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Karate-Do
Like most martial arts, Shotokan karate has its roots in ancient
China, from where it was brought to Okinawa, then to Japan, and
then to the rest of the world. Our art is usually classified as "hard," complementary
to "soft" circular martial arts such as Aikido and Tai
Chi Chuan. Shotokan is quite linear and is centered around the
principle of harnessing the body's internal energy and concentrating
it all into the point of contact, so as to deliver a single, final
blow. It is said that Okinawans routinely used their fists and
hand edges to smash through the bamboo armor worn by invading Japanese.
Shotokan karate can be devastating to an opponent and so must be
practiced with appropriate control.
Around 520 A.D., Daruma (Bodhidharma), the founder of Zen Buddhism,
was teaching at the Shaolin Temple (Shorin-ji) in the Hunan province
of China. Seeing that many of his disciples lacked the endurance
necessary to follow his strict program, he originated a method
of physical training called Ch'uan Fa. This was introduced to many
parts of China, and later came to be called Shorin-ji Kempo. Over
the centuries, many different styles developed.
Shorin-ji Kempo, later known as Kung-fu, was imported to the island
of Okinawa in the southern part of Japan during the T'ang dynasty
(A.D. 618 - 906). Here it was combined with native martial arts
and underwent tremendous development. For long periods in Okinawan
history, common people were refused the right to carry weapons.
Thus, they had to heavily depend for their defense on the art they
now called karate, which they learned in secret and passed on from
generation to generation.
Gichin Funakoshi, the founder of Shotokan, was born in Shuri,
Okinawa in 1868. As a young boy, he trained in Shuri-te (with master
Azato) and Naha-te (with master Itosu), both traditional Okinawan
styles. A blend of these two arts was then brought by Sensei Funakoshi
to Japan, when he was invited in 1917 to perform at a physical
education exhibition sponsored by the Ministry of Education. He
was asked back several times in the following years, including
by Japan's emperor in 1922, at which time Sensei Funakoshi decided
to teach and promote his art in Japan. He eventually helped found
the Japan Karate
Association (JKA) and became the first Shihan of JKA in 1948.
Sensei Funakoshi passed away in 1957, at the age of 88.
Initially, karate was written with two Chinese characters meaning
Chinese hands, Kara being the major province of China, and Te meaning "hands." Gichin
Funakoshi changed the first character from Chinese to Empty, thus
forming the modern term for Karate - empty hands. The word "empty" can
be interpreted at two levels: one as meaning weaponless, and a
deeper one signifying the fundamental teaching of Zen: empty yourself
to achieve unity with the Whole. Funakoshi Sensei also coined the
term Karate-Do, meaning The Way of Karate. The life of this gentle,
modest man was guided throughout by the principle that karate is
a means of perfecting and strengthening the human character.
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