Knightly Spirit: Ninety-five Years of Pacific Northwest
Kendo
By Joseph R. Svinth, e-mail: jrsvinth@juno.com. Copyright © 1999 All rights reserved.
A Hokubei Butokukai kendo tournament,
Gresham, Oregon, February 1940.
The Japanese script at the bottom of the photo reads "ji-chi seinen-dan
kendo-bu soritsu man go shunen kinen o-shu rengo taikai, showa jugo-nen nigatsu
juichi-nichi," or "Oregon Combined Kendo Tournament, in commemoration of the
completion of five full years from the foundation of the G-T [Gresham-Troutdale]
Youth Club Kendo Division: February 11, 1940." The characters at the top read
"hoshuku kigen nisen roppyaku-nen," or "Celebration of the Year 2600 of the
Japanese Era".
In March 1905 there was a kendo demonstration at the University of Washington
in Seattle. In June 1910 there was a similar exhibition during the dedication of
Tacomas Stadium High School Coliseum. As far as is currently known, these were
the earliest public kendo exhibitions in the Pacific Northwest.
The regions earliest known kendo tournament took place in Seattle on August
6, 1910. The location was the Great Northern docks near modern Pier 91, and the
occasion was the Nippon Yusen Kaisha (Japan Mail Lines, or NYK) fleet
championships. Yet despite several well-publicized public demonstrations, for
the next twenty years kendo remained relatively obscure. The reason was a
combination of the expense of equipment and the scarcity of teachers. Around
1924, however, the Seattle Kendo Kai obtained a permanent home, and by 1929 its
junior members were associated with Boy Scout Troops 55 and 56.
The Seattle Kendo Kai was directly affiliated with the Dai Nippon Butokukai
in Japan. Its instructors during the late 1920s included Morita and Morishima.
During the 1930s Umajiro Imanishi supplanted these men. Other Issei instructors
associated with this club included Nakagawa, Ogami, Ohya, Sawada, Tsuneishi, and
Yoshitomi. "Few were highly graded," Jim Akutsu later recalled, "and by the time
I got dan [senior] rank, I could beat most of them. But beating them was
no big deal since they taught kendo as mental discipline rather than military
training or sport."
The Seattle Kendo Kai had one affiliate, a junior club associated with
Seattles Maryknoll Catholic School. Tamotsu Takizaki, 5-dan, taught
there. "I learned much from Takizaki Sensei," former student and present-day
Chicago Kendo Dojo leader George Izui recalled decades later. "Not only kendo
techniques but also his gentle but strong ways." Added another former student,
Henry Itoi, "Mr. Takizaki at the Maryknoll gym was quiet in posture but swift --
like movie samurai, Toshiro Mifune."
During the fall of 1936 the Hokubei Butokukai, a California kendo association
with its international headquarters in Japan, also came to Seattle. Its Seattle
leader was the local businessman Heiji ("Henry") Okuda. Okuda did not practice
kendo himself. ("I cant say I have any real hobbies," he once told a reporter
from the Japanese-American Courier. "But I do like to sit down and
read.") On the other hand, men Okuda knew in California told him what a fine job
the Hokubei Butokukai leader Tokichi Nakamura was doing with California Nisei.
So, when Nakamura visited the Pacific Northwest in September 1936, Okuda agreed
to lend his considerable prestige to the establishment of a Seattle chapter of
the Hokubei Butokukai. This club met at the Seattle Buddhist Church until its
own dedicated dojo opened at 1212 King Street in 1940.
The following were some leaders of Northwest kendo during the mid and late
1930s.
- Umajiro Imanishi, who was the Seattle Kendo Kai kantoku, or
superintendent. Recalled George Izui, "He controlled us young bucks as would a
ramrod sergeant running his platoon. Unfairly at first, we young upstarts showed
no love for him. Later we realized and began to appreciate the unselfish
sacrifice he made in playing the heavy role for our sake." Added Henry Itoi,
"I never asked, but I thought Mr. Imanishi might have been a drill sergeant. I
respected him highly as an instructor and liked him. From him we learned to
abolish any kind of sloppiness in ourselves."
