Different martial arts are popular in our time. In particular, universal fighting system (UFS) which promotes a mix of fighting styles and bouts. But very few people know about Nippon Kempo (jp:日本拳法) system. It was the first system of the full-contact mix fighting in 1930s in the motherland of Samurai Japan. The founder of the Japanese hand-to-hand fighting which became Nippon kempo was Masaru Sawayama.
He was born on December 12,
1906 in the family of a noble Nakaoke Clan. He was a weak child. It was
difficult for him to walk to school. This was till he was 13
(thirteen). At that time different kinds of Western sport began to
appear in Japan: baseball, boxing, bodybuilding etc. Japanese young
people became fond of these new trends. Magazines and books which made
western sport popular came from Europe. Sports shops began to sell
barbells, dumbbells, expanders and other sports equipment of exotic
Western civilization.
Masaru felt the
influence of such expansion and he decided to change – a man must be
strong! He started bodybuilding and martial arts. And in some years he
turned into a strong young man with a perfect body.
One
of the founders of western ways of preparation of sportsmen in Japan
legendary Dzigoro Kano (founder of Judo) had great influence on life and
development of Sawayama Masaru. In 1904 Dzigoro Kano implemented and
made popular the bodybuilding system of Yevgeniy Sandov. Dzigoro Kano
was an educated man; he could go around the world and Europe and find
different methods of training. He paid attention to bodybuilding system
and he was the first to use barbells, dumbbells, and expanders in Judo.
In 1926 when Sawayama Masaru went to Law School of Kansai University in Osaka he was a perfectly developed young man.
At university he went in for judo and got the Fifth Dan (Shihan). He turned into the defender of all the weak; he many times stopped fighting students and local gangsters.
Sawayama Masaru was a skillful fighter, a good organizer and leader and the head of the university judo team.
At
university Sawayama was interested in striking and kicking fighting
techniques. He thought it was not used enough in judo and ju-jitsu.
Basis of judo training was randori – free bouts which had certain rules.
They let fighters develop useful skills
such as reaction and feeling of distance, decide tactics, use techniques
on fighting opponents. But randori rules did not let use strikes.
These
rules made fighting safe and protected sportsmen from serious injuries.
Fighters used strikes in vital striking areas only in kata. But
Sawayama thought that using only kata technique did not let sportsmen
master fighting on high level. Understanding of it made him start
exploring old schools of budjutzu (jp: 武術:じゅつ) (martial arts) famous for
sophisticated techniques of striking in atemi (vital areas). He spent a
lot of time looking for ancient manuscripts describing these techniques
and communication with masters living in Osaka in that time.
In 1920s several fighting systems such as European boxing, Okinawa karate-do and Thai boxing appeared in Japan.
Osaka became the center of activity of masters of different martial
arts systems.
Thanks to this Masaru could attend trainings and master
classes of different martial arts styles and schools. He could compare
advantages and disadvantages of kicking and striking techniques. He came
up to the conclusion that real martial arts like ancient bujitsu must
include striking and kicking techniques, throws, reverse joint locks and
skills to resist an armed person. Then he decided to create a synthetic
applied fighting system of practical use.
After
learning from master of Okinava karate and founder of Shitoryu
karate-do style Kenwa Mabuni, Sawayama founded the Centre for Tode Study
at Kansay University. Tode is the general term for martial arts of
Chinese origin in Okinawa.
This organization became the main centre for study karate-do in Kansay region.
Masters of different fighting styles gave seminars and classes here. He
invited the founder of Gojiryu style Miyagi Chijuni and Chinese master
of Bahei Tzhuan style Hu Siangui 白鹤拳, whose method influenced a lot
Gojiryu and Shitoryu schools, to give classes at Kansai university at
the beginning of 1930s. Their performances and teaching methods promoted
growing interest of people in Osaka nearby districts to Okinawa martial
art.
Mabuni used traditional Okinawa
karate methods when he trained Masaru. Classes were individual, and
kata was paid much attention. However, this approach did not satisfy the
young active man.
