The Shaolin Temple was first built around 495
ad, by the Chinese emperor Hsino Wen. It
was in the great Shaolin temple in the songshan
mountains of central China that Buddharama, a
sixth century indian monk first intro-duced
Buddhism and a form of mediation and fighting
techniques. He introduced a form of breathing
exercises based upon animal movements designed
to strengthen and condition the body as well as
the mind.
The art of Shaolin Kempo Karate has developed
from numerous styles of the martial arts
including: SHAOLIN TEMPLE BOXING, JIU JITSU,
KUNG FU, KEMPO, different styles of KARATE, as
well as the secret art of the WHITE TIGER (Chin
Na). Each fighting system offers some-thing both
unique and special, but each also has it's
weaknesses that make a fighter vulnerable. The
ultimate in self defense lay not in one way or
style of fighting, but by the integration of
these methods of fighting into one.
The Shaolin Kempo Karate fighting system is
one of the only system's that incorporates the
movements of the original five animals: TIGER,
LEOPARD, DRAGON, CRANE, and SNAKE. It is a
system that promotes health
and wisdom. Shaolin's theory of fighting is
based upon effective multiple strikes off a
powerful mobile base, with linear, angular and
circular off-ensive and defensive motions with
simultaneous manipulation of the opp-
onent's upper and lower body masses.
The art of Shaolin Kempo Karate with it's
graceful movements for devel-opment of the
internal energy & balance of the body's external
strengths is the essence for producing a
superior fighter. Shaolin Self Defense
Centers believes by applying the physical and
mental aspects of the martial arts into your
personal lives, one will achieve harmony and
balance.
William
"Thunderbolt" Chow
Chow, a Hawaiian kempo pioneer and instructor,
began the study of martial arts at age 7 under
the guidance of his father ( a kung-fu master).
During his youth, Chow also studied boxing,
wrestling, jiu jitsu, sumo, and karate. He
learned Kempo from James Mitose and became one
of only five students to attain a black belt
under him. Chow started teaching in 1944. His
first school was at the Nuuano YMCA in Hawaii.
In his new school Master Chow made several
modifications to the kempo that he learned from
Master Mitose. These modifications enhanced the
system's fluency, power development, and
versatility. Chow went on to award the rank of
black belt to a number of students since 1949.
Among those, the most notable are Ralph
Castro,Edmund Parker, Nicholas Cerio, Paul Pung,
and Adrian Emperado.
James
M. Mitose (1916-1981)
At the age of five Mitose was sent from Hawaii
to Kyushu, Japan for schooling
in his family's ancestral art of self defense (kempo).
From 1921-1936 he studied
and mastered his families teachings which were
based directly on Bodhidharma's Shaolin Kung-fu.
According to Mitose family tradition, clan
members in Kumamoto and Nagasaki brought the
knowledge of Shaolin Kung-fu from China shortly
before 1600. This art was modified by successive
masters until Kempo was born. After completing
his training in Japan Mitose returned to Hawaii
in 1936. In 1942 he organized the official Self-Defense
Club at the Brestania Mission in Honolulu. Only
five of his students (Thomas Young, William K.S.
Chow, Paul Yamaguchi, Arthur Keave, and Edward
Lowe) had attained the rank of first degree
black belt.
A Brief History of
Traditional Karate
The true history of traditional karate is
almost impossible to verify due to the secrecy
surrounding the arts and the lack of written
records. It is known that the martial arts of
Okinawa and Japan were influenced in the
development of their martial arts by various
Chinese sources. It is also clear that at least
one source of influence on Chinese martial arts
came from India.
In about 520 A.D. a Buddhist monk named
Bodhidharma, or Daruma Taishi, traveled to China
where he taught Chan (or Zen) Buddhism to the
monks at the Shaolin Temple in Henan province.
The monks were not physically capable of
withstanding the ascetic practices of his
teaching, so he began to teach them exercises
based on a fighting system. He introduced a
systematized set of exercises designed to
strengthen the mind and body, exercises which
allegedly marked the beginning of the Shaolin
style of temple boxing. Bodhidharma's teachings
later became the basis for the majority of
Chinese martial arts.
