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Master Funakoshi
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Master Gichin Funakoshi is widely considered the primary "father" of modern
karate due to his efforts to introduce the Okinawan art to mainland Japan, from
where it spread to the rest of the world. Born in 1868, he began to study
karate at the age of 11, and was a student of the two greatest masters of the
time, Azato and Itosu.
He grew so proficient that he was initiated into all the major styles of karate
in Okinawa at the time. For Master Funakoshi, the word karate eventually took
on a deeper and broader meaning through the synthesis of these many methods,
becoming karate-do, literally the "way of karate," or of the empty hand.
Training in karate-do became an education for life itself.
Master Funakoshi was the first expert to introduce karate-do to mainland Japan.
In 1916 he gave a demonstration to the Butokuden in Kyoto, Japan, which at that
time was the official center of all martial arts. On March 6, 1921, the Crown
Prince, who was later to become the Emperor of Japan, visited Okinawa and
Master Funakoshi was asked to demonstrate karate. In the early spring of 1922
Master Funakoshi traveled to Tokyo to present his art at the First National
Athletic Exhibition in Tokyo organized by the Ministry of Education. He was
strongly urged by several eminent groups and individuals to remain in Japan,
and indeed he never did return to Okinawa.
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In 1936, Master Funakoshi established the Shotokan Dojo (so named because Shoto
was Funakoshi's pen name) at Zoshigaya, Tokyo. This was the first Karate Dojo
(training hall) in Japan. Although others named his style the Shotokan style,
Funakoshi himself believed that Karate is one and that there is no "style" of
Karate. In 1948, the Japan Karate Association was organized, with Funakoshi as
the chief instructor. Because this organization made it possible for leading
Karate-Ka (practitioners of Karate) to pool their knowledge and ability, from
that time onward progress was rapid, leading to development of the three
aspects of present-day Karate -- self-defense, sport, and physical/mental art.
In April of 1957, Master Funakoshi passed away at the advanced age of
eighty-eight. Tens of thousands of Karate-Ka who learned under him remain,
insuring that the art he taught would not die with him. On the contry, people
in many foreign countries have shown an avid interest in Karate, and it is now
a world-wide martial art.
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