Kano Society

The Kano Society

 
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Vol 1 Issue 2     part 3  December 2000

The Future of Budo? - TP Leggett

Budo has no future as such, because its typical representatives have now become mere games. Like many games, they have dropped away from the ideal of - training into the aim of winning, often as professionals entertaining a crowd. To win or lose a kendo contest, they say, is the same thing as winning or losing a game of tennis. Now it is true that the kendo man no longer has any expectation of using a sword to defend himself. His special techniques with a sword find no application in life today. Even judo, with its ridiculously narrowed and artificial rules of contest, has lost most of its usefulness in self-defence; few judo men today would know how to meet an angry boxer. But it is, in fact, very easy. You run in on all fours and pull him over by grabbing his ankles. The boxer has no technique for hitting down. I will list the main areas in which I believe the Budo tradition, if kept alive and revived, can still contribute something very valuable to the world.

(1) Physical training: The technique of nearly all popular games consists in managing a ball, which is a situation that never occurs outside the play area. Many lead to one-sided development, whereas the movements in judo concern the whole body. In life, the judo man keeps his balance on slippery ground, when a crowd is pushing, or when he moves furniture. Most people lift a weight by their arms, whereas the judo man understands how to bend the knees and use the strength of the thighs. The kendo posture, too, gives hints about how to sit at a computer without fatigue, and also gives precision in movement generally.

(2) Space: Ball games require comparatively much more space. In a squash court, twenty judo men can easily practice together. This means that judo is specially good for cities where space is limited.

(3) Both kendo and judo are concerned with instant response to attacks against the body, whereas ball games are mostly concerned with quite an artificial aim.

(4) Self-control: Sportsmanship taught this: to try very hard, but not to be ruffled by failure, or puffed up by success. It is true that with the development of entertainment games practiced by professionals before yelling crowds, this training element, which is sport, has often been replaced by winning at all costs. Sportsmanship has, in some areas, been replaced by gamesmanship. In many sports clubs, the ideal of the sportsman is still honoured and encouraged: a bad loser who makes excuses and gets angry is not respected. Kano believed the Budo ideal is useful for teaching, not merely self-control but good fellowship. Budo situations are those where the animal aggressiveness and perhaps fear, will be roused controlled, and finally turned into friendship, Jita Kyoei. This was the ideal of the sportsman: to shake hands after a fight, but boxing has a disadvantage; one of its purposes is to inflict damage, which is not true of the Budo idea.

(5) Classical Budo texts, such as Heihokadensho, seek to replace the warrior of Yang, who comes forward shouting, glaring, swaggering and making feints, by the warrior of Yin, who is calm outwardly and inwardly (he can imitate the warrior of Yang if necessary). The ideal of the sportsman.

Budo has something far deeper to give to the world: transcendence of win-and. loss, technique and strategy, and manifesting inspiration. This is one of the fractional applications of Zen to a limited field; others are calligraphy, No dancing, and garden design. The special point of Budo is that the inspiration has to manifest, not at leisure, as in these other Ways or Do, but at high speed and responding to an opponent.

The Do does not depend on excellence in technique, though there has to be some technique in the particular field so that the result can show itself clearly. What does it mean in practice? When going into an important judo or kendo contest, to give up all thoughts of win-or-loss or special technique (Tokui-waza). If the mind can be emptied of such thoughts, a clear and unexpected result comes about. Sometimes this has little to do with any learned technique. The great Shogi grand-master, Yasuharu Oyama, told me that he did this mokuso at the beginning of a match. He used to sit perfectly still, sometimes for several minutes, before making his first move. Individuals in other countries discovered this secret of inspiration, but in general we can say that there is no tradition, and so we do not know how to train for it. It takes persistence and courage. What has been learned in Budo art can be applied in life situations. It is typically and uniquely Japanese that the hints at it should be in the form of poetry:

The moon does not design

to lodge there,

Nor does the lake seek

to catch the moon, of Hirosawa.

More Mochi? - Information from Japanese Tourist Office

New Year wouldn't be the same without mochi, which is made by steaming and pounding a sticky type of rice (mochi gome) In the past, mochi was made at home, but most families today buy it ready-made. Over the holidays, a pair of round mochi (kagami mochi) the size of plates--one a little larger than the other--is stacked on a stand and placed in a household Shinto altar or tokonoma (alcove) as an offering to the deities that visit on New Year's. The ornamental mochi is removed on January 11 and broken into smaller pieces before being eaten. By this time, the kagami mochi is usually quite brittle, and cracks appear on the surface. The mochi is not cut with a knife, since cutting has negative connotations (like "cutting off ties"). It's broken with one's hands or a hammer, and thus the ritual is called kagami biraki, or cracking open the kagami mochi. The smaller pieces are roasted and put in shiruko (sweet soup of boiled beans) or zoni (vegetable and meat soup). By partaking of this offering to the gods, ancient people believed that they were inviting divine blessings. Kagami biraki is not just a household affair. The Kodokan, a famous judo school in Tokyo, performs a mammoth kagami biraki ritual after a training session each year--a tradition going back to 1884. The mochi is put in shiruko and shared by 700 participants.

Membership News AGM 2001

Our membership continues to grow. Many leading figures in the Judo world are now members of our organisation and overseas members are showing a great deal of interest. After a set back caused by the death of our Patron Trevor Leggett we are planning several events for 2001 beginning with Kagami biraki on Sunday 14th January and continuing with a week of Kangeiko in February.

Later in the year we will hold a celebration of Trevor Leggett’s life. Full details will follow in due course.

AGM 2001

The AGM of the Kano Society will be held on Sunday 1st April 2001 from 2-5pm at the Fleming’s Hotel

8-12 Half Moon Street, London WC - That is off Piccadilly (opposite Green Park Tube Station). Tel 020 7499 2964

Would any members who wish to place items on the agenda please send them in to the office at least a month beforehand—Thank you.     NB you can also email or post on feed-back from website.

The Kano Society 

invite you to join us for 

Traditional Judo Events

  • Kata

  • Goningake

  • Randori

  • Mochi

At the Judokan Hammersmith

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Bulletin two part 2