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History of
JuJitsu,
Part II
by Dennis Helm, Godan.
THE FOUNDING OF KODOKAN JUDO
At the turn of the seventeenth century,
Japan was in disorder and disunion. Three able generals successfully subdued the other
warlords. The Tokugawa clan obtained supremacy and assumed the Shogunate. A strict
hierarchical social order was imposed in which the descending scale ran from the warriors
down through the peasants, artisans to the merchants at the bottom. The Shogunate put tax
collecting and its finances in order, administered careful control of the population, and
generally executed a viable dictatorship. This may well have been the world's most
ambitious effort to make time stand still. The Tokugawa rulers brought a reasonable degree
of order and unity to Japan for almost two hundred years.
During the time of the Tokugawa regime, the role of the
emperor was emphasized as the focal point of Japanese life, even though he was living in
genteel poverty in his secluded Kyoto court. Shogun and commoner alike ignored him.
In 1573 Oda Nobunaga became Shogun and for
nine years gained control of all most all of Japan. Nobunaga was assassinated in 1582 and
the commoner Toyotomi Hideyoshi took over of the government and continued to unify the
country. He ruthlessly put down any traces of insurrection and revived the old gulf
between the warriors - the samurai and the commoners by introducing restrictions on
wearing the long sword. The long sword was restricted to the samurai class.
In 1603 Tokugawa Leyasu became Shogun and was
determined to ensure his familys control of the government. The Tokugawa period
brings great change to the social history of Japan. The bureaucracy of the Tokugawas was
all-pervading. Not only were education, law, government and class controlled, but also
even the dress and behavior of each class was dictated. The traditional
class-consciousness of Japan hardened into a rigid class structure.
With the death of the shogun Tokagawa
Semochi, in August 1866, new struggles began to determine his replacement. Emperor Komei
died in February 1867, and Mutsuhito succeeded him. In November, the new Shogun, Keiki,
was forced to resign, and in January 1868, the young Emperor proclaimed the Shogunate
abolished. Imperial rule was restored in Japan. The abolition of the Shogunate ended 265
years of Tokugawa Family rule in Japan.
At little past two in the afternoon on the thirteenth
day of the tenth month of the first year of Meiji, which was November 26, 1868, in the
Gregorian calendar, the Emperor took up residence in Tokyo and thus symbolized the opening
of Japan's modern era. Tokyo was established as the new imperial capital and the arrival
of the Emperor there gave it legitimacy.
That the Meiji Restoration was called a restoration was
not mere chance. It was not a revolution, despite the changes it brought. The men of Meiji
restored the Emperor to his ancient place at the center of Japanese life and restored to
Japan the sense of national unity he represented. They renewed the vitality of existing
Japanese institutions and added new ones. The Restoration was engineered by the upper
class and it continued to be controlled from above with changes filtering down from the
top.
The Imperial ordinance, prohibiting the samurai class
from wearing swords in 1871, dealt a terrible blow to martial arts. The art of Jujitsu was
no exception. The MILITARY CONSCRIPTION ORDINANCE OF 1872 established an army and a navy
requiring all males who reached the age of twenty irrespective of class to register for
military service, and to be ready for all emergencies. In the conscript army, the ordinary
citizen was raised to the level of the samurai and was imbued with the Japanese warrior's
code.
The Imperial Rescript For Soldiers and Sailors, a
clearly Confucian document drafted in 1882, admonished them "to consider loyalty
their essential duty, "to have "sound discrimination of right and righteousness,
and to "make simplicity their aim". It was during this era that the founder of
Kodokan Judo, Jigoro Kano (1860-1938), appeared. He was born in Makagemachi of Hyogo
Prefecture, which is the current Kobe and came up to Tokyo in 1871 at the age of ten.
Master Kano showed great promise in his academic pursuits. From the time of his arrival in
Tokyo he attended private school where he pursued classical studies as well as yogaku, or
western learning.
He was physically frail in his early youth and the
thought of making himself stronger never left his mind. Kano learned that through the art
of Jujitsu a person of slight build could throw or subdue a larger and more powerful
opponent.
