There are more than 1,000 different forms of martial arts
scattered around the world and dating back more than 2,000
years ago. When the martial arts started and where no one
really knows. In our western culture we can date the
development of martial arts such as archery and wrestling to
ancient Greece. However there is evidence that martial art
training dates to Babylonian times.
In the far east development of the Oriental martial arts is a
bit more obscure. It is generally accepted that the martial
arts developed its roots in ancient China among the monks who
used weaponless fighting techniques to protect themselves. It
is not known which type of unarmed techniques were used first,
but it is clear that specialization was the custom.
Combinations of different forms of fighting were unknown.
Despite the ruling classes wanting to keep unarmed combat
techniques secret, through commerce and migration, the martial
arts spread from China throughout the east. The earliest
chronicle concerning the martial arts is the Nihon Shoki which
discusses Japanese wrestling and dates back to 720 AD. Since
then, the martial arts have developed into a variety of
systems that were the precursors of today's modern martial
arts. Despite the development of many types of weaponry,
unarmed combat remains a skill practiced all over the world.
JUDO'S HISTORY
The origin of Japan's martial arts is vague, and what we know
of it, is more legend than truth. However, the takenouchi-ryu
martial art system founded in 1532 is considered the beginning
of Japan's jujitsu forms. The system's founder taught jujitsu
in a structured and methodical manner.
For the next several hundred years, the martial arts were
refined by Samurai who made a lifetime study of some twenty or
thirty martial arts. Of these arts only one was based on
weaponless self defense -- jujitsu. By the mid-1800's more
than 700 different jujitsu systems existed. The most popular
were takenouchi-ryu, jikishin-ryu, kyushinryu, yoshin-ryu,
mirua-ryu, sekiguchi-ryu, kito-ryu, and tenshin-shinyo-ryu;
the last two were instrumental in Judo's development.
It was during this time that Japanese politics disintegrated
into disarray. Commodore Perry's visit to Japan in the
mid-1850's also changed Japanese civilization by opening up a
new world to them. In 1868 Imperial rule was restored (Meiji
Restoration) and the decline of the Samurai class started
along with a rapid decline in all martial arts. Although the
government did not officially ban the martial arts, people
were not encouraged to learn or practice them since the state
was considered more important than the individual. Jujitsu
literally fell into disuse. What was once the glory of the
samurai was now looked down on and many well established
jujitsu schools began to disappear.
If the budo concept was to survive the Meiji Restoration, it
had to change and become a tool to cultivate an individual and
make him a better person for the good of all. As a result budo
found a home in physical education and sport.
Sport provided teamwork which was good for all and also
developed the individual. It was a complete physical
education; not just a game. Although self defense techniques
were included in the training, emphasis was on using the
techniques in a holistic manner. Dr. Jigoro Kano is credited
with jujitsu's survival of the Meiji Restoration. He took
jujitsu and adapted it to the times. His new methodology was
called Judo.
In 1882, Dr. Jigoro Kano (The Father of Judo) made a
comprehensive study of these ancient self defense forms and
integrated the best of these forms into a sport which is known
as Kodokan Judo.
Jigoro Kano
ON THE FOUNDING OF JUDO
In the seaside town of Mikage, near Kobe, Japan, Jigoro Kano
was born on October 28, 1860. In 1871, Kano's family moved to
Tokyo.
As a boy, Kano was an undersized, slender, weak, and sickly
child with one sickness after another. Against his doctor's
advice, Kano decided to do something to improve his health and
at the same time learn how to defend himself against bullies.
At the age of 18 he enrolled in the Tenjin Shinyo ryu school
of jujitsu. Under the guidance of Fukuda Hachinosuke, Kano
began his long journey to physical well-being. The Tenjin
Shinyo ryu was a soft martial art that stressed harmony rather
than combat, yet at the same time included striking and
grappling techniques.
After studying at the Tenjin Shinyo ryu, Kano transferred to
the Kito ryu school to study under Tsunetoshi Iikubo. This
brand of jujitsu was much softer and stressed moderate
workouts with attention given to freedom of action, the
abstract symbolism connected with physical technique, and
throwing techniques.
It was during these times that Kano began a comprehensive and
systematic study of other forms of jujitsu such as
sekiguchi-ryu and seigo-ryu. He started this project out of
respect for his masters, but he soon he craved for a mental
knowledge that was lacking in their teachings. He sought to
understand the superior control that his teachers had
mastered. He also studied the manuscripts developed by the
founders of various schools, the I Ching, (Book of Changes),
and Lao-Tsze's philosophy.