Together with members of Centre for Tode Study he
began to develop the methods of study of striking and kicking techniques
and free full-contact fighting system. Sawayama put three goals:
- Avoid using atemi technique which its great ruining power with evil aims;
- Make atemi technique safe to protect fighters from injuries;
- Find the most efficient atemi technique.
Sawayama tried to achieve these goals in different ways which were not always successful.
On the first stage of his work Masaru
developed and used three kinds of sparring: yakusoku-kumite,
juiji-kumite, and senken-kumite.
Later, they became one kind – jui-kumite. While yakusoku-kumite
sparring (when the opponent says what he is going to do) students struck
and kicked according to the instruction of the teacher. This made the
activity relatively safe.
Jui-kumite
is a free sparring. Sawayama described it as a kind of sparring when
fighters use attacking and defensive techniques freely. However,
attacker strikes and kicks and waits the opponent to use a protective
technique. The main idea is to practice different protective techniques
freely and counter-attack. It is go-no-sen method (skill to
counter-attack after resisting opponent’s attack) with outlined roles.
At
last, but not the least is sinken kumitte. It is a sparring with
fighting swards which is a free bout with hikite. And it reminds
sparring in modern WKF karate system with sun-do-me rules. This system
of trainings developed in autumn of 1930 and became standard for Centre
for Tode Study at Kansay University.
Active
use of judo and jujitsu techniques in sparring made members of the
Centre think if they did karate or if they created a new independent
kind of budo which had the right to exist.
In
autumn 1932 Sawayama Masaru, after seven years of studying at Law
School, organized a meeting of the leaders of Centre for Tode Study:
Yano Fumio, Yagi Suiti, Yamada Reniti, Nakano Mizuru, Kuroyama Takamaro,
Takeiti Kazuaki and Tyadani Kintoshi. They declared the birth of a new
kind of budo. They called it Dai Nippon Kempo (Kempo of Great Japan) and
their Centre was called Dai Nippon Kempo Kai (Kempo of Great Japan
Centre). Sawayama was elected President. It should be mentioned that all
leaders of the Centre were masters of different fighting styles.
Kuroyama Takamaru was a judo teacher of chief police department of
Osaka. He was the best friend of Masaru and they together created the
motto “Develop body and mind practicing judo and kempo to serve your
country and people.”
This opposition
made relations between Sawayama and Kenwa Mabuni complicated. However,
the creator of a new fighting style and his teacher continued business
relations. Mabuni followed his student’s thorough methodological search.
He looked for new forms of sparring which made training process even
more efficient.
Sawayama refused from
basic kata practice and focused on free bouts. But experience showed
that, firstly, sparring with restricted contact did not have real
effect. Secondly, it did not make fighting safe because during the bout
fighters could strike in contact by accident. That is why very soon
after Dai Nippon Kempo Kai foundation its leaders began experiments with
different kinds of protective clothes. Finally, they decided to use
special equipment – bogu: helmet with bars for face protection (men),
chest armour (dou), groin armour (matate), and boxing gloves (gurubu).
This gear let strike and hit with all might, do throws, reverse joint
locks in sparring and ground bouts. The main was that fighters could
have full-contact strikes and kicks without serious injuries to the
opponent. This became carte-de-visite of Nippon kempo.
Absence
of weight categories, kicks in groin, training of special stamina and
spirit are chief advantages of Sawayama’s systems. Systematic kumite
practice is the way of fighting spirit development and control. It makes
this type of exercise an important and efficient means of bringing up
braveness.
Implementation of sparring practice in bogu let fighters use the widest
range of techniques in the bout and have full-scale competitions.
Sawayama’s students exchanged powerful strikes, did throws and reverse
joint locks while standing and falling on the floor, continued to fight
underground, skillfully using karate, boxing, judo and jiu-jitsu
techniques. This kind of sparring was introduced to Dai Nippon Kempo Kai
in 1934. This year the first official bogu fight tournament was held in
main dojo (jp: 道場)of Kokai Association, members of which practiced
Nippon kempo.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nippon_Kempo
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