Tuesday, 17 November 2015

budokan-karate



Budokan karate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Budokan (武道館 Budōkan?) is a style of karate recognized by the World Union of Karate Do Organizations[1] and theWorld Karate Federation. Karate Budokan International was founded on July 17, 1966 by Chew Choo Soot in Petaling Jaya,Malaysia and grew to expand throughout the world.

The Founder[edit]

Chew Choo Soot was born in Alor Star, a Northern State of Peninsula, Malaysia, on February 7, 1922. As an infant, his father died and so he was brought up under the strict discipline of his grandfather, an elderly Confucian scholar of the old school of China, who believed in education through books and not in martial arts.
At 15 years of age, Chew became very interested in weight lifting and enrolled for training at a small body building club in Epoh. Due to his dedication and training, he became the national Malaysian weight lifting champion in both the feather weight and the light weight classes in 1939, 1941 and 1942. During those years he also acquired an interest in martial arts and took up judojujitsu and wrestling.
It was not until he was 20 that Chew was introduced to Karate-Do, during the Japanese occupation of Malaya. He was then contracted by a Japanese military officer, who had seen him in health and strength magazines, to become a personal fitness and weight lifting coach. During one of his scheduled visits, the young Chew discovered the officer practicing movements which we now know to be karate ‘Kata’. The styles of karate practiced by the officer were Keishinkan andShotokan. Chew was impressed and asked for tuition, which the officer agreed to. For more than 2 years afterwards, they spent the evenings training together in karate, jujitsu, judo and weight lifting until the Japanese Army officer left for Okinawain 1945.
After the end of the Second World War, Chew went to Japan and Okinawa to further his karate training, as well as several trips to Taiwan to learn kung-fu and oriental weapons from a number of old kung-fu Masters of China.
In 1966 at the request of his friends, Chew then decided to start a dojo at Petaling Jaya with a small number of students and Karate Budokan International was first founded as a lesser organisation. There was a large amount of interest shown by people who wanted to learn karate, which became so great that he found it impossible to cope with the classes without seeking assistant instructors. As there were no other karate instructors in Malaysia, he then made two further trips to Tokyoand Osaka and employed 7 Japanese instructors to assist him to conduct the karate classes. These classes had then spread the art to the North and South of the Peninsula within 2 years.
Chew's ambition was to be able to travel to different countries and conduct karate classes when he reached the age of 80. Unfortunately, he fell ill by a paralytic attack on 4 February 1995 and died, in Malaysia, on 18 July 1997 at the age of 76 years.[2][3]

Global Expansion[edit]

KBI logo
Karate Budokan International is now a global association with branches around the world including AustraliaIndiaIsraelGermanyMalaysiaPakistanNorwaySri LankaUnited Arab EmiratesUnited States of AmericaCameroonWales and England. The world headquarters for KBI is located in NoosaQueensland, Australia.

The Grand Master[edit]

Richard Chew, the second son of the Founder Chew Choo Soot, was second Grand Master of Karate Budokan International. He followed the paths of his great father by visiting and conducting training camps and seminars at the Budokan Dojos worldwide and thus makes sure that the Budokan style is practiced in its pure form.
Karate Budokan International's current World Chief Instructor is Wayne Macdonald of the Noosa headquarters. Macdonald started Karate with Sensei Daniel Spice (from the NSW branch through HMAKarate ) on the same day in 1979. As cousins, they went together to their first karate class for mutual support, although Macdonald often recalls the situation differently. He recalls that Spice was too scared to go to karate by himself, so Macdonald went along to ‘hold his hand’.[4]
Wayne’s training has been under the guidance of the KBI Grand Master Richard Chew and Fabio Martella, and Wayne has been teaching Karate since 1983. Wayne and his wife Donna, now run a dojo (and International Headquarters) inNoosaville with over 400 members.
Macdonald has also been highly respected over the last two decades as one of Australia’s elite Karate athletes with six New South Wales titles (1986,87,88,89,90,91), two Queensland titles (1998 and 99) as well as 5 National titles.[5]
In the Asian Countries, the Budokan Karate is continuing to grow under the able leadership of B. Parmesh of India.
All India Budokan Karate Federation formed in India in 1991 by late Grand Master Mr. Chew Choo Soot: he appointed Mr. C. Hanumantha Rao as President, Mr. Syed Ahmed as Secretary General; now AIBKF is the largest and strongest karate organisation in India.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