Around 1880 Kano started rethinking the jujitsu techniques he
had learned. He saw that by combining the best techniques of
various schools into one system he could create a physical
education program that would embody mental and physical skill.
In addition, he believed that the techniques could be
practiced as a competitive sport if the more dangerous
techniques were omitted.
So in 1882, having pulled from ancient jujitsu the best of its
throws and grappling techniques, added some of his own, and
removed such dangerous techniques as foot and hand strikes.
Kano at the age of 22, presented his new sport--Judo. He
called this sport Kodokan Judo. The term Kodokan breaks down
into ko (lecture, study, method), do (way or path), and kan
(hall or place). Thus it means "a place to study the way."
Similarly Judo breaks down into ju (gentle) and do (way or
path) or "the gentle way."
Kano established his Judo school, called the Kodokan, in the
Eishoji Buddhist temple in Tokyo which grew in size and later
moved. The first Kodokan had only 12 mats (12 feet by 18
feet), and nine students in the first year. Today the Kodokan
has over 500 mats and more than a million visitors a year.
Kano's devotion to Judo did not interfere with his academic
progress. He pursued his study of literature, politics and
political economy, and graduated from Tokyo Imperial
University in 1881.
In 1886, because of rivalry between jujitsu schools and Judo,
a contest was held to determine the superior art. Kano's Judo
students won the competition easily, thus establishing the
superiority of Judo, its popular principles and its practical
techniques.
The categorization of Kodokan Judo was completed about 1887.
The Kodokan had three broad aims: physical education, contest
proficiency and mental training. Its structure as a martial
art was such that it could be practiced as a competitive
sport. Blows, kicks, certain joint locks, and other techniques
too dangerous for competition, were taught only to the higher
ranks.
Starting in 1889 Kano left Japan to visit Europe and the U. S.
He traveled abroad a eight times to teach Judo and several
times to attend the Olympics and its committee meetings. Often
in the face of extreme hardship, several of Kano's students
devoted their lives to develop Judo in foreign countries.
In 1892 Judo began to spread its wings across the world when
Takashima Shidachi lectured the Japan Society in London on the
history and development of Judo.
In 1895 Kano classified the Judo throws into the Go Kyo No
Waza. In 1900, the Kodokan Dan Grade Holders Association was
established.
On July 24, 1905, representatives of the leading jujitsu
schools (ryu) of Japan, gathered at the Butokukai Institute in
Kyoto to agree upon the forms of Kodokan Judo and to continue
the development of the technical forms of the sport. The
ancient jujitsu techniques of each particular school were to
be preserved in kata (pre-arranged form) for posterity.
In 1907, Gunji Koizumi arrived in the United States to teach
Judo.
In 1909, the system underwent a big change and the Kodokan
became an official Japanese foundation. In the same year
Jigoro Kano became the first Japanese member of the
International Olympic Committee
By 1910 Judo was a recognized sport that could be safely
engaged in and in 1911 it was adopted as a part of Japan's
educational system. In the same year, the Kodokan Judo
Instructors' Training Department, Kodokan Black Belt
Association and Japan Athletic Association were formed.
Beginning with the fifth Olympiad in Stockholm, Kano attended
every Olympic Game and International Olympic Committee meeting
and became a leading figure in international sport.
Kodokan Judo underwent an evaluation by its members in 1920.
The Go Kyo No Waza was revised to include only 40 throws.
Eight throws from the previous classification were discarded.
Judo in Europe in 1921 -- osotogari, osotomakikomi, seoinage
In 1921 the Judo Medical Research Society was born.
The Kodokan mottoes, Seriyoku-zenyo (maximum efficiency) and
Jita-kyoei (mutual welfare and benefit), emphasize moral and
spiritual training in addition to the physical training of
Judo. The ultimate goal of Judo was to perfection the
individual so that he can be of value to society. This
spiritual phase developed gradually and was completed around
1922. In the same year the Kodokan Cultural Judo Society was
established.
In his lifetime, Kano attained a doctorate degree in Judo, a
degree equivalent to the twelfth dan, awarded to the
originator of Judo only. He constantly worked to ensure the
development of athletics and Japanese sport in general, and as
a result is often called the "Father of Japanese Sports." In
1935, he was awarded the Asahi prize for his outstanding
contribution to the organizing of sport in Japan during his
lifetime.
