|
|
|
|
Brief History of Wado Ryu Karate
Ohtsuka studied commerce at University, and while there experimented with different styles of ju jitsu. In 1917 he joined the Kawasaki bank, and while there met Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido. Aikido is a defense art that maximizes the use of the opponents own strength and momentum to defeat him. It consists of several very graceful and flowing throws and holds which can be executed from virtually any type of attack. In 1922 at the sports festival in Tokyo, Ohtsuka first saw karate. Gichin Funakoshi Sensei was there to demonstrate Okinawan karate. Ohtsuka was extremely enthusiastic about karate, and Funakoshi agreed to teach him all he knew, and within a year Ohtsuka had learned all the katas that Funakoshi had brought with him. Ohtsuka then practiced kata with Mabuni Sensei, the founder of Shito-Ryu karate. By 1929 Ohtsuka was the chief instructor of Shindo Yoshin Ryu Jujitsu, and assistant instructor at Funakoshi's dojo. Ohtsuka felt that Okinawan karate, which concentrated only on kata, lacked the study of attacking techniques. For this reason he branched out from Funakoshi's style and developed his own style, 'Wado'. "Wa"= Peace, harmony. "do"= Way, method. "Ryu"= Style. Wado Ryu - The way of peace and harmony. Wado Ryu began officially in May 1934, when Ohtsuka registered it as an independent style. In 1939 the Japanese Martial Arts Federation asked for all the different styles of karate to register, and these included Shotokan Ryu, Goju Ryu, Shito Ryu, and of course Wado Ryu.
|
|
Send mail to raj@midlandwadokai.com
with questions or comments about this web site.
|