- Goro Mochizuki, a Seattle judoka who upon moving to Oregon in August 1933
also started a kendo class at Portlands Obukan judo dojo.
- Yoriaki Nakagawa, who besides being a kendoka was also the principal of the
Japanese Language School to which many Seattle Nisei were "encouraged" to attend
daily after the public school let out. George Izui has described him as "a tough
disciplinarian who ran a no-nonsense school, and his kendo kamae was of
the same nature. His refereeing (only one person officiating in those days) was
something to behold: firm, crisp, decisive, and fair."
- Jiro Sakano, who taught kendo at Portland's Columbia Boulevard Seinen Kai
before World War II, and was a leader of Northern California kendo afterwards.
- Kazuo Shoji, whom George Izui remembered as "a sensei of the present Seattle
Kendo Kai until his retirement. He was a very strong person with arms as large
as my legs. Noticeable with his aka doh (red breastplate), I admired his
bold, strong, fearless kendo style."
- Tamotsu Takizaki, chief instructor, said George Izui, "was a gentleman and a
great teacher. A product of the old bujutsu, having been awarded a
certificate of proficiency [menkyo] in martial arts, his kendo was
kiru kendo (to cut). His kendo was not of the light razzle-dazzle
flashy type, but grand, stately, immovable, no-wasted-motion style. Although
not a large man by todays standards, to go against him was as though bumping
against a brick wall in one moment, then his light body shifting left the
attacker helplessly shooting off into space at the next moment."
- Richard Yamamoto, who said: "I received my 5-dan and took my
renshi [instructors] exam at the Dai Nippon Butokukai in Japan in 1939.
I came back to the States soon after. I instructed kendo at Seattle, South Park,
Tacoma, Sumner, Puyallup, and Portland. I was what you call a junkai
kyoshi, or roving teacher."
- Kiyoshi Yasui, whom George Izui has described as "a very good kendo person
who had come home [to Seattle] after completing his academic education in Japan.
Although he was a consistent winner, he was very low-keyed and modest, and we
all admired him. "
- Jokatsu Yukawa, kendo and judo teacher (and minister) at the Tacoma Buddhist
Church from 1931 to 1933. "Reverend Yukawa furnished a model champion with his
dynamic personality," Aki Hayashi later recalled. He was "a no-nonsense person
who disciplined with a twinkle in his eye."
During the 1930s, about 10 percent of the students at the Tacoma Buddhist
Church and the Seattle Kendo Kai were female. "I was most nervous about practice
fencing with Mr. Takizakis daughter, Teresa, when she showed up," Henry Itoi
recalled in 1999. "The fellows were reluctant at first to hit her. But we found
out in a hurry that she could dish it out vigorously, and take it too."
Explained Sachiko Yamamoto Oyanagi in 1998, "Although us girls were few in
number, we strived to do our utmost." As for kendo's long-term value, Mrs.
Oyanagi added that the "most lasting experience was not the sport but what it
taught. Kendo taught me to discipline myself. So many sports are for skill and
ability. But in kendo you are taught respect, endurance, and love of
mankind."
Of training during this period, Jim Akutsu recalled:
Up to about nikyu [2-kyu; an advanced beginners grade], we did
slam-bang kendo. That is, wed put on armor and pick up swords and bang away at
each other. But once we made nikyu, Takizaki Sensei took us aside and
said that each stroke was supposed to be clean, that one stroke should do the
work. We had to know the opponents intention, and to feel his vibrations. For
that, he had us meditate.
Kangeiko, or winter training, was an ascetic practice, or shugyo,
commonly associated with prewar Pacific Northwest kendo classes. Although
kangeiko was meant to build practitioners character through overcoming
shared hardships, so far as most Nisei were concerned it mostly involved
training in the middle of winter with the heat off and the windows wide. As
Seattles Bill Fukuda put it:
I remember going to kangeiko (mid-winter training), in winter at five
oclock in the morning. We used to go to kangeiko for two weeks every
morning. It was cold! The instructors were all ex-soldiers of Japan. In a way
they treated us like they were in a military camp
They taught us a lot of
manners, Reigi-tadashii (be polite). Certainly they taught you that there
was a pecking order you know exactly where you are in the pecking
order.
