi operating dojos in your town than to have a government bureaucracy determining standards for what you can learn and teach within
your art."

I wonder if the same thing could be said of other professions? "That it's just a minor irritation." I am a professional master-level accredited instructor and am deeply concerned about those who run around making a mockery of karate and kobudo with the use of such titles. It undermines all that which reputable organizations, like the DNBK, have worked so hard to establish and perpetuate.

Contrary to Mr. Donohue, I strongly believe that it has been because of untimely historical phenomena, and a lack of government intervention, that common outcomes and standardized assessment criteria, necessary in the accreditation process of the tertiary titles in question, might have otherwise continued on

Presently such universal standards do not exist in karate/kobudo anywhere and teaching curricula vary from one teacher to another based primarily upon the individual experience of the person(s) most responsible for imparting the method.

I respect your input, thank you for your patience, and look forward to your (Mr. Donohue) reply.

Patrick McCarthy

Dai Nippon Butokukai Australia Shibucho: Kyoshi Karatedo 7th Dan; Yamaneryu
Kobudo Shihan: International Ryukyu Karate Research Society Director.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Digest 1368 Wed, 23 Jul 1997 00:06:19 CDT

Date: 22 Jul 97 13:28:32
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi Titles continued (another long post),
  part one of two

Message-ID: <199707221728.AA11020@interlock.randomhouse.com>

I've split my response to this thread in two, because it's very long.  Part two will come this evening or tomorrow.

 In response to my quibbles with his earlier post, Patrick McCarthy graciously wrote:

> I must apologize if part of my response about the Dai
> Nippon Butokukai was somewhat ambiguous. It would
> not be the first time that I have inadvertently done such a
> thing. There is enough ambiguity surrounding the history
> of karate without me adding to it. I hope that the following
> might help settle the matter or provoke some more clarity.

I, too, have to apologize.  In re-reading my post, I see that I've come across as being too unreasonably disputatious (why does this always happen to me?).  It wasn't my intention to carp.  In addition, as I fired off my reply to the original post from Mr. McCarthy, I unconsciously allowed my knee-jerk libertarianism to dominate my tone (I'll try to rein it in this time).  I admire Mr. McCarthy's scholarship and over the years I've read everything he's written that I could get my hands on.  He's always done a fine job, and I've particularly enjoyed his translation of the Bubishi, in both the Tuttle edition
and the earlier self-published one.


That said, we seem to have a fundamental disagreement regarding the value of government authority and regulation in the martial arts.

<cut>
> However, from 1895 until the end of the war, the DNBK was
> THE organization selected and administered by, the
> government. It was responsible for overseeing ALL of the
> Japanese "martial arts."  That also included the many
> interpretations of Uchinadi that vied for recognition on the
> mainland, and at home too. Of course, they're always
> exceptions to the rule. Those individuals (Naichi &
> Uchinanchu alike) who did not care to partake in such
> bureaucratical jurisdiction refrained from doing so.

Saying that there were exceptions to the rule, pretty fairly describes the situation in Japan outside of Okinawa.  In Okinawa, I think the exceptions WERE the rule.  Of course, I can't document this, because by their very nature as outsiders, the exceptions wouldn't be down "on record."  I can only rely on the colloquial accounts of the few Okinawan martial instructors with whom I've talked at length.  The Okinawan tradition I study has been handed down substantially outside the mainstream of government-recorded and supervised martial arts in Japan, yet it is vibrant and among the best traditions I've
ever witnessed.  This is what attracted me to the system in the first place and led me to give up my training in other systems, except as adjuncts to the core training.



> However, that is not the question of this issue. Only that
> the DNBK was the organization which established the
> title system. They did so and exercised exclusivity in
> issuing them until they were prevented from doing so.

There's no disputing this, nor is there any reason to do so.  The DNBK established a system which has been widely emulated and adopted by ryuha that didn't exist in the time of the DNBK's authority or that existed then but didn't submit to the DNBK's authority.  The mere fact of the DNBK's having established the terminology didn't preclude others from later using a convenient nomenclature and grading system, which was not, after all,
copyrighted or trademarked and no longer had the force of law
.  These words are in the public domain, and they're useful, so they get used -- and, human nature being what it is, often they get misused.  Organizations and ryuha that have adopted the nomenclature are not in the wrong by the mere adoption.

> In 1953 the DNBK re-surfaced, as did the practice of
> many "martail arts." Unlike before the war, the DNBK
> became a privately funded organization which
> maintained much of its original membership and its
> exclusivity. Having been a member of the DNBK (Kyoto
> honbu) during my many years in Japan, and having
> conducted much research into its historical role during
> the Meiji, Taisho and Showa eras, my familiarity with it
> is more than a passing one. I can assure anyone
> reading this post that the DNBK continues on
> preserving the same virtues, values and principles that it
> has always perpetuated.

