Shotokan Traditional Karate Organisation (UK)
Grandmaster Hirokazu Kanazawa
This text is an excerpt taken from the book, "KANAZAWA, 10th DAN -
Recollections Of A Living Karate Legend - The early years (1931-1964)",
with kind permission from Dr Clive Layton, and Hanshi Mick Randall MBE
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Who in the world of Shotokan karate has not heard
the name, Hirokazu Kanazawa? No, let me broaden that question: Who in
the world of karate, irrespective of style, has not heard of the name
"Hirokazu Kanazawa?" for it is a name that has almost become synonymous
with an entire art form. He is, quite simply, the most famous karateka
alive today.
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It would be sufficient to say that Master Kanazawa holds
the highest
black-belt rank currently bestowed by the Japanese upon any martial
artist. If we then added that, despite it being true that the era of
karate's popularisation is now over, the master nevertheless spends at
least six months of each year away from Japan, travelling the globe
teaching the 2.4 million students in the one hundred and six countries
that go to form the Shotokan Karate-Do International Federation, to
which he is chief instructor, so that the deep spirit of karate can be
imparted, it can readily be appreciated how his fame has come about.
Incredibly, the SKIF is now, it is believed, operating in more
countries than the Japan Karate Association.
However, Master Kanazawa's fame does not rest solely on
his seniority or on the number of students within his association
today, though clearly these are indicative, but on a series of
contributory factors, essentially personal, but also historical, that
have made the above possible. Terry O'Neill, for example, wrote in the
mid l970s that Kanazawa was "often cited by experts as the man who has
come closest to achieving perfect technique ... [and that] From an
aesthetic viewpoint, the karate of Kanazawa has no equal..." But this
technical prowess was not God-given, it was the result of a
single-minded determination that has not waned in fifty years.
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Another of the master's notable attributes is his
ability to communicate, which may be seen as a combination of his high
intelligence and the love he has for an art that he has chosen to
share. Vernon Bell, the founder of British karate, reflecting back to
1965 recalled that Kanazawa's "teaching ability was so profound that
even the simplest of individuals, just by copying, just by following,
repeating, could feel what Kanazawa was teaching." Certainly, Kanazawa
always could, and still can, draw the very best from a willing pupil.
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And the demonstrations! Master Kanazawa is, in the
author's considered
opinion, not only the finest exponent of conventional tameshiwari that
the world of Shotokan has ever produced, but he lays claim to a strange
and unique ability in the martial arts, an ability that defies the
known laws of science, at least as the author understands them, in that
he can reputedly board-break and brick-break selectively in a stack,
with either punch or kick. Clearly, all in all, there is something very
special indeed about this man.
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As one might imagine, Master Kanazawa's karate
lineage is of the first-order. A student, and later vice-captain of the
infamous Takushoku University dojo for four years, he was taught by the
founder of Shotokan, Gichin Funakoshi, and by Master Masatoshi
Nakayama, Chief Instructor of the JKA, as well as by numerous other
seniors, including Hidetaka Nishiyama and Teruyuki Okazaki. In 1956,
Kanazawa was one of only three selected to enter the newly instigated
one-year JICA Instructors' Courses. Then, in 1957, at the first JKA
All-Japan Championships, he won the individual kumite title despite
having entered the competition with a broken hand. The following year,
he won both the individual kumite and kata competitions, becoming the
first JKA Grand Champion, a feat that has only been repeated five times
since. In 1961 he was posted as JKA Chief lnstructor to Hawaii,
returning in 1963. In 1964 he studied briefly on Okinawa, and in 1965
he came to Great Britain.
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It is just before the trip to Europe that this book
ends, for the story
of 1965-1966 is told in great detail in Volume II of the author's
Shotokan Dawn, which is currently in press, and, The Kanazawa Years
details personal reminiscences of Michael
Randall MBE for the period 1965- 1968, which covers the master's
residence in Britain. Master Kanazawa then taught in West Germany for
two years, acting as coach to the European team at the world
championships in Mexico in 1968, before returning to Japan to take up a
dual post - Principal Director of the lnternational Section of the JKA,
and as a Director of the JKA. During this time he also taught at
Musashi, Kanto and Kitazato universities. He was coach to the JICA team
for a number of years, and successfully took the world championship
title in Paris, 1972.
