What it is
History:
Origins of Aikido
Yoshinkan Style Aikido
Yoshinkan Aikido Ranking
What Exactly is
Yoshinkan Aikido?
In a nutshell, Aikido is a very
powerful Japanese martial art that is defensive in nature. It is non-competitive and non-agressive. It does not meet force with resistance or brute strength; instead it redirects an aggressor's force with well-timed, flowing, circular movements that lead an attacker off their centre of balance. Rather than relying on our strength to protect us,
the attacker's own motions and momentum are utilized to compromise their
balance and stability. Once they are off-balance they are subdued or
dispensed with by using any of a large variety of joint locks, pins or
throws.
The Origins of Yoshinkan Aikido
Modern Aikido evolved from Daito Aikijutsu which is said to have originated
around 900 AD. It was passed down through the generations, though only to
direct descendants of the Japanese royal family, until Sokaku Takeda began
to teach the art outside of the family in the mid-19th century. Takeda's most outstanding student was a
small man named Morihei Ueshiba.
Ueshiba augmented Daito Aikijutsu with the essentials of other traditional
martial arts he had mastered, and with techniques of his own, thereby
founding 'Aikido' in the early 20th century. One of Ueshiba's most talented
students was Gozo Shioda, who went on to begin the Yoshinkan style of
Aikido.Gozo Shioda, born in 1915, studied and
earned a 3rd Dan in Judo while still a teenager. He then discovered Morihei
Ueshiba's school and immersed himself in an eight year full-time, intense
study of this new martial art. He readily mastered Ueshiba's teachings and
was eventually awarded Aikido's first 9th Dan.
The tremendous popularity of Aikido in
Japan probably dates back to 1954 when an exhibition of Japanese martial
arts was organized in Tokyo. Masters of many Japanese martial arts
participated but Shioda's astonishing demonstration resulted in his easily
attaining the top award. As a result of his exhibition many sponsors offered
support and so Gozo Shioda's now-famous Yoshinkan ('House for Cultivating
the Spirit') Dojo was firmly established.
Yoshinkan
Aikido is now taught nationally in Japanese schools and the Tokyo Police
Department as well as to the general public. Yoshinkan Aikido has also
spread worldwide. In 1990, Gozo Shioda established the International
Yoshinkan Aikido Federation (IYAF) to bring together and organize
virtually all global Yoshinkan Aikido dojos and instructors.On the 17th of July, 1994, Gozo
Shioda passed away at the age of 78. His gift to all was the dynamic power
of Yoshinkan Aikido coupled with a clear and effective teaching method which
will ensure the continued development of powerful Aikido technique, well
into the future.
The Yoshinkan Style of Aikido
Yoshinkan Aikido is occasionally called the "hard" style because the strict
and sometimes gruelling training methods are a product of the pre-war
military period Gozo Shioda spent as a student of Ueshiba.Yoshinkan Aikido uses six fundamental
training movements and about 150 common defensive techniques which are
practiced repeatedly. Mastering these basics conditions students to be able
to execute the remaining techniques, which are thought to total about 3000
in all.Yoshinkan Aikido is not a sport. It
is the cooperative development of both physical and mental dexterity. But
there is also an incredibly powerful and practical self-defense side of
Aikido that is available to all, irrespective of size, age, gender, race or
culture.
Yoshinkan Aikido Ranking
Aikido Yoshinkai Burnaby follows the same ranking and
belt system used at the Yoshinkan Aikido Honbu Dojo (headquarters) in
Tokyo. Students start as beginners with a white
belt, then progress through 5 tests spanning 10 levels before finally
testing for a black belt (called Shodan or 1st Dan).
Each pre-black belt level is called a Kyu and progresses from 10th Kyu up to
1st Kyu. The only other colour of belt used besides white and black is a
brown belt which is granted to students at levels 3rd through 1st Kyu.
|
Exam Taken |
Rank
Achieved |
Belt
Issued |
Appointed
at Honbu |
Judan (10th Degree) |
Black Belt |
|
Kyudan (9th Degree) |
|
Hachidan (8th Degree) |
Nanadan (7th Degree) |
|
Rokudan (6th Degree) |
|
10th Exam |
Godan (5th Degree) |
|
9th Exam |
Yondan (4th Degree) |
|
8th Exam |
Sandan (3rd Degree) |
|
7th Exam |
Nidan (2nd Degree) |
|
6th Exam |
Shodan (1st Degree) |
|
5th Exam |
1st Kyu |
Brown
Belt |
|
2nd Kyu |
|
3rd Kyu |
|
4th Exam |
4th Kyu |
White Belt |
|
3rd Exam |
5th Kyu |
|
2nd Exam |
6th Kyu |
|
7th Kyu |
|
8th Kyu |
|
1st Exam |
9th Kyu |
|
10th Kyu |
|
|
Beginner |
It takes 3 to 5 years to reach the level of
Shodan (1st degree black belt), depending mainly on the effort and diligence of the student. From
Shodan, you progress to second degree black belt (Nidan), then third
(Sandan) and so forth. The undergraduate degree levels of Shodan and
higher are quite advanced and take many years of diligent
training to accomplish. Practitioners at levels of
Rokudan and up are rare and very advanced expert levels of Yoshinkan Aikido.
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Last Updated: 6-Jan-2008
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