Nihon jujutsu
Nihon Jujutsu ( Japanese日本 柔 術, nihonjūjutsu , literally Japanese, soft art ) is a modern Japanese Budō discipline for self-defense and physical training, the techniques of which are combined from both ancient and contemporary Japanese martial arts.
history
In the 1940s, the master student of Mifune Kyuzo and Ito Kazuo (both 10th Dan Meijin Judo ), Satō Shizuya (10th Dan Meijin Nihon Jujutsu, 9th Dan Hanshi Judo, founding member and chief instructor of IMAF ), based on the techniques of several traditional Jiu Jitsu styles and Judo, the modern Japanese Nihon Jujutsu. It was officially recognized by the IMAF-Kokusai Budoin as a new Budo discipline and adopted as an independent system.
In Germany, Nihon Jujutsu is taught in the DAKO (German-Asian Martial Arts Organization), the German partner budo association of the IMAF, under the direction of Peter Klein (8th Dan Kyoshi Nihon Jujutsu, 7th Dan Jiu Jitsu) .
techniques
Nihon Jujutsu includes:
- Taisabaki (evasive moves)
- Ukemi (Roll and Fall)
- Kihon Waza (basic techniques)
- Kihon Kata (fixed partner exercises)
- Goshin-ho (free defense combinations)
- Tanbo-Jutsu (handling the short stick).
Attacks of all kinds are fended off with throws, levers, punches, kicks and choking techniques.
swell
- www.imaf-germany.de, Peter Klein: Nihon Jujutsu
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ IMAF: Meijin. Retrieved June 7, 2017 .