The Shaolin monks eventually gained the
reputation of being the most formidable fighters
in all of China. Their fighting method became
known as Shorinji Kempo and as they traveled to
teach about Zen, it influenced and was
influenced by numerous other Chinese fighting
systems.
In the late 12 th century, Zen was introduced to
Japan and readily became the religion of the
Samurai class. As such, it would influence all
of Japan's traditional martial arts. If Shorinji
Kempo was introduced with Zen, as seems likely,
it may also have had some influence on the
traditional fighting methods of Japan.
Okinawa itself is a small island at the
southernmost point of the chain of islands that
comprise modern day Japan. It is the main island
in the chain of Ryuku Islands which spans from
Japan to Taiwan. Surrounded by coral, Okinawa is
approximately 6 miles wide and only about 70
miles long. It is situated 400 nautical miles
east of mainland China, 300 nautical miles south
of mainland Japan and an equal distance north of
Taiwan. Being at the crossroads of major trading
routes, its significance as a "resting spot" was
first discovered by the Japanese. It later
developed as a trade center for southeastern
Asia, trading with Japan, China, Indo China,
Thailand, Malaysia, Borneo and the Philippines.
Due to Okinawa's proximity to China, cultural
exchanges between the two countries undoubtedly
took place even before written history. When the
first exchange of martial arts techniques and
ideas occurred is not known. It is known that in
1372 Okinawa's King Satto exchanged diplomatic
delegations with the Ming Emperor. Part of this
exchange included people knowledgeable in the
martial arts of their respective countries. Thus
the Okinawans refined their own fighting methods
further by incorporating ideas from foreign
sources and adapting them to their own styles
and needs.
One important factor in the development of
Okinawan fighting methods was the advent of
repressive rulers. Between 1477 and 1526 Okinawa
was ruled by King Sho Shin who banned the
ownership of weapons. In 1690 Japan's Satsuma
clan came to power and continued the ban. The
various schools of fighting practiced in secret,
so as not to be observed by the rulers, and in
deadly earnest.
Okinawa was also engaged in trade with the
people of Fukien province in Southern China and
it was probably from this source that Chinese
Kempo, was introduced to the ordinary people of
the islands. Further refinement came with the
influence of other martial arts brought by
nobles and trade merchants to the island.
Te continued to develop over the years,
primarily in three Okinawan cities: Shuri, Naha
and Tomari. Each of these towns was a center to
a different sect of society: kings and nobles,
merchants and business people, and farmers and
fishermen, respectively. For this reason,
different forms of self-defense developed within
each city and subsequently became known as
Shuri-te, Naha-te and Tomari-te.
Collectively they were called Okinawa-Te or
Tode. Gradually, karate was divided into two
main groups: Shorin-ryu which developed around
Shuri and Tomari and Shorei-ryu which came from
the Naha area. It is important to note, however,
that the towns of Shuri, Tomari, Naha are only a
few miles apart, and that the differences
between their arts were essentially ones of
emphasis, not of kind.
Beneath these surface differences, both the
methods and aims of all Okinawan karate are one
in the same. It has been suggested that these
two styles were developed based on different
physical requirements. Shorin-ryu was quick and
linear with natural breathing while Shorei-ryu
emphasized steady, rooted movements with
breathing in synchrony with each movement.
This Okinawa-te continued to be practiced in
secret, even after the end of the Satsuma rule
in 1872, when the only "enemies" left were the
other schools. The secrecy did not end until
1902 when Commissioner of Education Shintaro
Ogawa recommended that it be included in the
physical education of the first middle school of
Okinawa.
While the need for a true jutsu had somewhat
declined by the advent of the 20th century,
karate's value as a character building and
health promoting martial art was recognized, and
it was soon being taught in many of Okinawa's
schools. The first karate master to teach in
Okinawa's schools was Anko Itosu. He was soon
followed by a number of others, including Chojun
Miyagi, Kenwa Mabuni, and Gichin Funakoshi ( the
founder of Shotokan).