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FURTHER
HISTORY
OF GOJU-RYU
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By
kind permission of Shihan George Picard,Glenridge Martial Arts Academy,
Ontario,Canada.
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Okinawa Goju-Ryu Karate is
unique in the world of martial arts. Where other schools of Karate have
divided and detached into splinter groups, Goju-Ryu has remained the closest
to the original teachings of its two main contributors. This page deals
largely with the general history that effected all Okinawan and ultimately,
Japanese Karate. Okinawa Goju-Ryu Karate is very well defined in its history
and lineage. From the teachers of Chinese Kempo master RyuRyuKo to Kanryo
Higa(shi)onna (1853-1915), to his successor and most devoted student Chojun
Miyagi (1888-1953), the founder of Goju-Ryu Karate, to his most devoted
student, elected successor, and founder of the JUNDOKAN Ei'ichi Miyazato
(1922-1999), to its present chairman Koshin Iha, Okinawa Goju-Ryu has
remained largely unchanged from its original Chinese combative roots.Because
of Okinawa Goju-Ryu's 400 years of traceable, unbroken history, in 1998
the Dai Nippon Butokukai, the society that governs all Japanese and Okinawan
martial arts in Japan, recognized Okinawa Goju-Ryu
as the ONLY form of Karate, Japanese
or Okinawan, as an ancient martial art. Placing Goju-Ryu alongside
other Japanese arts like jujutsu and kenjutsu, which have lineages of
over 900 years, is a huge accomplishment. Secondly, since Karate is Okinawan
by birth, such an honor by Japanese society makes the distinction that
much more impressive. The Satsuma Samurai Clan, after
being exiled from Japan, invaded Okinawa and stormed Shuri Castle. The
Okinawan king and family were taken to Japan where they were kept as political
prisoners. Okinawa became a puppet state of the Satsuma Clan and Japan,
being forced to keep a false loyalty with the Chinese Emperor to maintain
economic and political ties. It is a misconception that the Okinawans
and the Japanese Samurai battled each other. The Samurai depended on the
Okinawans for food, labor and other goods. Therefore, they protected the
Okinawans from bandits, piracy, looting, etc. and in return the Okinawans
gave a form of devotion and loyalty. The abolishment of the Samurai class
wearing the sword and top-knot, marked by the downfall of the Tokugawa
Shogunate, and the beginning of the Mejii Restoration Era in 1868, brought
Japan and Okinawa out of the age of fuedalism and into "democracy"
and the modern world. The Mejii Era focused on promoting education,etiquette,to
increase morality and nationalism. The new society eagerly endorsed sports
and recreation to advance these new virtues to which modern martial arts
were born. The secret practices of Ryukyu Kempo (toudi-jutsu) was no longer
necessary and began to emerge openly as a means to preserve and propagate
Okinawan culture. Demonstrations for the Royalty of Okinawa and Japan
helped bring about an acceptance by the Japanese people. Originally, the idoegrams for
Karate meant "China Hand", with the first character pronounced
"tou" or "kara" representing China's Tang dynasty(618-907).
This demonstrates the strong ties that Okinawa had with China. 1905 was
the first time the present terminology for "kara", meaning "empty"
or "void", was used. However, this definiton does not refer
to a "weaponless" art as most intend. Herein, "kara"
comes to represent a deeper, spiritual embodiment of more than just the
physical aspect of martial arts training. Through diligent physical, mental
and moral development, the Karate practitioner is unlimited or "void
of limits" in their abilities to accomplish the most difficult of
tasks.The suffix "-do", as used in judo, kendo, aikido and other
arts, means "way" or "path" (pronounced "dao"
in Chinese), was added making Karate-Do another avenue by which the Japanese
could teach and spread harmony through physical exercise and organized
sports. An attempt to organize all Okinawan Karate styles into a single
colaboration through shared terminology of technique and "public"
kata was interrupted by WW II. Most of the Shuri-te and Tomari-te schools
(Shorin-Ryu) had begun the transition, but Goju-Ryu had not been affected
by the disintegration and re-organization process. (My Italics.Ed) The naming of Goju-Ryu came
more by accident than by design. Shinzato Jin'an, who was Miyagi's senior
student, gave a public demonstration while in Japan. When asked what this
unique style of self-defense was called, he could not answer as the Okinawan
masters used no defined terms to identify their arts into styles as the
Japanese had done for centuries. Upon his return to Okinawa, he discussed
with Miyagi what had transpired and Miyagi decided it was necessary to
have a name for his art in order to cooperate with other Japanese martial
arts and to identify his unique style. He was the first of the Okinawan
masters to officially name his art and have it registered with the Dai
Nippon Butokukai. Although he named his art Goju-Ryu, he seldom used the
name nor did he raise any signs using it. "Go" can mean hard,
explosive, resiliant, impenetrable (Yang in Chinese) and "Ju"
means soft, yeilding , pliant, malleable (Yin in Chinese). Though there
are much deeper meanings, Goju-Ryu literally means the "Hard and
Soft School". This but only one example of Miyagi's exertion to maintain
the Chinese origins of his art and reverence for his teachers. (Back to KARATE HISTORY ) |