Karate in Enfield
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JAPANESE MARTIAL ART AT IT'S BEST A1 KARATE - No1 CLUB
Karate Clubs : ENFIELD KARATE CLUB SJK - SOUTHGATE LEISURE CENTRE KARATE CLUB SJK - ARNOS GROVE KARATE CLUB SJK - EDMONTON KARATE CLUB SJK - COCKFOSTERS KARATE CLUB SJK - SOUTHBURY LEISURE CENTRE KARATE CLUB SJK - NORTH LONDON KARATE CLUBS SJK.
We have, three Enfield Karate Classes, two Southgate Karate Clubs, a Karate School at Arnos Grove, Cockfosters Martial Arts, Edmonton Karate Dojo, North London Karate Clubs.
CHINESE ORIGINS
The origin of karate dates back more than a thousand years.
When Daruma Taishi was at the Shaolin monastery in China, he
taught his students physical training methods in order to
build endurance and physical strength required to carry out
the rigid discipline that was part of their religion. This
physical training method was further developed and adapted
to become what is known today as the Shaolin art of
fighting.
The martial art was imported to Okinawa and blended with the indigenous fighting techniques of the islands also known as Te. The lord of ancient Okinawa and later the feudal lord of Kagoshima, on the southernmost tip of Kyushu in Japan, banned the use of weapons, thus giving rise to the development of "empty hand" fighting and self - defence techniques. This martial art, due to its Chinese origin, was called karate, written in characters with the literal meaning "Chinese hand." The modern master of this art, Gichin Funakoshi, however, chose the character for its meaning in Zen Bhuddist philosophy: "rendering oneself empty." To the master, karate was a martial art, but it was also a means of building character. Master Funakoshi wrote: "As a mirror's polished surface reflects whatever stands before it and a quiet valley carries even the smallest sounds, so must the student of karate render his mind empty of selfishness and wickedness in an effort to react appropriately toward anything he might encounter. This is the true meaning of kara or 'empty' of karate."
Funakoshi
was first introduced to the Japanese public in 1922, when he
was the then professor at the Okinawa Teacher's College, was
invited to lecture and demonstrate at an exhibition of
traditional martial arts sponsored by the Ministry of
Education. His demonstration so impressed the audience that
he was flooded with requests to teach in Tokyo. Instead of
returning to Okinawa, Funakoshi taught karate at various
universities and at the Kodokan, the mecca of Judo, until he
was able to establish the Shotokan in 1936, a great landmark
in the history of karate in Japan.
The Japan Karate Association was established in 1955 with Funakoshi as chief instructor. At this time, the organization had only a few members and a handful of instructors who had studied karate under the then aged master. In 1958 the Association held the first all-Japan karate championship tournament, now an annual event, helping to establish karate as a competitive sport.Photo.
As a practical means of self-defence, karate is taught in a great number of colleges and universities in their physical education programs. In Japan and elsewhere in the world, moreover, karate is gaining great popularity as a competitive sport, one which stresses mental discipline as well as physical prowess. What was originally developed in the Orient as a martial art, then, has survived and changed through the centuries to become not only a highly effective means of unarmed self-defence, but also an exciting, challenging sport.
We now have, three Enfield Karate Classes, two Southgate Karate Clubs, a Karate School at Arnos Grove, Cockfosters Martial Arts, Edmonton Karate Dojo, North London Karate Clubs.
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