I agree with Mr. McCarthy that the DNBK did much to preserve the values of budo and that much of what we know today as budo bears the stamp of its efforts.  I can't argue with Mr. McCarthy's knowledge of the details of the DNBK's role, either, as my knowledge of the individual activities of that specific organization is superficial.  However, I think that the DNBK, and all organizations with regulatory authority of any degree, serve in the main to stifle innovation, enforce uniformity, and elevate socio-political goals having little to do with the actual techniques and knowledge of the regulated area,

In the late Tokugawa era and post-bakufu transition of bujutsu to budo, too much of the meat of most of the regulated fighting systems was lost, in large part because of the goals of the Japanese government, which in no way included having a populace with the means or mentality to resist orders of the increasingly fascist military rulers.  The goals were more along the lines of developing a compliant, strong, resilient, competitive, unquestioning stock of potential soldiers, bureaucrats, and laborers for service to the newly assertive, soon-to-be-conquering empire.

Mr. McCarthy's own tireless and admirable work in resurrecting the "lost"
techniques over the years might have been unneeded if the Japanese government
had kept its heavy hands off in the first place
.

The very name Dai Nippon Butokukai screams out me -- and others of my background -- cultural aggression and repression.  "Dai Nippon" was the name used to denote the greater Japanese empire, including possessions in Korea and Manchuria and, a bit later, the East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere (that is, subjugated Asian neighbors).  This term was used by many patriotic organizations, all up to little good for the world in general.  To romanticize an era and to aggrandize an organization that played a part, however small, in a sordid historical undertaking, is not productive for the further development of martial arts or world peace.  Many Western and even many Japanese martial artists have no idea of the degree to which Japanese martial artists of the early part of this century were involved in helping to suppress sentiment against the military dictatorship that had usurped power in Japan.  It was the Japanese university karate, kendo, and judo clubs, for example, that served as enforcers against pacifist and anti-imperialist sentiment among the Japanese civilian populace.  They routinely beat opponents, burned down their houses and businesses, and in general served in a capacity similar to that of the Red Guard in Mao's Cultural Revolution (when, by the way, most of the remaining real martial arts and Buddhist traditions of China were irrevocably destroyed).

Best to recognize the many contributions of the sleeping dog, take note of the harm the sleeping dog has done and might do again, and let it lie.  A hundred hanshi in Manhattan (where I work, teach, and study) is a very small price to pay.


> Mr. Donohue also wrote that "this organization, as most
> was political from the start."
>
> I concur. Isn't that the nature of government organizations?
> Being political. Is there some other kind of organization?

There are non-governmental organizations, too, and they're often more political than governmental organizations.  The point is not whether organizations are political, but why anyone in his right mind would wish to submit to the caprices of any organization unless submission brings with it more advantage than not submitting.  (Unless, of course, the government requires submission.  Then, the advantage is in not being the nail that gets hammered down.)  I don't see any such advantage in the martial arts, particularly when the organization has government-granted enforcement power.


> Mr. Donohue also mentioned that "it governed only its members,
> and it had no enforcement authority."
>
> I am not sure what point Mr. Donohue was actually trying to make
> here that concerns the issue about titles that I brought into question,
> but, I assume that it is in some way connected to karate. Of course
> the DNBK governed its membership. There was never a question
> as to enforcing its authority, as there is no historical testimony to
> the contrary.  The pre-war DNBK fell directly under the auspices of
> 5 ministries [Welfare, Education, War, Navy, and National Affairs.]
> It was THE licensing AUTHORITY for the teacher's titles in
> question in Japan. Moreover, it was also the same organization
> responsible for setting forth the criteria necessary for what is now
> known as modern karatedo.

I was wrong in making this statement.  It seems that the organization did have the legal authority to stifle nonconforming martial artists who didn't remain quietly anonymous.  (In fact, the government and its quasi-judicial arms relentlessly stifled all on conformity in the era in question.)  It doesn't have the authority now, and, if it did, that authority wouldn't extend beyond the boundaries of Japan.

As "the organization responsible for ... modern karatedo," I'd say that the DNBK has a lot to answer for.  The DNBK presided over and instigated a relentless and tragic loss of technique, from which we are only now beginning to recover, more than fifty years later.  It's ironic that much of this process of recovery of the heart of karatedo is taking place outside of Japan -- in Mr. McCarthy's efforts in Australia, for example.


George Donahue
----------
gdonahue@randomhouse.com / gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
Kishaba Juku of New York City at the Ken Zen Institute of Japanese Martial Arts
and Culture
Okinawa Karate-Do Shorin Ryu Kishaba Juku / Matsubayashi Ryu / Ryukyu Kobujutsu
Nana korobi, ya oki.


Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue have a dialogue on the old CD - Part 1

 


Back in 1997 I was new to the internet and the CyberDojo. Almost immediately I found a lengthy dialogue between  Patrick McCarthy and George Donahue.

Patrick was a well known competitor, practitioner and author on his arts. He knew George as his book editor at Tuttle, but not as a martial artist.

George had been raised in Japan, was on an old Samuri tv series as a youth playing the younger version of the samurai for flashbacks when he learned vartious lessons. He later trained in karate on Okinawa. Established a Kashiba Juku group in the states and eventually became the martial arts editor  for Tuttle Publications.

