
Karate: Art of the Empty Hand. A small string of islands linking the
main islands of southern Japan to the Chinese offshore island of Taiwan
can be accredited as the birthplace of Karate. The Japanese call these
islands the Ryukyu islands. The largest island of the chain is Okinawa,
which is also the capital.
The Story of Okinawa. It
is thought that the earliest inhabitants of Okinawa came not only from
China, but from the northern Japanese islands and from South Asia.
Archaeology has shown that cultural penetration of China has continued
since at least 300 BC.
In
these times, the people of Okinawa lived a simple life supported mainly
by a crude agriculture, sea-fishing and the gathering of shellfish.
However, successive military invasions by the Japanese from the sixth to
the ninth centuries AD evidently stimulated the native people to organise themselves into village groupings presided over by chieftains.
Okinawa had become divided into 3 rival kingdoms by 1340, and a decade
later
the largest of these kingdoms entered into a formal, tributary
relationship with China , which was confirmed by the Chinese Emperor in
1372. Under the terms of this relationship, the Okinawans, like almost
all of China's neighbours except for Japan, sent annual delegations to
the mainland bearing tribute for the Emperor. A few nobles from these
delegations were permitted to travel on from the coast to the Imperial
Court. Some younger princes even enrolled in the schools set up for
foreigners in Peking, where they would study Chinese culture, arts and
sciences before returning home. In this way, many important Okinawans
became familiar with the city and court life of China, as well as its
traditions and learning.
By
1429, after some internal skirmishing, Okinawa was united under one king
and the first (Sho) dynasty was established. This set the stage for the
golden era of Okinawan history. The people took to trading, and steadily
established a network of trade links that stretched not only to Japan
and China, but as far afield as Indo-China, Thailand, Malaysia, Borneo,
Indonesia and the Philippines. Okinawa became a Venice or Genoa of the
East, a great centre for the distribution of rare woods, spices,
incense, rhinoceros horn, ivory, tin and sugar from the south of Asia.
These were exchanged for the fine ceramics, textiles, medicinal herbs
and precious metals of Japan, Korea and China.
Okinawan sailors and merchants visited not just China and Japan, but all
the great ports of East Asia, a factor that Okinawans of today consider
highly important in the history of their martial arts.
The Banning of Weapons. Something else of crucial importance also took place about this time.
Around 1470, the collapse of the Sho Dynasty gave rise to
a period of political turbulence that
was ended only by the
establishment of a new (also Sho) dynasty in 1477. The new king, Sho
Shin, had to deal with the rebellious war lords who were firmly
entrenched in their castles throughout the island. One of his first
moves was to ban the carrying of swords by anyone, noble or peasant. His
next move was to order the collection of all weapons, which were to be
placed under royal control at his castle in Shuri. Finally, he charged
that all nobles, now unarmed, should come and live next to him in the
royal capital. It is interesting to note that this policy of first
disarming, then 'de-casting', rebellious lords in Okinawa predates the
same actions on mainland Japan. These were carried out in the sword
edicts of Toyotomi in 1586 and in the Tokugawa Shogun's orders for the
daimios or warlords to assemble in his capital in 1634. It
is typical of the convoluted nature of relations between China and Japan
that the Shogun did not, however, force the Okinawans to give up their
tributary relationship with the Chinese. On the contrary, he forced the
Okinawans to maintain a facade of loyalty to the Chinese. Whenever
diplomats came from the mainland, the Japanese rulers hid themselves and
anything that would betray their presence. Indirect contacts with China,
which the Japanese both wanted and needed, were maintained through
Okinawa, but the Okinawans' economic wealth and political independance
were really annexed to Japan in 1609.
Of vital importance
to the following discussion was the fact that after 1609 the Japanese
maintained the ban on the carrying of weapons and kept the nobility
bottled up in Shuri city. Japanese samurai were, however, allowed to
carry their weapons there. The ban on the natives' carrying of weapons
evidently remained in force throughout Okinawa's subsequent history;
Napoleon, in 1816, on hearing of a small nation state called Okinawa
where people carried no weapons remarked: "I cannot understand a people
not interested in war".
In Okinawa today, most
Karate masters believe that the banning of weapons by one of their first
kings was an act of sublime wisdom, not one of oppression.
The Art of the Hand. This brief historical
sketch sets the scene for a discussion of the great Okinawan tradition
of te, the martial art of the hand, in which the human body is trained
to become all the weapons a man or woman may need for self-defence.
