- Robert Trias
Robert A. Trias (1923 – 1989), founded a
karate school in theUnited States Fact|date=February 2007. He also developedShuri-ryu karate, an eclectic style with roots in theOkinawa nShuri-te tradition.While serving in the
United States Navy duringWorld War II , Trias was stationed onTulagi in theSolomon Islands and was a Navy champion middleweight boxer. There he metTung Gee Hsing , a Chinese missionary of Chan (Zen ) Buddhism. Hsing often watched Trias work out and imitated his boxing footwork, and he asked to practice with Trias. Trias refused because Hsing was "just a tiny little guy," but Hsing was persistent and at last Trias agreed to spar with him. Hsing gave Trias "the biggest thrashing of his life" and Trias then asked Hsing to instruct him in the martial arts. [Article "Robert Trias: pioneer of U.S. karate" by Sergio Ortiz, Black Belt Magazine, April 1976, pages 36-39]Hsing taught Trias some
xingyi as well as some Okinawan Shuri-Te karate, which Hsing had learned fromChoki Motobu on Okinawa. Later, Trias studied with Hoy Yuan Ping whose lineage was from the Teshin Shinjo School of Kempo Ju-jitsu in Japan. Trias also held a 6th dan black belt in Kodokan JudoFact|date=February 2007 and studied under Yju Yamada. Trias was also mentored by Yasuhiro Konishi and Makoto Gima.When Trias left the Navy, he began teaching martial arts in his backyard in Phoenix, Arizona, he later opened his first karate school in Phoenix. Trias served as an officer of the Arizona State Highway Patrol for a number of years,Fact|date=June 2008 utilizing his self-defense knowledge on duty and teaching his fellow officers. He founded the United States Karate Association (USKA). Through his pioneering efforts in Karate, he became the United States' liaison with Korea, Japan, China, and Okinawa for many years. He was instrumental in promoting the first world karate tournament in 1963 in Chicago, IL. His rules for tournament competition are still used today with slight variation.
Trias' style was known as Shorei-Goju Ryu, Shorei-ryu and Shuri-ryu and any organizations claim to trace their roots to him and the USKA.Fact|date=June 2008
Trias died in 1989 of cancer leaving the Shuri-ryu system to his daughter Roberta Trias-Kelley, inheritor of Shuri-Ryu and Menkyo Kaiden.
Robert A. Trias is the author of "Karate is my Life""The Hand is my Sword", "The Pinnacle of Karate", "The Supreme Way", and "Render Yourself Empty".
Sources
Footnotes
Endnotes
* [http://www.triaskarate.com/ Robert a Trias]
* [http://www.shuri-ryu.com/trias.htm Robert A. Trias]
* [http://www.shuri-ryu.org/shuri-ryu/trias.htm Robert A. Trias]
* [http://www.suncoastkarate.com/Grandmaster_trias.htm Robert Trias]
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