Yoshukai Karate

Yoshukai Karate
Yōshūkai Karate
Also known as Yoshukan, Chito-Kai
Focus Striking
Hardness Full contact
Country of origin Japan, United States, Germany, Canada, Puerto Rico, Latvia, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
Creator Mamoru Yamamoto
Famous practitioners Mamoru Yamamoto, Mike Foster, Cheryl Wheeler-Dixon
Parenthood Chito-ryu
Ancestor arts Shorin-ryu, Shorei-ryu, Chinese martial arts, indigenous martial arts of the Ryūkyū Islands (Naha-te, Shuri-te, Tomari-te)
Olympic sport no

Yoshukai (養秀会 Yōshūkai?) karate is a branch discipline of the Japanese/Okinawan martial art, Karate-, or "Way of the Empty Hand." The three kanji (Japanese symbols) that make up the word Yoshukai literally translated mean “Training Hall of Continued Improvement.” However, the standardized English translation is "Striving for Excellence." Yoshukai Karate has been featured in Black Belt Magazine.[1][2][3]

Contents

Origins of Yoshukai Karate

The body of fighting and self-defense techniques which became Japanese Karate-do is thought to have originated about a thousand years ago in India and spread from there to China, Okinawa and finally to Japan in the early 1900s. Gichin Funakoshi (Funakoshi Gichin), founder of Shotokan karate, is considered to be most responsible for the systemization and introduction of karate to Japan. Afterward, many other masters emerged, including Tsuyoshi Chitose,[4] who developed Chito-ryu karate from a combination of Shorin-ryu and Shorei-ryu karate styles. After moving from Okinawa to Japan in 1922, Dr. Chitose began teaching karate in Kumamoto, Japan. He refined the Okinawan techniques based on his medical knowledge and officially founded his own style of karate in 1946, in 1952 naming it Chito-ryu, meaning “1,000 year-old style.”

In the late fifties, Dr. Chitose’s top ranking student and protégé was Mamoru Yamamoto (Yamamoto Mamoru). After establishing his own training dojo, Yamamoto adapted new fighting techniques and traditional weapons from Okinawa into Chito-Ryu. After leaving the Chito-Kai Federation in 1971, Yamamoto became noted for founding the style of karate known as Yoshukai.[5]

In 1957 American serviceman Michael G. Foster was stationed in Japan with the U.S. Air Force and began the study of judo and karate. After training in Chito-ryu karate with Yamamoto, he returned to America where he established Yoshukai style in the United States, later extended further by Dr. Chitose’s student Hiroyuki Koda, and others. Through the efforts of Foster and other of Chitose and Yamamoto’s students, Yoshukai Karate was successfully established as a world-wide martial arts style.

Mamoru Yamamoto

Mamoru Yamamoto (later called Katsuo) (b. 10 July 1938) began his formal training in the martial arts in Miyakonojo, Japan. He first studied judo, but began training in the Chito-ryu style of karate under Dr. Chitose at the age of fifteen[1] In 1959, Yamamoto and his wife Sumiko opened their first dojo in Kitakyushu, Japan in the Fujitani Judo Club. In the early 1960s, Chitose gave Yamamoto permission to start his own branch of Chito-Ryu karate under the name of Yoshukan, and in 1963 Chitose changed the third kanji of their branch's name from kan - meaning to stand alone - to kai - meaning association,[6] indicating a potential for growth within the organization.

During this early period, Yamamoto worked with Mas Oyama of Kyokushinkai Karate to develop the rules for Japanese full contact sparring to replace the sun dome tournament rule of the time. This rule meant that competitors must spar at full speed but could not make contact with one another,[7] which made judging of fighting very subjective. One competitor might move faster but the other could be more powerful, and it was up to the judge to determine which might win in the exchange of techniques. This development of new rules led to the modernization of tournament fighting in both Japan and the U.S.