Apart from being an innovator and administrator, Kano was also
a skilled player as testified to by a high-ranking Judoka who,
when asked about his experience in competing against Kano,
said, 'It was like fighting with an empty jacket"!'
While returning home from an IOC meeting in Cairo where he
succeeded in having Tokyo nominated as a site for the 1940
Olympics, a lifetime devoted to Judo ended when Kano died of
pneumonia aboard the S. S. Hikawa Maru on 4 May 1938, at the
age of seventy-eight years .
World War II saw a different development of Judo. Instead of
being used for sport, Judo was being taught as a combat skill.
Those selected for commando and special services training
often achieved a high standard of expertise.
When Japan hosted the 1964 Olympics, Judo was given its first
opportunity as an event. Of the sixteen medals awarded for
Judo, Japan won three gold medals, and one silver medal. Judo
was no longer a Japanese sport but had developed to become an
international sport.
For more than sixty years the structure of Kodokan Judo had
not changed. However in 1982 the Kodokan revised the Go Kyo No
Waza by reintroducing the 8 techniques that were discarded in
1920 and by adding 17 new techniques. These sixty-five
techniques became known as "The 65 Techniques of Kodokan
Judo."
Judo instructors in the Americas early in 1900 There have been
two main developments in Judo over the years. The first was
the introduction of weight categories. In the early days,
weight differences were not considered important. Everyone
fought everyone else, with the result that, if two players
were equally matched in skill, the bigger man usually won.
There was much opposition to the introduction of weight
categories. Some masters feared that it meant the end of Judo
as a skillful art. Initially there were three categories, and
later this was made into five. Inclusion of the sport in the
Olympic Games in 1964 helped to hasten this important reform.
The second development was the teaching of Judo to children.
In the early days, it was thought much too dangerous to teach
children because they would not have the self-discipline to
avoid using it outside the club. Today many clubs are composed
largely of junior membership.
There are different styles of Judo. With its inclusion in the
Olympics, there has been a shift toward a contest style
practice. In clubs where this style is taught, practice
becomes largely a continuous contest. Other schools stress
skill. They favor repetitive movements to make them
instinctive, and the development of speed through practice
with little resistance. Such clubs usually also teach the kata,.
Such clubs could be considered traditional Judo clubs.
JUDO IN THE UNITED STATES
1974 Judo demonstration for President Ford America's first
introduction to Judo was in the late 1800's. In 1904,
Yoshitsugu (Yoshiaki) Yamashita, one of Kano's students,
traveled to the US and taught this Japanese sport to Theodore
Roosevelt and West Point cadets. Although many local clubs and
regional associations developed, attempts to organize Judo on
a national basis were not successful. During the early 1930's
Judo was taught at several colleges in California. In 1932
Kano lectured on Judo at the University of Southern
California. In this same year four US Judo associations were
formed and later became recognized by the Kodokan as
representatives of American Judo.
In 1949, Ruth Gardener became the first foreign female student
to study at the Kodokan. Her objective in visiting Japan was
to study for second degree black belt ranking. One of the
first Japanese women to travel overseas to teach Judo was
Keiko Fukuda, now 9th dan. She traveled to Australia and the
Philippines, and settled in the United States to live.
It was not until after World War II that American Judo began
developing on a national basis. Many American servicemen
studied Judo in Japan during the occupation and then returned
home to teach it. As a result the Armed Forces Judo
Association (AFJA) was established.
American Judo received a further boost in the early 1950's
when General Curtis Lamay required its teaching to US Air
Force personnel in the Strategic Air Command. In 1953 Judo was
officially recognized as an AAU sport and national tournaments
have been held since.
Kano made drastic changes in ancient jujitsu to suit the needs
of his time; the acceptance of change is inherent in Judo.
Everything about this martial art encourages us to make
changes as required. In today's globalization of people and
economy, Judo will undergo tremendous change. Its adaptability
lends itself to the changing needs of society and the
individual.
Today Judo is enjoyed by more than 400,000 men, women and
children. There are many reasons for learning Judo. Judo
provides exercise, relaxation, sport, an interesting
challenge, balance, coordination, self-protection and
self-confidence. Judo offers a fellowship unlike other sports,
and develops a keen desire to coordinate mind and body. One
soon realizes that sheer weight, height, strength, and age are
not the governing factors of one's ability.
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