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History
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Uechi Ryu Karate Do - A Brief History
Uechi Ryu Karate Do
was originally a form of Chinese Boxing -- one of the pangainoon
(“half-hard-soft”) systems. According to one researcher, its formal name
may have been “Nan-Pa Toro Ken” -- South Group Mantis Fist. This system
combined the movements of the tiger, dragon, crane, leopard, snake, mantis,
and cobra.
Grandmaster Uechi Kanbun Sensei was responsible for bringing this art out of
China. Kanbun Sensei’s decision to teach allowed the system to spread
worldwide, thus preserving the original style and allowing fro the creation
of many variations for all to study. Kanbun Sensei never told the true old
name of the system he studied in China, but originally simply named it
“Pangainoon-Ryu Karate-Jutsu”.
Uechi Kanbun Sensei was an Okinawan Samurai (Bushi) descendent, born on 5
May 1877 in Izumi, a small village on the Motobu peninsula of northern
Okinawa. As a young man, Kanbun Sensei left Okinawa for China to avoid
conscription in the Japanese Army, to study Chinese Kung Fu, and to further
business prospects for his family’s herbal medicine trade. His resolve to
study fighting arts in China was inspired by incredible tales of the
fighting skills and feats of the Chinese masters as told to him by an old
karate master named Toyama, who had traveled frequently to China to study
such arts. Kanbun Sensei was already proficient with the Bo (staff) and had
excelled in the karate training of his village, but these stories fired his
imagination and made him thirsty for new and deeper training. And so, in
March 1897, nineteen year old Uechi Kanbun Sensei left Okinawa for China to
seek fulfillment of his dream of becoming a true warrior.
In Fuchow, a major city of the Fukien Province of China, just west of the
northern tip of Taiwan, Kanbun Sensei met a young Taoist priest named Shuu
Shiwa Sensei, a master of Chinese Boxing. Among other styles, Shuu Sensei
taught his family system of Kung Fu which, according to research, may have
been created by an ancestor approximately 200 years prior, the monk Shuu
Anan. Kanbun Sensei studied every day for ten years, and became a master of
the Shuu Family Style. His training with Shuu Sensei extended beyond
fighting skills -- Kanbun Sensei also deepened his already considerable
knowledge of the healing arts, and made medicines that he sold to help pay
his tuition. Eventually he was permitted to teach, and opened his first
school in Nansoue, about 250 miles southwest of Fuchow. He taught there for
nearly three years. Near the end of that time, an unfortunate incident
occurred in which a technique from the Shuu Family Style was accidentally
misapplied and a man was killed. Kanbun Sensei closed his school and left
China, vowing to never teach Kung Fu again. The year was 1910. It is
probable that Uechi Kanbun Sensei was the only Okinawan who ever taught Shuu
Family Style Kung Fu in China.
After his return to Okinawa, Kanbun Sensei married and settled down to a
life of farming. His son Kanei was born on 26 June 1911. Other children
followed, and the Uechi family grew. Kanbun Sensei still refused to discuss
his skills in Kung Fu or his life in China.
After seventeen years of silence, Uechi Kanbun Sensei was finally convinced
to share his art once again. He had left Okinawa in 1924 for employment in
Mainland Japan, in the Wakayama Prefecture near Osaka. His first non-family
student was an Okinawan named Tomoyose Ryuyu, who lived in the Okinawan
compound in Wakayama close to where Kanbun Sensei lived. The year was 1927
-- within a few years, Kanbun Sensei and his senior students established a
highly reputable dojo. Kanbun Sensei taught full time, and also made and
sold the medicinal compounds he had learned from his father
using herbs he brought from China. By that time, the art of fighting
without weapons was becoming known as karate -- “Empty Hand” -- which had
previously been known as “Chinese Hand” (one Japanese Kanji KARA means
“Chinese”, the other KARA means “Empty”).
When Kanei Sensei was sixteen years old and in ill health (1927), he joined
his father in Wakayama and began to learn the art of “Pangainoon-Ryu Karate-Jutsu”
-- Half-Hard-Soft Style Empty Hand Technique. He regained his
health and became proficient enough to establish his own Osaka dojo in April
1937, moving it to Hyogyo a short time later.
In 1940, Kanbun Sensei renamed the system "UechiRyu Karate-Jutsu". In 1942,
Kanei Sensei returned to Okinawa and began teaching in his home dojo in Nago.
Kanbun Sensei returned to Okinawa in late 1946, and moved to Ie Jima, an
island just off the northwest coast of Okinawa. He died there on 25
November 1948, losing his agonizing battle against nephritis. Uechi Kanbun
Sensei was 71 years old. After his death, the art was renamed UechiRyu
KarateDo (Uechi’s Method of the Way of Karate).
Uechi Kanei Sensei continued to teach a modified version of his father’s art
for the remainder of his life. In the early 1950’s, he moved the dojo to
Ginowan, and later to Futenma (1956). Kanei Sensei was considered one of
the world leaders in the field of karate development, instruction, and
popularization. He passed away in early 1991 after a long term of illness.
Uechi Kanei Sensei was 79 years old, and had achieved 10th Dan.
There are now several UechiRyu-style associations on Okinawa, all teaching
slightly different but equally valid styles of the same system.
G. Breyette -- (c) 2003, All Rights Reserved
*We gratefully thank Breyette Seizan Sensei for allowing us to use the following history of UechiRyu. Please note that it is copyrighted and should not be used without Breyette Sensei's permission.