Each large prewar kendo club organized an annual shiai, or contest.
Although of course everyone preferred winning to losing, the goal was more to
foster cooperation than to acquire trophies , and one of the measures of success
was the quality of the food served during and after the matches.
The standard pre-WWII Northwest tournament circuit included Steveston,
Vancouver, Seattle, Tacoma, and Portland Metro. "Rules regarding contests
yesterday did not seem as complicated as they are today," recalled George
Izui:
A contest was refereed by one person. His calls were never questioned. If a
contestant had a doubt about the officials call, he tried to do better next
time, so there would be no doubt. There may have been penalty rulings, but I
cannot recall anyone having been charged with one. Teammates did not applaud or
shout any encouragement, advice, or joyous approval. The spectators may have
applauded a good contest, but I do not remember.
The Northwests final prewar kendo tournament took place at the Hokubei
Butokukai kendo hall at 1212 King Street on Sunday, May 4, 1941. Besides
competition in kendo, said the Japanese-American Courier, there was also
a display of "Kendo-no-kata, a form of fencing which is done by two kendo
instructors with real glittering Japanese swords."
All US kendo clubs closed following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in
December 1941. Unlike Canada, there was no kendo in US "relocation centers"
during World War II. So while World War II helped spread kendo into Ontario and
Alberta, in the US kendo did not resume until the mid-1950s.
In Spokane, pioneers of the postwar revival included Sgt. Martin Di
Francisco, who taught kendo at Fairchild Air Force Base from 1956 to 1960; he
had learned his kendo in Japan and was an Air Force close combat instructor. In
Seattle, postwar pioneers included Umajiro Imanishi, Kazuo Shoji, and Kiyoshi
Yasui. Their reformed Seattle Kendo Kai couldnt train at the prewar Hokubei
Butokukai kendo hall, however, as in December 1951 that building had been sold
to the Nisei Veterans Committee for use as a meeting hall. So the clubs first
dojo was in the gym at Seattles Morrison Hotel, and later it moved to the gym
at St. Peters Episcopal Church, where it still holds classes today.
During the early 1960s a kendo club opened at the Tacoma Buddhist Temple. Its
head instructor, Rod Nobuto Omoto, was from Oregon but had received his kendo
training at the Budo Semmon Gakko, or Busen, in Japan before World War II. Mas
Tanabe and Yosh Tanabe (no relation) assisted in Tacoma kendo instruction.
A kendo club formed at the University of Washington during the early 1970s
and to facilitate tournaments and regulate promotions the Washington State Kendo
Federation was established in 1974. This organizations by-laws and constitution
were approved on March 9, 1975. The President was Rod N. Omoto. Vice President
was Kiyoshi Yasui. Paul H. Kurose was Executive Secretary, Treasurer. Hitoshi
Mohri was Secretary of Internal Affairs, and Recording Secretary was John
Sullivan.
In 1975 Steven Strauch and Tomotsu Osada organized what became the Obukan
Kendo Club in Portland, and then affiliated with the Washington State Kendo
Federation. Over the next fifteen years clubs in Alaska, Idaho, and Montana also
affiliated, and as a result on March 3, 1991 Washington State Kendo Federation
voted to change its name to the more appropriate Pacific Northwest Kendo
Federation (PNKF).
By November 1999 PNKF had sixteen member clubs, plus several more budding.
For example, there is currently an active program at Tacoma Community College,
theres a revival of the Washington State University Kendo Club, the Bellevue
Kendo Club is helping establish a dojo at Everett Community College, Idaho Kendo
Kai is helping people practicing in Pocatello, and Obukan Kendo Club is
encouraging incipient clubs in Corvallis and Eugene.
Welcome to new members as well as to old friends from Canada and
elsewhere.
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