Yamamoto was considered a tough fighter and top competitor in Japan and held the title of All-Japan Karate Open Tournament Champion from 1958 to 1960.[8][9] In the early days of his dojo, he established his school through a practice called dojo yabe in which a martial artist visited neighboring schools and fought with its top practitioners. The winner established their school as stronger, and if a school was badly defeated, they often closed their doors and stopped teaching.[citation needed]

Yamamoto represented Japanese Karate at the Canadian International Exposition in 1967, and also demonstrated Yoshukai Karate at the World's Fair in Japan in 1970.[8] Yamamoto and some of his students, including Mike Foster, accompanied Chitose on a promotional visit to Canada in 1967, where they conducted demonstrations, a clinic, and presided over the Canadian National Karate Association tournament. This trip was organized by Mas Tsuruoka, widely recognized as the father of Canadian Karate and, later, the founder of Tsuruoka Ryu.[10]

In 1971 Mamoru Yamamoto withdrew from the Japanese Chito-kai Karate Federation.[11] and became noted as the founder of his own Yoshukai style of karate.[5] In his departure, Yamamoto took with him the dojos established by his students in the United States.

Mike Foster

Mike Foster (b. 19 April 1940) was an American serviceman stationed in 1957 at Ituzuke Air Force Base, Japan. Foster first studied judo, and later karate with Watanabe Sensei, a Goju Ryu instructor who taught at the Itazuke Administration Annex base gym. Watanabe felt that Foster was a promising student and suggested that he study with Mamoru Yamamoto who was then still affiliated with Tsuyoshi Chitose's Chito-ryu. In 1964 Foster returned to Japan to test for second degree black belt and spent three weeks training at Yamamoto's dojo. He then returned to Japan in September 1964 to live and train in Yamamoto's dojo for approximately nineteen months.

Foster returned to the U.S. in 1966 as 4th degree black belt and became recognized as one of the top fighters in the U.S.A.[12] He was named the Director of the U.S.A. Yoshukai Karate Association by Yamamoto, and in this capacity established and headed karate schools in the United States which became part of the U.S. Chito-ryu Karate Federation.[13] He returned to Japan on other occasions to study for a total of ten years under Yamamoto, during which time Yamamoto separated from the Chito-ryu Federation.[14] Foster remained in the U.S. director position until 1980 when he stepped down and founded his own Yoshukai International Karate Association. In 1989 after a lawsuit, Foster was awarded the right to use the name "Yoshukai International Karate Association." [15]

Foster opened his first dojo in the U.S. in the mid-sixties at Tampa, Florida, and shortly afterward established the first of several Yoshukai Karate schools associated with colleges and universities at St. Leo College, Florida. From Tampa he moved to Orlando, Florida, where he kept a dojo during the early seventies. During the late seventies and eighties Foster maintained a dojo in Daytona, Florida. In the early nineties he relocated to Titusville, Florida, where he shared a hombu dojo (headquarters) for seven years with Aikido Sensei Tom Walker.[16] Foster continued to instruct senior grades at his hombu dojo in Titusville until 2008, when he retired from active teaching due to health reasons.

Hiroyuki Koda

Hiroyuki Koda (Koda Hiroyuki) (1944–1997) arrived in the United States in the fall of 1969 from Fukuoka, Japan. Koda was an instructor of the Yoshukan branch of the Chito-Kai under Tsuoshi Chitose, and expected to assist with the establishment of Yoshukan schools in the U.S. He located in Florida to work within dojos established by Mike Foster, and in 1971 Koda and his American wife Gwen Lisk Koda opened their first dojo in Lincoln, Illinois.[17]

The Yoshukai branch of Chito-Kai officially became Yoshukai karate in 1973.[18] Koda affiliated with the new U.S.A. Yoshukai style, and continued to assist with establishing and developing schools in the United States. With the assistance of Yoshukan black belt Rayburn Nichols, he moved his family to Birmingham, Alabama, and named his organization Mid-South Yoshukai. In 1975 Hiroyuki Koda assumed the U.S.A. director position vacated by Mike Foster and renamed the Mid-South Yoshukai the U.S. Yoshukai Karate Association (USYKA). In 1982, the Koda family moved to Texas, and in 1987 to Montgomery, Alabama, where Koda set up a honbu dojo (headquarters).

