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It was February of 2020, when Sensei Raja Mookherjee, 3rd Dan Kyokushin Karate and Sensei Capt. Kaustav Nath, 2nd Dan Kyokushin Karate got together and discussed about the future of Kyokushin in India. Seeing the dilution of the training system and deviation from Sosai’s eleven mottos or inscriptions of Kyokushin, known as the Zayūnomei jū ichi-kajō, which are central to the teachings of Kyokushin Karate. Both have known each other for over 36 years since 1984 as young students of Kyokushin Karate in Calcutta. Together they came out with a resolution of building an organization with the vision of implementing Sosai’s version of Kyokushin..

Sosai Masutatsu Oyama,

The Founder of Kyokushin Karate

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 Kempo 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..

TECHNICAL STANDARDS

1. DOJO KUN

There are English and Japanese versions of this Dojo Kun. The Dojo Kun is usually posted on the dojo’s walls. In addition, the Dojo Kun is often recited by the whole class at the end of each training session.

2. KATA

Kata is a Japanese word meaning “form”. It refers to a detailed choreographed pattern of martial arts movements made to be practiced alone. The kata are executed as a specified series of approximately 20 to 70 moves.

3. KUMITE

Kumite is the part of karate in which a person trains against an adversary, using the techniques learned from the kihon and kata. Kumite can be used to develop a particular technique or a skill or it can be done in competition.

4. BELT EXAMINATION SYLLABUS

Masutatsu Oyama, the founder of Kyokushin karate, practiced both Judo and Okinawan Karate before adopting a belt system for Kyokushin karate, his own style.

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