Sensei, where were you born?
Kobe
Japan. I have been studying Karate for fifty years.
Does anyone in your family
train in Karate?
No, only me.
Who has had the greatest
influence upon your karate?
Mr. Mabuni Kenwa - the most famous
Karate teacher.
How has Karate changed since
you started training?
Karate has changed. Previously, students
adhered to the code of ancient budo - no fighting. Nowadays, with the
advent of sports Karate, championships predominate. I can't say that it
is a bad thing - previously, there was a small, elite group doing
Karate. Now, sport karate is for everyone. This may be a good or bad
thing, but some of the serious meaning of Karate has been lost.
Previously, Karate was used in real fighting, to defend oneself, now it
is used for competition.
Do you train in weapons?
My
senior students train in weapons but I do not train with them a lot
myself. I put more importance on kata than weapon practice.
Do you have a favorite Karate
technique or Kata?
I always demonstrate the Kata "Suparimpai",
one hundred and eight techniques.
Do you have many ladies and
children amongst your students?
Yes. Karate is excellent for
health; everyone can benefit.
What sort of qualities do you
aim to foster in your students?
In Japan, especially the
children, I teach to become strong in character and to have good control
over the self - not violence. I never advocate violent behavior.
Sensei, have you ever wanted to
give up Karate?
Before and during the second World War, the
Karate training was very , very hard. At that stage I thought to give
up, but did not.
Is there any thought on Karate
which you would wish to share with your students?
Karate is not
just punching, kicking, and blocking - that is technique. Karate is an
art. Everyone should have a high goal and ideal. Strive for achievement;
not low level but high level.