Master Kano decided to train in the art of Jujitsu and
possibly make himself physically fit. During 1877, while attending the Imperial University
in Tokyo, Kano found Hachinosuke Fukuda, the Master of the Tenjin Shinyo-Ryu. Kano
promptly enrolled with Fukuda as a pupil. After attending classes during the day at the
university, Kano could be found at the dojo practicing kata and randori. Due to his
enthusiasm and effort he surpassed the senior pupils and became a ranking member of the
dojo, with the title of Shihan-Dal, meaning, "representing the Master". The
techniques of this Ryu of Jujitsu, such as atemi-waza, shime-waza, and hodaku, were
superior in many technical aspects to other Ryu. They contributed much to broaden Kano's
scope
of the art. In 1879, with the untimely death of Fukuda,
Kano entered the school of Masammoto Iso, which was the main branch of the same Tenjin
Shinyo-Ryu.
Here Kano continued his efforts to master the art of
Jujitsu. During 1881, Master Iso passed away and Kano turned to an entirely new Jujitsu
Ryu, the Kito-Ryu, where he was able to continue his training under the guidance of Konen
likubo. When 22-year-old Kano took nine of his private students from the dojo of his
master likubo in February 1882, and set up his own dojo, Judo didn't automatically spring
into being. In fact master likubo came two or three times a week to help Kano's students.
They were still learning Jujitsu rather than Kodokan Judo. Possibly Kodokan Judo came into
being the day that Kano first defeated likubo. Until then Kano never had been able to
throw him. That day in randori (free practice), Kano blocked every move likubo made, then
applied two of his techniques - ukewaza and sumiotoshi - to throw the Jujitsu master no
less than three times.
Kano explained: "Force your
opponent to make his body rigid and lose his balance, and when he is helpless, you
attack". Upon hearing this, likubo replied: "Your skill in randori surpasses me,
so we will discontinue the practice sessions, but you alone should continue to study and
perfect the randori techniques. However, your kata form needs further improving so in this
area I will give you instruction.
The Tenjin Shinyo-Ryu, which Kano first studied, was
especially known for atemi-waza and katame-waza, while the Kito-Ryu excelled in nage-waza
techniques. Therefore, Master Kano was able to grasp the wide spectrum of Jujitsu,
including its philosophy. The three Jujitsu Masters from whom Kano received tutelage were
all foremost leaders in their respective Ryu and were also considered distinguished Grand
Masters of the whole art of Jujitsu. Kano received further instruction from many other
masters representing other Ryu. Jujitsu originally was not an application of consistent
principles of science but simply a group of methods of attack and defense devised by
different masters, one Ryu representing a group of methods devised by one master, and
other Ryu representing the devices of others. This being the case there was no fundamental
principle by which the validity of the various methods could be tested.

Techniques from a Tenjin Shinyo Ryu training
manual.
At this time, there seems to have been a
significant growth in Kano's systematic development. This is the point where his personal
philosophy coalesced into a coherent ideal. Kano having seriously studied Jujitsu came to
conceive of one all pervading principle by which the various techniques could be
evaluated, which was: Whatever be the object, it can best be achieved by the highest or
the maximum efficient use of mental and physical energy directed to that purpose or
aim". Going back into Japanese history, Kano studied all of the methods of attack and
defense taught by different masters. He found that there were many methods which could
stand his test, while others could not.
Preserving those which he deemed valid, and adding many
other techniques of his own device which he felt confident could stand the test, he
organized his own system of attack and defense in 1882. "JUDO" was the name of
the
principle together with its application, whereas
Jujitsu was the name for a group of different devices not founded on such a principle.
Kano named the institution where this principle was studied and its application taught,
the KODOKAN, which literally means "an institution for studying the way".
Inasmuch as the name Judo was used 250 years before Kano was born by the Jikishin-Ryu, it
is necessary to qualify Kano's as Kodokan Judo.
When Kano was graduated from the Imperial University in
1881, he also had accomplished his primary aim, which was to make himself physically fit.
Realizing that Jujitsu training could make an important contribution to everyday life, he
decided that such profound benefits should not stop with himself but should be promoted
widely among young people and carried on to future generations.
Kano taught in the government school, which educated
the children of the House of Peers. The Emperors son also attended this school. Kano
later filled the post of Director of the Bureau of Primary and Secondary Education in
Japan, and for twenty-four years served as the Principal of the Higher Normal College in
Tokyo. Through teaching Kodokan Judo to the future teachers of Japan, Judo was introduced
into the curriculum of the school children of Japan. Kano was thus able to propagate his
art. Judo was almost immediately recognized, as a national exercise and Kano's method of
teaching became a widely accepted instructional technique.