In 1997, Koda died from pancreatic and liver cancer, and the directorship of the U.S. Yoshukai Karate Association passed on to his eldest son, David Yuki Koda.

Kumite

Yoshukai kumite or sparring style is classified as full contact. Both Mamoru Yamamoto and Mike Foster adapted the traditional Chito-ryu technique to meet the changing requirements of tournament competition, and in the sixties and seventies, this adaptation made the Yoshuaki style very successful and advanced for its time.[2]

Yoshukai uses mainly forward, side and natural stances and technique that emphasizes lack of regression in movement. Ki is approximately 60 percent hard-focused, and 40 percent soft, meaning that the kumite or fighting style incorporates techniques similar to Aikido technique which turn an attack or use it to the advantage of the defender. Outside of Japan, techniques and stances are adapted from Japanese karate to fit taller Westerners with longer legs and higher hara or center of gravity. Although Yoshukai is considered a full-contact style, students are also trained to participate in light- to medium-contact sparring within the dojo to develop strategy and control of technique.

Kata

Traditional kata or forms from Chito-ryu (and occasionally other styles) are adapated to meet the philosophy and style of Yoshuaki Karate within the various organizations of the system. This list of kata includes traditional kanji script as best available[19]:

Name Kanji Description
Nijushichi 二十七 27 Movements
Zenshin Kotai 前進後退 Advancing and Retreating
Heian Kihon 1-4 (H-Forms) 平安 Peaceful Mind, 1-4
Shihohai 四方拝 Four Quarters
Gekisai 撃塞 Attack and Destroy
Tai Ho Jitsu 1 - 5 - -
Seisan 正整 Thirteen Hands
Niseishi 二十四歩 Twenty-four Hands
Rohai Sho 鷺牌 小 Vision of a Crane (minor)
Rohai Dai 鷺牌 大 Vision of a Crane (major)
Sochin 壯鎭 Tranquil Force
Tenshin 荘鎮 Twisting Body Motion
Mugen 無限 Endless
Bassai 披塞 To Penetrate a Fortress
Sanchin 三戰 Three Battles
Chinto 鎮東 Subdue the East
Kusanku 公相君 Viewing the Sky/Night Fighting
Sanshiryu 三十六歩 Thirty-four Hands/Dragon
Ryusan 龍山 Dragon Spiraling Upward
Tensho 転掌 Rolling Palms
Seienchin 征遠鎮 Calm Within the Storm
Tai Ho Jitsu 1 - 10 - -
Hen Shi Ho Jitsu 1 - 50 - -
Hanten - -
Rinten - -
Kakeite - -
Nage Waza - Throwing Technique

Kobudo

Two sai

Kobudo translates as “the way of weapons.” Yoshukai karate uses a number of Okinawan weapons which were originally farm tools converted into defensive implements. Yoshukai study includes traditional Okinawan kobudo as an extension of karate technique, and mastering the use of martial arts weapons may be required for advancing in rank. These weapons include the Nunchaku, , Sai, Kama, Tonfa, and sometimes the Katana or Samurai sword.[3]

Yoshukai Karate organizations

In the 21st Century, the Yoshukai Karate style is represented by numerous local, regional and international organizations, some of which are listed below.

Yoshukai International

Yoshukai (養秀会) International is the karate organization founded by Michael G. Foster in 1977 and derived from Yoshukai karate. Yoshuaki International is adapted for the different body type of U.S. and European practitioners. In Mike Foster's Yoshukai International, stances and techniques were modified to incorporate Foster’s ideas about weapon alignment and elimination of regression.