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In 1978, following political problems and what
seems like a very acrimonious split from the then JKA, Master Kanazawa
returned to Japan as a matter of honour, having originally intended to
take up residence in Canada. Despite considerable family pressure to
move to North America, he was determined to stay in Tokyo as the
unfortunate and derogatory word jomei had been banded about concerning
him. Alone, he said he felt like a kitten compared to the might of the
JKA tiger. Resolute that others were not going to determine his future,
and feeling that truth would prevail and that a great test was before
him, he formed SKI, essentially, from nothing. "My approach to students
was to say, 'The door is open, but I'm not inviting you in. Come if you
want to.' I never canvassed students, never poached them from other
dojo or associations, especially not from the JKA." Class will tell,
and the rest, as they say, is history - a history recorded, albeit
often very sketchily, in martial arts magazines of the last twenty
years or so.
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Since that time Master Kanazawa has spent his life
teaching and
building up the federation he is justly proud of, and which contains,
according to the master, a staggering estimated one hundred thousand
black-belts worldwide. Indeed, so great now are the numbers within SKI
that a new computer system has had to be installed (away from the dojo
because the sweat of students is affecting the workings). The greatest
personal tragedy came with the premature death of his dear wife of
fifteen years, Harue, aged forty-four, from cancer, in 1988. They had
three sons, Nobuaki, Daizo, and Fumitoshi, all of whom attended
university and all of whom have studied karate. Indeed, Nobuaki is the
SKI World Kumite Champion, and Nobuaki and Fumitoshi met in the finals
of an SKI open tournament in Japan in 1998, so the tradition continues.
"Now," Master Kanazawa says, "karateka, all over the world, are my
family." Today, he still resides in Japan, with SKI's headquarters
being at 2-1-20, Minamikugahara Ota ku, Tokyo 146-0084. His current
rank of judan was awarded in April, 2000, while the master was
attending the SKI World Championships in Bali, Indonesia. Such is his
notoriety, an internationally recognizable figure, that in a number of
countries, especially those with unstable political situations, the
master is accorded VIP treatment, and it has not been unknown for him
to have a military escort from the airport.
If one saw Master Kanazawa and had no idea of just who
he was, or what he did, I believe that most observers would
instinctively appreciate that here was someone of great depth and
hidden strength. If one was fortunate enough to meet him socially, then
one would discern a dignified, well educated and well-mannered Japanese
of good bearing, where one's initial observations of depth and strength
would undoubtedly be confirmed. His posture and quietly assured
composure are, without doubt, a consequence of his hard and continuous
training through half a century. This practise has resulted in an
astonishing physique, one that has given rise to comment by just about
everyone who has seen the master in the changing room. Master
Kanazawa's body is truly something to behold, an inspiration, for
despite being seventy years of age, he is an anatomical chart of honed
sinew and muscle that a karateka half his age would be proud of.
It may seem surprising then, given the remarkable nature
of the man, and the seemingly endless stream of superlatives used to
describe him, that no authoritative book has been written chronicling
the master. Despite having being approached on a number of occasions by
writers on karate and publishers around the world, the master never
consented to make the time available, and all that could be gleaned had
to be picked from the patchwork of material covered in interviews in
martial arts magazines, and from brief biographical information from
books and the master's numerous technical works, many of which have
been pirated in countries where some of the populace seem to have scant
regard for the notion of copyright. There was clearly a need for such a
book as, Kanazawa, 10th Dan. In traditional karate fashion, the master
wanted to entrust this form of his legacy to students he knew, and
those with a proven track record. The author had known the master for
twenty-six years when interviewing commenced, and the publisher of this
book, Michael Randall MBE, 9th
Dan, trained with the master on the very first lesson he gave in Great
Britain in April, 1965, so an atmosphere of understanding and trust was
apparent throughout.
Karate-Do is a Way of life, and, as such, must reflect
and balance all life's moods. If happiness can rise above sadness, when
normality prevails, then surely we have chosen well. Terry O'Neill
wrote more than thirty years ago of Master Kanazawa:
"He is the perfect specimen of the type of person the art of karate can
develop there will never be a finer living example of what karate at
its highest level really is. The present author concurs whole-heartedly
with this sentiment. Kanazawa's life has been one of dedication,
striving and sharing - a life where the very limits of human ability
and understanding have been stretched.
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