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The Martial arts Portal

Martial arts are systems of codified practices and traditions of training for combat. While they may be studied for many reasons, martial arts share a single objective: to defeat a person physically or to defend oneself from physical threat. In addition, some martial arts are linked to spiritual or religious beliefs and philosophies such asSikhismHinduismBuddhismDaoismShinto or Confucianism while others have their own spiritual or non-spiritual code of honor. Many arts are also practiced competitively most commonly as combat sports, but may also be in the form of dance.
Boxing was practiced in the ancient Mediterranean
In popular culture, the term martial arts often specifically refers to the combat systems that originated in Asian cultures. However, the term actually refers to any sort of codified combat systems, regardless of origin. The Indian martial artGatka was developed by sixth-century Sikh guru, Guru Hargobind and it was further developed and preached by the tenth-century Sikh guru, Guru Gobind Singh. In the late eighteenth century this martial art was further developed as a recreational game and Panjab University Lahore codified its rules. Europe is home to many systems of martial arts, both living traditions (e.g. jogo do pauand other stick and sword fencing and savate, a French kicking style developed by sailors and street fighters) and older systems collectively referred to ashistorical European martial arts that existed until modern times and are now being reconstructed by several organizations. In the Americas, Native Americanshave a tradition of open-handed martial arts, which includes wrestling, andHawaiians have historically practiced arts featuring small and large joint manipulation. A mix of origins occur in the athletic movements of capoeira, a practice that was created in Brazil by slaves and was based on skills brought with them from Africa.
While each style has unique facets that make it different from other martial arts, a common characteristic is the systematization of fighting techniques. Methods of training vary and may include sparring or forms (kata), which are sets or routines of techniques that are performed alone, or sometimes with a partner, and which are especially common in the Asian and Asian-derived martial arts.
The word martial derives from the name of Mars, the Roman god of war. The term martial arts literally means arts of war. This term comes from 15th-century Europeans who were referring to their own fighting arts. A practitioner of martial arts can be referred to as a martial artist.

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Modern Arnis is the system of Filipino Martial Arts founded by the late Remy Presas as a Self-Defense System. His goal was to create an injury-free training method as well as an effective Self-Defense System in order to preserve the older Arnis Systems. The term Modern Arnis was also used by Remy Presas' younger brother Ernesto Presas to describe his style of Filipino Martial Arts; since 1999 Ernesto Presas has called his system Kombatan. It is derived principally from the traditional Presas family style of the Bolo (machete) and the stick-dueling art of Balintawak Eskrima, with influences from other Filipino and Japanese Martial Arts.
Arnis is also the Philippines' National Martial Art and Martial Sport, after President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed the Republic Act. No. 9850 in 2009. The Act also mandates the Department of Education to include the sport as a Physical Education course. Arnis will also be included among the priority sports in Palarong Pambansa (National Games) beginning 2010.[1]
  1. Jump up^ Lizares, George. "Arnis now a national sport". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved January 6, 2010.

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  • "The ultimate aim of karate lies not in victory nor defeat, but in the perfection of the character of its participants."
-Gichin Funakoshi (1868–1957)
  • "The teaching of one virtuous person can influence many; that which has been learned well by one generation can be passed on to a hundred."
-Kano Jigoro (1860–1938)
  • "So there are five ways of knowing who will win. Those who know when to fight and when not to fight are victorious. Those who discern when to use many or few troops are victorious. Those whose upper and lower ranks have the same desire are victorious. Those who face the unprepared with preparation are victorious. Those whose generals are able and not constrained by their governments are victorious. These five are the ways to know who will win."
-Sun Tzu (c.544 BC–c.496 BC);The Art of War (trans. by Thomas Cleary)
  • "I have often found in the most ancient forms of martial arts it is the person who falls over first that provides the least competition; however, once you have fallen over it is difficult to win."
-Sir Samuel David Hull Jr (1985–1987)

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