Blitz - June-July 2017

(Greg DeLong) #1
FEATURE STORY |ƫ333ċ(%06)#ċ*!0ƫđƫ^37

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very great karate
teacher leaves an
impression on their
students. What are
your strongest memories of
the late Ohtsuka Tadahiko
Sensei, in terms of how he
taught and presented the Goju
Kensha school?
Noguchi: When Ohtsuka
Sensei created the Goju Kensha
Sai Shin Kan dojo in 1970, I
followed him and embraced the
entirety of his teachings until
his passing in 2012. My lasting
impression of Ohtsuka Sensei is
his amazing ability to codify his
Goju Kensha karate teachings,
and constantly evolve his system
with whatever he considered
useful — and make it fit within
the perimeters of traditional
Japanese Goju-ryu. He was way
ahead of others in Japan, and
according to his peers, Goju
Kensha Sai Shin Kan dojo was
considered one of the top three
dojos in all of Japan. Ohtsuka
Sensei was extremely intelligent;
after the Goju Kensha school was
established, many of the seniors
studied Japanese chiropractic. In
the difficult graduation exam,
most of us scraped through with
low pass marks, in the fifties,
but Ohtsuka Sensei achieved a
perfect score of 100. His physical
abilities in karate-do matched his
extraordinary intelligence and
people like him are rare. I am so
grateful our paths crossed.
Some would ask that since
Goju Kensha is a branch of Goju-
ryu, what makes it different to
other Japanese forms of Goju,


and the Okinawan schools from
which it came?
Noguchi: Ohtsuka Sensei
researched the Chinese systems
that were the precursors of
Okinawan Goju-ryu, namely
White Crane [kung fu], bagua,
Hsing I chuan [literally ‘fist’,
meaning fighting method] and
tai chi chuan. He revived many
of the underpinning power-
generating principles, theories
and training methodologies.
Unfortunately, he received a
lot of criticism from Japanese
karateka in the 1970s and ’80s —
but now, funnily, many are doing
the same thing he was then.
Probably the most radical
difference may be his approach
to Sanchin kata training.
Ohtsuka Sensei used more of
the natural and relaxed Chinese-
influenced internal methodology,
where the emphasis is on the
use of the hara (abdomen; the
general area encompassing
the lower tanden) without any
forceful breathing or excessive
tension on the body.
Naming and categorising
things is how humans develop
knowledge, as it enables us
to identify similarities and
differences, so as to then learn
more about the relationships
between such elements. In
martial arts this process is
at work everywhere — we
have names to identify all the
‘different’ systems or styles
— but do you think perhaps
there is too much emphasis
on this, and not enough on
the similarities?

Noguchi: Yes, definitely, I
do believe that. That is a very
good question, perhaps a subject
that needs to be reflected on
much more. Human beings are
the same, the only differences
are cultural behaviours and of
course, in relation to training,
we have differences in physical
build that may influence the way
we perform. Novice students
and immature practitioners are
the most passionate defenders
of their particular art and
concentrate on the differences,
often quick to criticise other
schools. Visual differences are
more obvious at this novice level,
but as you advance, you become
enlightened to the sameness.
Goju Kensha has a strong
connection to the Chinese
internal arts — a link that goes
back quite a way to when the
Okinawans were engaging in
sharing their martial arts with
the Chinese, and vice versa. This
exchange process between the
two martial cultures was revived
by Master Ohtsuka. Is this
something that has also been
part of your karate journey?
Noguchi: Yes, Ohtsuka Sensei
saw martial arts as an important
cultural artefact of China. He
encouraged that we study the
Chinese arts that karate came
from, and we basically did what
our teacher advised. We never
questioned him — he was the
teacher, after all.
Ohtsuka Sensei saw Japanese
Goju-ryu as a living philosophy
of harmony and balance. He
felt that you needed to be able

INTERVIEW BY BEN STONE & JAMES SUMARAC | IMAGES BY JON NANOS


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