|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Funakoshi
Gichin (1868-1957)
was
the founder of the Shotokan-ryu style of Karate. Funakoshi
was born in the Okinawan capital of Shuri into a family of the Shizoku
class (upper class).He began his karate training at the age of 12,
with master Azato and then with Master Itosu. He worked for many
years as a primary school teacher, but then resigned to open a karate
school. He was chosen by the Okinawa Karate Masters for a karate
demonstration to be held in Kyoto, in 1922. He remained in Japan
and began to teach karate in some Tokyo University clubs.
Master Gichin Funakoshi was instructed by Yasutsune Azato and Yasutsune
Itosu. He was also responsible for changing (or defining, depending
how you look at it) the meaning of the word Karate-do. He changed the "kara"
symbol in Karate from the old symbol, meaning "China",
to the new symbol, meaning "empty". In his book Karate-Do
Nyumon, he writes: "Just as an empty valley can carry a resounding
voice, so must the person who follows the Way of Karate make himself
void or empty by ridding himself or all self-centeredness and greed.
At first times were very hard, but soon karate became to grow; in
1935 Funakoshi pupils built the Shotokan dojo, and karate was taught
in many places in Japan.
|
|
Make
yourself empty within, but upright without. This is the real meaning
of the 'empty' in Karate. "...Once
one has perceived the infinity of forms and elements in the universe,
one returns to emptiness, to the void. In other
words, emptiness is none other than the true form of the universe.
The 2nd World War was a ruin for karate. The Shotokan was destroyed,
karate people was dispersed, many died. Okinawa was nearly destroyed
too. After the war Funakoshi reorganized karate in Japan, Gichin
Funakoshi died in Tokyo
in 1957. |
|
|
|
|
There are various
fighting techniques - yarijutsu (spear techniques) and bojitsu (stick
techniques), for example - and forms of martial arts,
such as Judo and Kendo. All share an essential principle
with Karate, but Karate alone explicitly states the basis
of all martial arts. Form equals emptiness; emptiness
equals form. The use of the character for "empty"
in Karate is indeed based on this principle."
The result of
this change is that Karate-do, which formerly translated loosely
to "Chinese hand", now translates to 'the way of the
empty hand'.
|
|
Here are some photos taken from the
book Funakoshi published in 1924: "Rentan Goshin Karate-jutsu".
From them we can see how different the old Shotokan style of karate
was.
|
|
|
|
|
For
more of these photos please check out the links page
|
|
Sensei Keinosuke Enoeda 9th Dan

|
Sensei
Enoeda was born in Kyushu, an island in the South of Japan, on July
4th 1935. A strong and natural athlete, he initially took up baseball,
kendo, and judo, as did many of his contemporaries - these being
the popular sports in Japan at that time. He proved particularly
adept at Judo, and by the age of 16 he had reached 2nd Dan. However,
as is often the way, fate guided him to a demonstration by two top
Karate exponents from the famous Takashoku University. The two Karateka,
Senseis Irea and Okazaki, so impressed him, that there and then,
he decided to channel his energy into Karate.
He enrolled
at Takashoku University, joined the Karate section, and within two
years was the proud holder of Shodan. Another two years found him
Club Captain.
One his teachers
was the great Master and founder of modern Shotokan Karate, Funakoshi
Gichin, whose instruction and advice is still a source of inspiration
to him to this day.
|
|
|
|
He
graduated with a degree in economics before joining the JKA instructors
class which he attended for three years, during which time his main
instructor was Sensei Nakayama. He also trained with many of the
top Sensei of other schools and styles of Karate. It was this quality
of instruction, combined with a fiercesome determination, which
molded Sensei Enoeda into one of Japan's finest ever competitors
and instructors.
After achieving
his aim of becoming JKA Champion, Sensei began to receive invitations
to instruct in various countries - Indonesia, South Africa, Hawaii
- and eventually joined his friend, Hirokazu Kanazawa, to instruct
in England.
|

Sensei Enoeda wins the all Japan kumite championships,
1963
|
|
|
|
So
it was, that in 1965, Sensei Enoeda found himself in a place called
Liverpool, where he was to spend some considerable time. He had
a flat in Percy Street, in Liverpool City Centre, close to the Anglican
Cathedral, and his transport was a bright orange Volkswagen Beetle.
He was instructing
full-time at the Liverpool Red Triangle Dojo, and the quality of
instruction and the spirit he engendered was soon to bring the club
competition success. If you were there in those early days, you
would have found it difficult not to be inspired by the intensity
of his coaching.
|
No less inspirational
was the intensity of his training - every morning at 7am in Sefton
Park he would meet with a small group of students and train with
them, showing by example that even All-Japan champions need to make
training part of the daily lives. These students included Andy Sherry,
Terry O'Neil, Bob Poynton, and Bill Christall, all of whom still
make daily training a part of their lives, and who encourage others
to do so.
Thus, Sensei's
'way' has permeated through to KUGB club Instructors and to the
current generation of Junior and Senior Squad members, and goes
a long way to explaining the high standards of Karate within the
KUGB.
When he went
to Australia for the World JKA Championships in 1989, he would have
the British Squad out training every morning at 7am. Sensei would
talk about how his life had changed since he had left Japan to teach
in England in 1966. He confessed that he had worried about the changes
he would have to face - both in culture and climate - something
he had not experienced so much when, for example, he was teaching
in Hawaii. The climate there is similar to the Summer months of
Japan, and there is a long established Japanese community.
At first he
found English food strange - he could not believe we make a pudding
from rice! - and the British weather! What did emerge from the conversation
however was that he had grown to love the British people and their
culture, and that he was so proud to be Chief Instructor to "The
Best Karate Nation in the World" - his own words.
Addendum.
Sensei Enoeda
passed away on March 29th 2003. He has left a huge hole in the British
Karate community which will be impossible to fill. A memorial service
was held in his honour at Crystal Palace on June 1st 2003, photos
of which are on the Gallery page. It was announced at the Memorial
Service for Sensei Enoeda that he had been posthumously awarded
9th Dan by the Japan Karate Association.
|
|