Foster studied with Yamamoto in Japan for a period of ten years[20] and in 1966 brought the system to the United States. In 1977 Mike Foster left Yamamoto Sensei's organization and established the Yoshukai International Karate Association.[21] At the same time Hiroyuki Koda established the U.S. Yoshukai Karate Association (USYKA).[22]

Foster was noted as a karate champion in the early days of his career, and after retirement from active competition, remained a premiere karate official and teacher in America.[23] Other noted champions and officials associated with the style include Larry Pate (retired),[24] Calvin Thomas[25] and Mike Smith. Yoshukai International has dojos all over the world,[26] including the U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico, Germany, Latvia, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.[27]

Depending on the source, the outline of the crest patch represents a cherry blossom or possibly Yata no Kagami (八咫鏡), the sacred mirror of Japan which stands for wisdom and honesty. The three kanji symbols that make up the word "Yoshukai" across the top of the crest (養秀会), literally translated, mean: Training Hall of Continued Improvement. The flag in the center of the crest is the Nisshōki (日章旗 "sun flag") or Hinomaru (日の丸 "sun disc") and the kanji symbol superimposed on it (忍) is “Nin” which stands for patience.

Dojo Kun or rules are:

  • 1. To uphold the Dojo name
  • 2. To seek perfection of character
  • 3. To be faithful
  • 4. To endeavor in all things
  • 5. To respect others
  • 6. To refrain from violent behavior

Most dojos within Yoshukai International use four belt colors without stripes to recognize the standard kyu (below black belt) and dan (above black belt) ranks, although some dojo use belts with stripes to indicate the specific ranks.

Due to Mike Foster's success as a practitioner and instructor, Yoshukai International has established and maintains schools all over the world, including throughout the U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico, Germany, Latvia, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.[28]

Yoshukai Karate International

Yoshukai Karate International was formed on June 28, 2008, due to differences in management philosophy between Mike Foster and the Yoshukai International’s separately incorporated testing board. The Board continues to function as a not-for-profit corporation doing business as Yoshukai Karate International.[29]

U.S. Yoshukai

U.S. Yoshukai Karate is one of two main branches that grew out of Yoshukai karate in the U.S. David Koda's U.S. Yoshukai Karate Association dojos are located in the southern part of the United States (Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee) with the headquarters located in Montgomery, Alabama.[30]

In 1973, the Yoshukan branch of Chito-kai became Yoshukai Karate, an independent karate style. The Yoshukai Karate organization grew quickly as students reached black belt status and began opening schools throughout Alabama and surrounding states. Its growth was further accelerated when several instructors from other styles transferred their entire schools to the organization. In 1975 Koda assumed directorship of United States Yoshukai schools under Mamoru Yamamoto and renamed his organization U.S. Yoshukai Karate.

In 1997, after Soke Koda died of pancreatic and liver cancer, the directorship of the U.S. Yoshukai Karate Association passed to his eldest son, David Yuki Koda, though managerial duties remained with Gwen Koda until 2000 when she passed these duties to David Koda's wife, Adrienne Koda.

U.S. Yoshukai Karate is represented by dojos in Montgomery, Opp, Albertville, Hoover, Bessemer, Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, and Enterprise, Alabama; Joelton and Spring Hill, Tennessee; Tallahassee, Florida; Harrodsburg and Bowling Green, Kentucky; Bloomington, Illinois; and Los Angeles, California.[31]

World Yoshukai Karate Kobudo Organization

At Katsuoh Yamamoto's request, Hiroaki Toyama and Mike Culbreth established the World Yoshukai Karate Kobudō Organization (WYKKO) in 2000 as an extension of the Japanese Yoshukai organization. Yoshukai America, which was renamed World Yoshukai, is directly managed under the headquarters of Yoshukai Japan and its offices are located in Pensacola, Florida, and Dothan, Alabama. World Yoshukai is the only U.S. organization directly administered by Yoshukai Japan. The organization is led by the director and Hiroaki Toyama (vice president of Yoshukai) and Mike Culbreth (vice president of Yoshukai). World Yoshukai now has more than 1,000 members in more than 30 branches throughout the United States, including Florida, Alabama, Texas, Georgia, California, Missouri, Nebraska and New Mexico.[32]