Karate, or Karate-do
(the art itself) as we know it today, is largely the product of a
synthesis that took place in the eighteenth
century
between the native Okinawan art of te and the Chinese arts of Shaolin
Temple boxing, and other southern styles that were practised at that
time in Fukien Province. In the last 70 years, Japanese martial arts
have influenced Karate as is practised there, although little of this
influence has filtered back to Okinawa. Te is thought to be at least
1000 years old. The Okinawans of 1000 years ago were not rich, and
weapons were in short supply. The land was not unified, and a knowledge
of self-defence must have been an important asset and would have
provided the necessary impetus to the emergence of an indigenous martial
art. Later, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries when the Okinawans
began to travel extensively, they were sure to have encountered many of
the great fighting systems of South Asia and these would have influenced
their indigenous art. Certain techniques in today's karate seem to have
originated from that part of the world. Okinawa's own style however is
unique, and foreign influences have always been modified to conform with
the Okinawan fighting principles. Chief among them is the use of the
hand (te), and especially the closed fist.
The Divergence of the Okinawan Arts. When the king, Sho Shin, disarmed the nobles and gathered them into
Shuri city, is believed that 2 movements were born in
Okinawa. On the one hand, the nobles sought out, learned and developed
the unarmed combat art of te. On the other hand, farmers and fishermen
began to develop weapons systems based on the combative use of tools and
agricultural implements. Flails (hand threshing tools), grindstone
handles, sickles, horse bridles and even boat paddles became lethal
weapons. Both the unarmed and armed traditions were practices in utmost
secrecy, and largely confined to their respective social classes. Te was
practiced by the nobles of the Royal court and Ryukyu bujutsu (Ryukyu
weapon arts) grew up among the people. Even in the twentieth century,
several of the greatest karate masters, notably Chotoku Kyan, were and
are descendants of the royal and noble families of the city of Shuri. The
first recorded performance of Chinese martial arts in Okinawa took place
in 1761. There are also several personal histories of the masters of te
at that time. Some of these masters, including Chatan Yara, are known to
have travelled to Fukien Province in China and studied there. One great
Chinese master, Kusanku, spent 6 years in Okinawa. During the nineteenth
century the Okinawan art began to be known by the name of T'ang-te or
'Chinese hand'.
Even though the art was practised in great secrecy, in remote places,
and largely at night or before dawn, 3 separate styles began to emerge
from the 3 urban centres around the capital. Shuri-te, the art that
developed in Shuri, was practised by the Samurai of the court, while in
the nearby port town of Naha, and in Tomari, the gate-town of Shuri, the
people developed their own independent styles of te.
The
differences between them probably arise from their having been
influenced by different Chinese traditions. There is some evidence to
suggest that Shuri-te derives from Shaolin Temple boxing, while Naha-te
incorporates more of the soft, Taoist techniques, involving breathing
and the control of Ki, the life force, called chi in Chinese. Tomari-te
evidently drew from both traditions.
It
is important to note, however, that the towns of Shuri, Naha and Tomari
are only a few miles apart, and that the differences between their arts
were essentially ones of emphasis and not of kind. Beneath these surface
differences, both the methods and aims of all Okinawan karate are one
and the same
By
the end of the nineteenth century, the names of the styles had changed
again. The arts of Shuri and Tomari were subsumed under one name,
shorin-ryu, meaning the 'flexible pine school'. Naha-te became known as
goju-ryu, the 'hard and soft school', and it was developed by the great
master Higaonna Kanryo. Shorin-ryu is subdivided into several slightly
different styles, but goju-ryu has remained largely unified
stylistically. There has also grown up a tradition in Okinawa and Japan
where both styles are fused together and taught as one. The largest
school which does this is the Japanese shito-ryu, headed by Mabuni.
Traditionally, it is said that the shorin-ryu style is lighter and
faster than goju-ryu, and that the stances are generally higher. The
kata of the 2 styles are slightly different: in goju-ryu the arm and leg
motions are more bent and circular, and greater emphasis is laid on
breathing.
In
1935, a multi-style committee of masters sat down together to decide on
a single name for their art. They called it karate, which means
'empty-handed' or 'weaponless' defence art. Some masters feel that the
Japanese appendage of -do, 'the way', should also be added to the name.
Today, karate still flourishes in Okinawa. The destruction of the
island's historic buildings, archives and much of its unique heritage
during the horrifying battle between the Japanese and the United States'
allies in 1945, has led the people to prize even more highly their
immaterial cultural assets in the form of dance, music and karate.
Following ancient precedents, karate masters are amongst the most honoured dignitaries of Okinawan society, and dojos or training-halls
abound in the built-up areas of Naha and Shuri. Even though there are no
overall masters of each style, there is much friendship and little
competition between today's leaders of the art. |