N
ot many figures in the
modern martial arts loom
larger than — and generate
as much controversy as
— George Dillman. A mem-
ber of the Black Belt Hall
of Fame, he’s been a significant presence for
more than 50 years and has made an indel-
ible impact on the arts. The following are
seven ways Dillman has changed the martial
arts and why it matters.
1
POPULARIZING BUNKAI
When Bruce Lee exploded on the scene,
he roundly criticized the martial arts com-
munity’s practice of kata. He demonstrated
convincingly that those movements could
never work as they were taught. What Dill-
man did was to argue that the problem
wasn’t with the forms but with how they were
being interpreted. “There are no blocks in
kata,” he insisted over and over again.
Dillman showed practical and realistic
applications of those traditional movements.
Traveling the world, he demonstrated how
kata were practical for self-defense, and in
so doing, he made the word bunkai (break-
down) a familiar term in traditional martial
arts circles.
The result of this is that an entire genera-
tion of practitioners was freed from inef-
fective practices and given permission to
interpret kata in meaningful ways. Ironically,
all over the world, contemporary karateka
are teaching courses and seminars, as well
as generating countless YouTube videos, on
kata bunkai, kata for self-defense, kata for
the real world and so on — and many of them
have no idea who Dillman is. But because of
him, the lexicon and practice of traditional
arts have changed forever.
2
LINKING THE PRESENT
TO THE PAST
One of the more alluring characteristics of
the traditional martial arts is the promise of
fighting secrets. Unfortunately, those who
studied found few secrets, just techniques of
varying degrees of effectiveness. Even kara-
te’s so-called “lethal techniques” did not seem
to work as advertised, and the notion of ikken
hissatsu (to strike down the opponent with a
single blow) seemed a hopeless ideal.
And so the karate community focused
on performance and competition, on scor-
ing points and demonstrating athleticism,
and the art more and more has come to be
populated by children and teens screaming
their way through creative forms that blur
the lines between martial arts, gymnastics
and dance.
But Dillman brought karate back to its
fighting roots by demonstrating that the
traditional movements of kata are not only
useful in self-defense but also valuable as a
repository of information on pressure points
(kyusho-jitsu).
“Kata contain the angle and direction for
attacking the pressure points,” Dillman likes
to say. This is something of a summary for
beginners because what he teaches his stu-
dents to recognize is that kata contain com-
prehensive information on pressure-point
At George
Dillman’s home
in Reading,
Pennsylvania,
he and Taika
Oyata pose
with the
certificate that
proclaimed
Dillman a
seventh-
degree
black belt.
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oto
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46 BLACKBELTMAG.COM OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2019