History of the Kokusai Jujutsu Renmei


The Kokusai Ju-Jutsu Renmei (KJJR) was founded in 1991 by Grandmaster Tanemura Tsunehisa Shoto. It was established for the preservation and transmission of true, authentic Japanese Ju-Jutsu. Ju-Jutsu is not a sport. It is a true, traditional martial art of the Samurai. It consists of rolling, breakfalls, blocks, joint locks, throws, grapples, strikes, kicks, chokes, ground work, multiple attackers, and many other techniques.

Jujutsu has been given different names such as Jiu-Jitsu or Ju-Jitsu, which are not correct. Most of those systems are not traditional martial arts with a lineage from Japan. They are blends of other martial sports such as Judo, Aikido, Hapkido, Shoot wrestling, and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.


The Kokusai Jujutsu patch has deep meaning. The outer circle is the golden aura of a halo. The eight-pointed star symbolizes God’s sword shining in all directions. The top 2 symbols translate to "Heaven" and "Earth". The lotus flower in the center is a symbol for peace and harmony.

The names of some of the Ryuha taught are:


Hontai Takagi Yoshin ryu
Kukishin ryu
Asayama Ichiden ryu
Tatara Shinden ryu
Bokuden ryu
Yagyu Shingan ryu
Tenshin ryu
Araki Shin ryu
Itten Chukai Ryushin Ryu
Tenshin Kyohyo Kukishin Ryu
Daito Ryu

~Grandmaster Tanemura Tsunehisa Shoto


Understanding Jujutsu and Martial training

Budo is Budo, that's all. Budo is a great Japanese inheritance which our ancestors made for complete victory, through experience in battles by their blood and sweat. It is not Budo if there is no thinking about battle and effect in a true fighting case. With the Budo if you lose a fight, you face death. The Budo practitioner has to have resolution all time to die or not. Don't confuse true Budo and Bushido which was made up in the feudal age as a Samurai theory by Zen and Confucianism. We have to master ourselves through Budo training. If you divide Jutsu (technique) and Michi (way), and if you try comparing with sport and sportsman that is the idea as in Europe. Then the Ho and Michi are just one.

Sport is decided by rules, takes a weight system, starts the fight from an oath and has an empire. This is very far from the true Budo way of Japan and the East.

For training in Budo one has to keep doing correctly the original Kata, even the steps or swings which previous Masters left as the Ryuha. So we can reach the point we never lose the way.

Some sportman said, training only in Kata is like a mold that one will not be able to break out of to see its applications or variations. I don't think so. If so, that instructor is bad. In the present, there are many strange martial art demonstrations which look like movie shows.

For training in Budo one has to concentrate with strong Ki. So this Ki sees into an opponents heart and he will be afraid. If one can not do this, as a martial artist it is not useful for true cases. If a man trains like a movie actor that is just playing at Budo. Even when receiving a heavy injury never escape and even if ones neck is cut never resign until you knock down and completely finish your enemy.

If you just only throw for a point (like in competition), ... you will never attain true Budo.

After World War II, Japan could reconstruct and the Japanese could have a good standard of living. But even though the economy can prosper, if one loses its traditional culture it is very difficult to reconstruct. If one doesn't try to preserve and study now traditional Japanese Budo will be soon be lost.

I hope to study and train in Japanese Budo instead of spending a lot of time as a sports martial artist only with the Budokan (Japan Budo Center) and Budo class of University. They take control of too many martial arts and are laughed at by Martial Artists from China and Asia . These things are very shameful for the traditional Japanese martial artist and Japan itself too.

I will say again, that martial art (Budo) is not sport and not a play theory of Budo, and it is unimportant how long the scroll is. The most important thing is just training and practice. There is a very famous phrase in China : "The person well known about the way never says so, but the person who doesn't know well soon says".

~Grandmaster Sato Kinbei - 1948

 

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