|
SOSAI MAS OYAMA
FOUNDER OF KYOKUSHIN KARATE
This is the History of one of the Greatest Martial Artist whoever
lived.
He was a legend in his own time.
(1923-1994)
Sosai (Great Master) Masutatsu
Oyama was born in Korea in 1923 and became the founder of Japan's
most renowned -- and the world's most widespread -- style of karate.
From the age of 9, Mas Oyama learned Chinese Kenpo in Manchuria
and followed into his teens by practicing Judo and boxing. Finally
this led him to the practice of Okinawan karate, which ultimately
served as the springboard for the creation of his own style, Kyokushin,
or the "The Ultimate Truth." By the time Mas Oyama was
20, he had received his 4th dan in Okinawan karate and though tireless
study eventually attained a 4th dan in Judo as well.
Among Mas Oyama's many accomplishments,
he is perhaps best known for introducing tameshiwari or "stone
breaking" into the practice of modern karate. Mas Oyama reasoned
that through hard training he could condition his hands to be as
powerful as a hammer. Since one could break stones with a hammer,
he began the practice of learning how to break boards, bricks and
stones with his bare hands. This incredible power he then translated
directly into his theory of fighting karate, reasoning that if he
could break stones, human bones would break beneath his blows as
well. Perhaps his greatest contribution to Japanese karate, therefore,
was the introduction and popularization of full-contact fighting
karate. At the time he won Japan's largest tournament sponsored
by Okinawa's Shotokan karate, he was often penalized for fighting
too hard, resulting in frequent injuries to his opponents. It was
this experience, perhaps above all other influences, that led to
his creation of Kyokushin karate. After all, Mas Oyama believed,
karate is a fighting art: Without taking it to its extreme by practicing
to break the body of one's opponent (for application during real
life and death struggle), one could never realize the true spiritual
potential of karate.
Frustrated by society's opposition
to his gathering strength, Mas Oyama at the age of 23, retreated
to a remote spot in the mountains with the ambition of training
more hours per day than he slept for three years. During this time
he practiced by striking the few mountain trees around his cabin
with his bare fists until those trees withered and died. He pressed
twice his body weight 500 times per day, meditated under icy waterfalls,
and fought in the night with the demons of bitter cold and isolation.
Upon emerging from mountain training, it is said that Mas Oyama
struck a telephone pole and left a clean imprint of his fist in
the treated wood.
At the age of 27 convinced
that he could not find another fighter in Japan who could match
his power and skill, Mas Oyama began his famous battles with bulls
to prove his strength and make the world realize the true power
of his karate. In one famous bout in front of a movie camera, he
battled an angry bull on a beach for 45 minutes, both he and the
bull refusing to be beaten. Finally the bull tired, and Mas Oyama
sliced one of his horns off with his shuto, or "knife-hand
strike."
Mas Oyama opened his first
dojo in Ikebukuro, Tokyo at the age of 30, and called it "Oyama
Dojo." It was here that he took all that he had learned from
the various styles that he'd practiced through the years, combined
them with what he'd learned during the many thousands of hours of
self-training and full-contact fighting, and created a new style
of karate, which he called Kyokushin. In 1964, a new dojo in Ikebukuro
became the world headquarters of the International Karate Organization,
Kyokushinkaikan, which had over 12 million members in 133 countries
at the time of his death.
Mas Oyama died of lung cancer
in April of 1994, leaving to the world a legacy of the world's strongest
karate.
|
|