The true genius of Kano's Kodokan Judo is found in the
leg movements, which had no counterpart in previous Japanese Jujitsu systems. While Kano
was studying at the Tenjin Shinyo-Ryu he also studied European wrestling and Japanese sumo
systems and combined elements of each to allow his 105 pound body to throw a burly 170
pounder by the name of Fukushima, who took great delight in smashing him about the mat.
The Technique Kano used is now known as Kataguruma, or shoulder wheel. While keeping
balance on a focal hip point, he soon developed a strong goshi, or hip technique. A
brilliant invention of Kano's was the development of one-legged techniques.
In the past, Jujitsu techniques had been designed for
action against men in armor and were greatly restricted. The older Jujitsu techniques were
not designed to be used against a person in street clothes. The concept of off balancing
one's opponent and using one's body in an efficient manner was also a new concept to
martial arts. Kano started Kodokan Judo in 1882, at the Eishoji Temple. In his attempt to
develop a workable sport out of the great number of Jujitsu techniques, Kano ran into
trouble, because many people felt that those remnants of an obsolete political-social
system would be best forgotten. Even though Kano was a modernist, he felt that the old
knowledge, where applicable, should be refined and not destroyed.
Kodokan Judo became the focus of criticism from Jujitsu
experts, especially from Hikosuke Totsuka, who was the most influential Jujitsu expert
with a great number of followers. The other Jujitsu systems were suspicious of the
practical merits of Judo in combat. Between the Kodokan Judo and other Jujitsu Ryu there
developed a keen rivalry, especially between the Totsuka-Ryu and the Kodokan. In 1886,
under the auspices of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Board, a tournament between the two
opposing groups was held to decide the supremacy of the two forms of Japanese
self-defense. In the tournament, ten highly selected Kodokan experts competed, including
the "Great Four" of the Kodokan: Tsunejior Tomita, Sakujiro Yokoyama, Yoshiaki
Yamashita (who later went to the United States and taught Judo to Presideht Theodore
Roosevelt), and Shiro Saigo.
Through the early years when Judo was
developing at the expense of Jujitsu, Kano rose in the education field. He lectured at
various schools and colleges and was appointed Principal of the Tokyo Higher Normal
School. In 1889, he traveled to Europe for the first time as attach to the Ministry of
the Imperial Household, and represented the Ministry of National Education in China in
1902 and again in 1905. With such a fast rise in the demanding field of government
service, it is amazing that he was able to spend any time on Judo. During his lifetime
Kano developed a reputation as a scholar and spoke excellent English. At one time he gave
a lecture at the University of Southern California in his major field, which was Japanese
literature. Along with everything else, Kano had a great organizational talent. He built a
nucleus of first rate judoka around himself, and exhorted the other Jujitsu masters to
adopt his methods. By a firm but gracious example he saw the Kodokan Judo movement
flourish. His idea of education involved not only teaching but setting a good example as
well. His first students, mainly Yamashita, lsogai, Yokoyama, Saigo, Suzuki, Nagaoka,
Mifune, and Tomita emulated him and carried his teaching and example throughout Japan.
Dennis Helm is the
author of 2000 YEARS: Jujitsu and Kodokan Judo
2000 YEARS is
the product of more than a 22 year effort involving library research, hundreds of
interviews, and world wide travel. This is the history of early Jujitsu and later Kodokan
Judo starting with its founder "Jigoro Kano" as he studied various Jujitsu
systems. This led up to the Meiji period Police Bututsu Competitions between Kodokan Judo
and the best Jujitsu men of the period. These competitions are covered in as a great depth
as historically possible. The information is not available anyplace else.
Early American Judo
development is written from the prospective of those who lived through the times. This is
the official and authorized history of American Judo. There is no other! The book is text
with photographs.
$25.00 plus $5.50 S&H
Credit card orders via Email or postal address. Checks can be used for postal orders.
For further information of to
order:
Email: panda30256@usa.net
2000 YEARS
9907 Debbie Lane
Machesney Park, IL 61115-1530 |
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