The Dynamics of Isshin Ryu Karate
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2 DVD set containing basic to expert Karate Isshin Ryu (Nhat Tam Luu) skills. And the intermediate-advanced kata, taught by Sensei Angi Uezu, 7 dan Isshin Ryu Karate. Include:
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Seisan –
Seiunchin –
– Naihanchi’s
– Wansu
Chinto –
Sanchin –
Kusanku –
– Sunsu
– No Kun Bo Tokumine
Urashi Bo’s
Shishi No Kun No Dai Bo is a Chinese novel.
Tatsuo Shimabuku, one of the great karate teachers, developed Isshin-ryu, which is drawn from numerous other, earlier traditional systems.
Master Tatsuo Shimabuku began studying and teaching karate at the age of 14 and committed the rest of his life to it. He studied the other styles, Shuri-te, Shorin-ryu, and Goju-ryu, for 26 years, each under the master of that school.
Tatsuo Shimabuku, Master
Master Shimabuku combined the greatest elements of each school to become Isshin-ryu. Master Motobu, Master of Shuri-te, taught him kumite; Master Kiyan, Master of Shorin, taught him Kata and added improvements; and Master Miyagi, Master of Goju, taught him Sanchin, the foundation of all Okinawan karate.
Isshin-ryu, which has 500-year roots, is a postwar development that has been updated to fit the demands of today’s society. It was created in the 1950s and has been taught to American Marines stationed in Okinawa ever since.
When World War II hit Okinawa, Shimabuku’s fame had reached its pinnacle. As a businessman as well as a karate instructor, the sensei’s tiny manufacturing company was entirely destroyed, and he was almost bankrupt from the start of the war. He did everything he could to evade conscription into the Japanese army by fleeing to the countryside and working as a farmer. He was compelled to evacuate as the Japanese situation worsened and the necessity to press the Okinawans into duty became more pressing.
As his karate fame spread among the Japanese, numerous troops launched a comprehensive search in order to study karate under him. The officers who ultimately apprehended him promised to keep his whereabouts a secret provided he taught them karate; it was in this manner that Master Shimabuku escaped the war.
After the war, with his company destroyed and no hope of earning a livelihood by teaching karate on the war-torn island, Master Shimabuku retreated to farming and practiced karate privately for spiritual and physical rest. He was known as the island’s premier practitioner of both Shorin-ryu and Goju-ryu Karate while in Okinawa.
In the early 1950s, the sensei began to investigate merging the numerous styles into a single standard system. He could see the challenges that would arise as a result of the distinctions between styles, and he wisely determined that style unification or synthesis would benefit the progress of karate.
He conferred with the island’s old masters as well as the leaders of the prominent schools. At initially, there was widespread support, but his proposal was met with opposition as the heads of the many institutions began to fear losing their identity and status. Sensei Shimabuku made the decision to go out on his own, and so Isshin-ryu Karate was founded. Master Shimabuku died on May 30, 1975, leaving a legacy to the world of karate and all future Isshin-Ryu pupils.
The language is English.
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