Yoshukai Canada

The Yoshukan Karate Association in Ontario is led by Kancho (System Chief Instructor and Founder) Earl Robertson, and draws from both the Yoshukai International and Chito-Ryu systems. Kancho Robertson has over 35 years of teaching experience and holds black belt rank in several karate systems. He studied in Japan under Tsuyoshi Chitose, and holds a 6th dan (Degree) black belt and Shihan (Master Instructor) rank in Yoshukai International Karate under Hanshi Mike Foster. Robertson is the author of Advanced Kumite: Karate Fighting Skills.[33]

Yoshukai British Columbia is headed by Mark Hepburn who holds a 5th dan (fifth degree) black belt and Shihan rank in Yoshukai International. Hepburn began training in martial arts in 1975. After training with Yoshukai black belt Nick Nibler, he attended a clinic conducted by Mike Foster in 1993 and affiliated with Yoshukai International. Hepburn heads three dojos in British Columbia in Surrey, the Township of Langely (Aldergrove dojo) and New Westminster (Queensborough dojo).

Hepburn was the Karate BC Tournament Director (1996–99), a Director on the Karate BC Executive Committee (2003–2005), the BC Winter Games Zone 3 Representative (Fraser Valley) for karate for over ten years, a coach for the Zone 3 Karate team for the BC Winter Games for over ten years and was a Director (secretary) on the Executive Committee for the National Karate Association of Canada (2006–2008).[34] The BC Yoshukai International Karate School is a member of Karate BC, the provincial associate of Karate Canada and Sport Canada.[35]

Yoshukai Germany

Mike Foster was invited by German karate pioneer Peter Trapski to conduct demonstrations in Germany in the late seventies and entered and won the Duisberg Euro-Cup competition in 1978. In the same year, Otto Rumann established the first German Yoshukai school in Dortmund, Germany, and later expanded to other cities. He now maintains his hombu dojo (headquarters) in Dortmund, and directs other schools in Altena, Essen, Hildesheim, Kaiserslautern, Karlsruhe, and three schools in Hagen, Germany.

German Yoshukai schools fall under the leadership of Yoshukan Dortmund. Dojos are a members of Yoshukai-International Karate Association and also of the German Karate Federation.[36]

Yoshukai Latin America

William “Bill” Solano was born in 1942 in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, and was raised in the U.S. His first experience in the martial arts was in 1958 in New York City in the art of Jujutsu. In 1969 he began the study of Kung Fu in lower Manhattan, N.Y. In 1972 he moved to Daytona Beach, Florida, where he began studying Yoshukai Karate with Mike Foster. At the end of 1975, Solano returned to Puerto Rico and established his first dojo, where he continued to practice the Yoshukai Karate style until 1981.[37] In 1991 full directorship of the Puerto Rico Yoshukai organization was assumed by Miguel Alejandro, with schools in Cupey, Carolina, Cidra, and two in Trujillo Alto. In 2009 Alejandro formally established Yoshukai Latin America.[38]

Yoshukai Australazia

Tom Somerville, Neil Frazer and Warwick Lobb were instrumental in establishing Yoshukai Karate in New Zealand and later in Australia. Tom Somerville was a New Zealander who lived in the United States and trained with Mike Foster’s students Charles Scanlan and Kevin Bradford in New Jersey in the mid seventies. He returned to New Zealand and in 1979 set up a dojo at the University of Canterbury. In the early 1980s, Neil Frazer and Warwick Lobb traveled from New Zealand to New Jersey to complete their black belt training, and Neil Frazer took over running the Canterbury club with assistance from Warwick. In 1990 Dave Leathwick started a club in Palmerston North known as the Tokomaru Dojo, and in 2004 Darel Hall started the third New Zealand club in Wellington.