Knowing that Patrick was in a somewhat heated discussion on the CD when George weighed in. Beginning what would be a lengthy discussions of an extremely erudite level of discourse. I do not know of another discussion of similar character. A discussion that does not exist  today.

This will be challenging but well worth the effort.

Because of it's length I am breaking it into several parts.
===============================================================




From Digest 1363  Fri, 18 Jul 1997 00:07:04 CDT

Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 10:50:28 +1000
From: "Patrick McCarthy" <Bujin@bigpond.com>
To: <karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu>
Subject: Re: Robert Agar-Hutton's request about titles; Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi etc.
Message-ID: <01013781233999@onaustralia.com.au>

Mr. Agar-Hutton, a pleasure to correspond with you once again. The titles
you mentioned were originally established in pre-war Japan by the nation's
sole organization responsible for overseeing Martial Arts... The Dai Nippon
Butokukai.
In the same way that rank is obtained, so too was (and still
are) guidelines, specific outcomes and standard assessment criteria
necessary to obtain such titles.

It is truly sad that such a mockery is often made of them due to their
indiscriminate use by unscrupulous people who are not part of the DNBK and
have not met their guidelines. To the best of my knowledge no other
organization was ever licensed by the Japanese government to issue such
titles
. If, however, there has been, I would like to see the letter from
the government authorizing it, rather than someone telling me that so and
so "told me so."

If you (or anyone) are interested better understanding such history, may I
then recommend contacting the International Ryukyu Karate Research Society
c/o POB 420 Virginia, Brisbane 4014 Australia to purchase the Analysis of
the Dai Nippon Butokukai. We are a information-based fraternity which deals
with the history and evolution of Karatedo.

Look forward to meeting you during my forthcoming trip to the UK.

Regards

Patrick McCarthy
-----------------------------------------------------
From Digest 1364 Sat, 19 Jul 1997 00:06:56 CDT

Date: 18 Jul 97 16:27:29
From: gdonahue@randomhouse.com
To: karate@raven.cc.ukans.edu
Subject: Re: Hanshi, Kyoshi, Renshi
Message-ID: <199707182026.AA20278@interlock.randomhouse.com>

In answer to Robert Agar-Hutton's query of about titles, Patrick McCarthy wrote:

> The titles you mentioned were originally established in pre-war
> Japan by the nation's sole organization responsible for
> overseeing Martial Arts... The Dai Nippon Butokukai. In the same
> way that rank is obtained, so too was (and still are) guidelines,
> specific outcomes and standard assessment criteria necessary
> to obtain such titles.
>
> It is truly sad that such a mockery is often made of them due to
> their indiscriminate use by unscrupulous people who are not part
> of the DNBK and have not met their guidelines. To the best of my
> knowledge no other organization was ever licensed by the
> Japanese government to issue such titles. If, however, there has
> been, I would like to see the letter from the government authorizing
> it, rather than someone telling me that so and so "told me so."
<cut>

I agree with Mr. McCarthy that indiscriminate use of undeserved titles is
unfortunate.

However, I don't agree that the Dai Nippon Butokukai has any authority for "overseeing" martial arts.  This organization, as most, was political from the  start.  It governed only its members, and it had no enforcement authority.  It never seriously represented Okinawan martial arts or martial artists unless the Okinawan arts or artists made tremendous efforts to "fit in" with the prevailing Yamatunchu mentality.  Many of them were unwilling or had no desire to submit their traditional and personal arts to the whims of a quasi-governmental organization.  That didn't in any way invalidate the quality of their arts or detract from the skill of the practitioner.  For most Okinawan martial artists, and many in the rest of Japan, particularly "uchi no bujutsu" lineages (private ryuha that were never opened to the general public), the Dai Nippon Butokukai was almost totally irrelevant.  If it had any relevance at all, it was merely as a body that set examples or standards for voluntary compliance.

Organizations' use of titles are matters solely for the discretion of the organizations themselves.  Ultimately, the government doesn't own the language.  Many organizations are lax or commercial or cynical in their issuance of titles.  Many are not.  As long as no fraud is committed on the general public, it's none of the government's business.  Government (particularly the Japanese government) has generally acted to suppress martial arts that don't conform to the government's political agenda.  Martial artists,
in general and particularly in Okinawa, have often been at the forefront of resistance to government repression.

The proliferation of gaudy titles for martial artists of little real accomplishment is indeed unfortunate, if those things bother you, but it's just a minor irritation.  Far better to have a dozen hanshi operating dojos in your town than to have a government bureaucracy determining standards for what you can learn and teach within your art.


George Donahue (mushi)

----------
gdonahue@randomhouse.com / gdonahue.kishaba.juku.usa@juno.com
Kishaba Juku of New York City at the Ken Zen Institute of Japanese Martial Arts
and Culture
Okinawa Karate-Do Shorin Ryu Kishaba Juku / Matsubayashi Ryu / Ryukyu Kobujutsu
Nana korobi, ya oki.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------