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First, I would like to give a
bit of background about Kenwa Mabuni again. Kenwa
Mabuni was born in November 14, 1889 in Shuri, Okinawa.
He was the 17th generation (patralineal) of Ogushiku
Keiyu, a well-respected samurai of the 17th century.
As such he was given early admission to the dojo
of Anko Itosu in Shuri. There he studied for 15
years and developed into one of the top students
in Itosu's dojo. His first few years learning the
basics invigorated his health and he proceeded to
study with tremendous vigor. By 1905 he began severe
training which included the learning of many little-known
kata and long hours of reflection and mental discipline.
Mabuni developed a tremendously inquisitive mind
and absolutely positive attitude towards life. By
1915 he had proven his prowess in understanding
of martial arts and created the kata
Aoyagi just
after having finished a mushashugyo. Unfortunately
that same year Anko Itosu, Mabuni's first karate
sensei, and Kanryo Higaonna died. Mabuni went into
mourning over his lost sensei for the next year.
In 1916 Mabuni with his vast knowledge of karate
from Shuri and Naha began assimilating his information
into a style which he called Shi-To Ryu after the
karate names of his two instructors. By the late
1920's the Japanese, who were the military masters
of the subordinate Okinawa, were screaming for karate
masters to teach them the art of "empty hand." Kenwa
Mabuni went to Osaka in 1930 and began to teach
his composite Shuri/Naha karate to the Japanese.
What Mabuni had physically developed was an unusual
body dynamic wherein the martial artist was completed
enveloped in a cloud of commitment disregarding
protection in order to develop the power of complete
killing strikes. This self-abandon appealed to the
Japanese do-or-die attitude and Mabuni was accepted
without reservation as a martial arts master. In
addition, he developed hip action to its maximum
and centralization as a core issue in maintenance
of balance, abilities which are vital to a small
person fighting multiple larger opponents.
Having been trained in the menkyo-system, Kenwa
Mabuni offered more to the Japanese than mere physical
techniques and body dynamics. He had experienced
the whole of Okinawa including having been one of
Okinawa's finest police officers. He had seen the
derelect components of the port town of Naha where
roudy drunken sailors were commonplace. He had visited
Tomari and trained with the great Arakaki in Tomari-te.
He had been raised in Shuri and known the capital
city with its historical monuments and the degeneration
of those monuments since the Japanese takeover 50
years before. He had circled the island during a
mushashugyo visiting with masters of many different
villages. Now he was a well-qualified creator of
kata (sozosha) and menkyo sensei.
What
the Japanese were getting was more than a teacher
of physical technique. They were embarking on a
road of experience which could lead them well beyond
physical fighting.
In 1935 Kenwa Mabuni was invited to introduce his
style of karate to the Dai Nippon Butokukai. After
his introduction his style of karate was accepted
as one of the four major styles of karate in Japan.
He called his style Shi-To ryu after the two major
instructors of his life. The Shi came from one way
of saying his instructor's name Itosu, which is
Shi-su. The To came from his other major instructor
Higashionna which can be said To-onna.
During his creative phase in karate (c 1912-1930)
he developed many kata, Kenwa Mabuni created Aoyagi,
Juroku, Miyojo,
Shinsei, Matsukaze
and Shinpa,
but some of these katas are little known and even
more rarely seen. Miyojo was created for an all-girls
school wanting to learn karate. The kata contained
strikes which Mabuni felt were easily learned and
could be applied by light-weight people (Mabuni
was only 4 feet 10 inches tall himself and may have
weighted 110 pounds.
Kenwa Mabuni was a small man physically. What he
lacked in body size he made up for in spirit and
determination. The essence of Shito-ryu is totality
of commitment. The style is a way of learning to
fight in a no-holds barred manner. But that issue
is one more easily taught in the dojo. Look at the
really good practitioners and you will see the body
dynamics so typical of Shito-ryu...the hip action,
pelvic thrust, control of axis, unification of body
parts, low stances...etc. These are not the sole
property of Shito-ryu, but without them we do not
practice Shito-ryu.
Kata from both Naha-te and Shuri-te were easily
adapted by Kenwa Mabuni to the strong kihon and
body dynamics which he had discovered. These kata,
as well as the kata he created himself, are tremendous
lessons in martial arts dynamics.
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