Neil Frazer maintains a dojo in Sydney, Australia and continues to direct Yoshukai Australasia. The dispersed nature of New Zealander karateka means that New Zealand Yoshukai practitioners maintain their training in Malaysia, Canada, France and England. The organization operates a Facebook.com group to provide news and communications.[39]

References

  1. ^ a b Buttitta, Bob. Yoshukai Karate: Not for the Weak of Heart. Black Belt Magazine, May 1984, p. 54.
  2. ^ a b Klase, Bill. "Rough, Tough Yoshukai Karate: Traditional Karate's Link to Full-contact Fighting." Black Belt Magazine, March 1988, p. 56.
  3. ^ a b Baker, Timothy. "The Weapons of Yoshukai Karate: Nunchucks, Swords, Sickles, Staffs, Sai and Bo." Black Belt Magazine. January 1992, p. 24.
  4. ^ Kentucky Budo-kan: A Short History of Chito-ryu
  5. ^ a b Heinze, Thomas. Die Meister des Karate und Kobudo: Teil 1: Vor 1900
  6. ^ Yoshukai Karate International
  7. ^ Nakayama, Masatoshi. Best Karate, Vol.5: Heian, Tekki
  8. ^ a b Yoshukai Karate History
  9. ^ Colling, Michael. "Chitose Tsuyoshi: A Bridge Through Time". http://www.dragon-tsunami.org/Dtimes/Pages/article33.htm
  10. ^ Chito-ryu US History: 1950 - 1970
  11. ^ Yoshukai Karate History
  12. ^ Colling, Michael. "Chitose Tsuyoshi: A Bridge Through Time". Dragon Times. http://www.dragon-tsunami.org/Dtimes/Pages/article33.htm. Retrieved 9 July 2010. 
  13. ^ "Chito-ryu US History: 1950 - 1970". Chito-ryu.com. http://www.chito-ryu.com/index2.html. Retrieved 9 July 2010. 
  14. ^ "Development of World Yoshukai". Yoshukai Karate, Japan. http://yoshukai.jp/en/Development_us.html. Retrieved 9 July 2010. 
  15. ^ (Mike Foster, et al. v. United States Yoshukai Karate Association, CA no. 89-D-741-N)
  16. ^ Jones, Todd. "Interview with Tom Walker". Aikido Journal. http://www.aikidojournal.com/article?articleID=166. Retrieved 9 July 2010. 
  17. ^ "History of Yoshukai". website. http://www.yoshukaikarateinternational.com/history.html. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
  18. ^ "Chitose Tsuyoshi: A Bridge Through Time". website. http://www.dragon-tsunami.org/Dtimes/Pages/article33.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
  19. ^ Karaté
  20. ^ History of Yoshukia International Karate
  21. ^ Yoshukai
  22. ^ Yoshukai Development
  23. ^ History of Yoshukai International Karate
  24. ^ Cirone, George D. "Karate Kop-Out." Black Belt Magazine. June 1970, p. 48.
  25. ^ "New England Open Draws Top Competition." Black Belt Magazine. October 1992, p. 75.
  26. ^ Instructors
  27. ^ History of Yoshukai Karate
  28. ^ "History". Yoshukai Karate of Tampa Bay. http://yoshukaitampabay.com/History.aspx. Retrieved 9 July 2010. 
  29. ^ Yoshukai International Karate Association
  30. ^ "Instructor Contacts". website. http://www.yoshukai.com/contact.shtml. Retrieved 2008-01-17. 
  31. ^ U.S. Yoshukai Karate
  32. ^ "World Yoshukai Karate Kobudo Organization". website. http://www.wykko.com. Retrieved 2008-06-20. 
  33. ^ Yoshukai Ontario
  34. ^ Instructors
  35. ^ Yoshukai British Columbia
  36. ^ Yoshukai Germany
  37. ^ William Solano Biography
  38. ^ Yoshukai Latin America
  39. ^ Yoshukai Australazia

External links

See also


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