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  • Martial Arts Enhancement Seminar 5 in Portland, OR

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    MAES 5 Flyer PicSigung Trent Junker of “Realm Of The Tiger Kajukenbo” in Portland, OR has an upcoming seminar with some big names.

    It will be held on Sunday March 23, 2014 and is FREE for Kajukenbo black belts!

    I recommend training with Kelly Worden any time you get the chance.

    Sifu Kyle Alexander is hosting the event at the “Acdemy of Kung Fu” on SE 21st and Powell in Portland, OR

    MAES 5 Flyer (PDF)


  • Possible hack of GM Dechi’s email account

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    If you receive a version of this email do not open the link and DEFINITELY do not sign in to view any “document” unless you first get independent confirmation that it is legitimate.

    For the record, it does not matter WHO the email is supposed to be from.

    Thank you to Ms. Joanna for bringing it to my attention.

    ———- Forwarded message ———-

    From: “Dechi Emperado” <ksdidechi @at@ gmail .dot. com>
    Date: Feb 20, 2014 2:01 PM
    Subject: Please View This Original Doc
    To:
    Cc:

    Hello

    Please check the Google Document i sent to you and get back to me.

    CLICK TO VIEW IT HERE

    And log in with your email.

    It’s very important.

    Thanks.

     UPDATE:  This was confirmed to be bogus here on the Kajukenbo Cafe


  • USJJF is no longer a JJIF Member nor are they the recognized governing body for the USA

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    Sarah Stanton sarah -dot- m {dot} stanton [AT]  gmail _dot_ com
    Feb 17 (3 days ago)

    Hello!

    I am contacting you because you are a current or past member of the United States Ju-Jitsu Federation (USJJF). We wanted to let you know that there has been a change in Ju-Jitsu in the USA. The USJJF is no longer a JJIF Member nor are they the recognized governing body for the USA.

    The Ju-Jitsu International Federation has recognized the United States Ju-Jitsu Organization (USJJO) as the National JuJitsu Member of the USA and as the recognized Governing Body for JuJitsu in the USA. Follow this link to see the JJIF letter to the USJJO and the USJJO Press Release: http://usjjo.org/usjjo-national-governing-body-ju-jitsu-usa/

    We would like have you join our organization and participate in any manner that would benefit you, your organization and your students.

    About Us: http://usjjo.org/about-us/
    Membership: http://usjjo.org/membership/
    Member Schools: http://usjjo.org/membership/members/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/United-States-Ju-Jitsu-Organization/215508245191744

    If you would like to discuss our organization, I would be happy to talk to you at your convenience.

    Thank you!

    Sarah Stanton
    President
    US Ju-Jitsu Organization
    (4four0) 4seven6-9one6four
    www.usjjo.org


  • Lua seminar: Olohe Solomon Kaihewalu

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    From the Kajukenbo Cafe, here

    2014-Olohe-Kaihewalu-2014-seminarLim Family Martial Arts. LFMA LIM Karate Proudly Presents: Lua Great Grandmaster Olohe Solomon Kaihewalu

    Here is an opportunity to experience “PRICELESS” training in a private setting with the Creator Founder of Kaihewalu Lua. One of the most prolific & effective hand & weapon martial artists in the world. “Papa Sol” is one of the most senior “Living Legends” available to us today. He is a 12th Degree Black Belt, Great Grandmaster. One of a few Great Grandmasters that teach “On the floor” everyday! Olohe is one of only 2% true Hawaiian blood living from Hawaii. His ancestry bloodline goes back to Hawaiian Royalty. Related to the Chow Family through Legendary John Chow Hoon.

    DATE: Friday, Sept. 19, 2014
    TIME: 5:00 pm – 9:00 pm
    LOCATION: BFSC – Barney Family Sports Complex
    22050 Queen Creek Rd., Queen Creek, AZ 85142
    SEMINAR FEE: $40.00 per participant or Red Envelope


  • Uke needed for Rakkasans self-defense class

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    Hi, Rakkasans!

    I’m Looking for an Uke!

    I need an uke/assistant instructor/”mugger” to assist me in a self-defense class for the 7th Graders at Immanuel Lutheran School, in St. Charles.

    Class dates are February 20th, 24th, and 27th , from 9-11 am.

    Individual should be able to take some judo falls, not be afraid of getting joint-locked, and be able to work with and help 12- and 13-year olds.

    Sense of humor required!

    I’ve been teaching this class for Immanuel Lutheran for about 16 years.  For most of those years, Sean Kiely (grandson of our much-missed Sensei Kiely) and/or my oldest son have helped me.  However, both are now gainfully employed, and not free for these classes.

    It is not necessary to attend all three; if you can only help at one…that’s appreciated, too!  (The final class on the 27th is the one when you and
    I will be taking falls from all the kids in the final exercise!  And if I don’t find an uke, I’ll be taking *ALL* the falls!)

    Pay will be much gratitude, lots of smiles from the kids, and a bottle of water!  If you wish, afterwards I will write a letter of appreciation to your Sensei.

    If interested and available, contact me at cfcoffin “at” mindspring -dot- com or at 3one4 9seven3 0six5six.

    Thanks!

    Chuck Coffin
    6th Dan, Jujitsu
    4th Dan, Judo
    Member, Rakkasans Martial Arts Hall of Fame


  • Joe Lewis’ Top 10 Martial Arts for Self Defense

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    Brother John Rentschler submitted this article he found in Black Belt magazine.

    “At least two of these should ring a bell.” —  John Rentschler

    Joe Lewis’ Top 10 Martial Arts for Self-Defense

    by Joe Lewis – February 3, 2014 *

    Karate champion Joe Lewis teaches a martial arts clinic.

    This list is in no particular order. I could have put krav maga, haganah and others in there, but when I got to 10, I stopped. This list will piss off many instructors, but they have to realize, for example, that with a system like kyokushinkai, which came from goju-ryu and has many descendants like asahara, enshin, yoshukai and zendokai, they were not left out. Krav maga, for example, has nothing that the Okinawan, Japanese and kickboxing systems do not. If I were to include all of them, the list would go into the hundreds.

    Kyokushinkai Karate

    Kyokushinkai has a great history of physical toughness and conditioning, as well as an arsenal of leg kicks, sweeps and knee strikes from the outside and from the pocket. Most K-1 champions come from this style. It’s weak on ground maneuvers, though.

    Outlaw Tai Chi

    It has an effective composition of quick strikes (cutting and tissue-ripping moves) to vital areas like the eyes, ears, face, neck and groin. The emphasis in training is on pure nonclassical maneuvers, as is seen in most other Chinese systems. However, outlaw tai chi is weak on structure and ground maneuvers.

    Bando

    Although strictly a weapons-based style, bando lends itself to highly effective defensive techniques (without weapons) from old-school monk tactics largely developed years ago in Southeast Asia along trade routes. It contains bleeding techniques, head striking, low-level flange kicks, drop kicks and farewell kicks not taught in other kickboxing styles.

    Kajukenbo

    It’s a hybrid system that uses the best parts of other styles, from upright maneuvers to grappling. It was designed strictly for self-defense instead of adhering to traditional rituals or sporting competition. Its weaknesses are a lack of movements to control the horizontal relationship with assailants — like all styles — and always using the hands as the primary means of defense. **

    ** Mike Griffin specifically adapted and modified our Kajukenbo to address these weaknesses before I even started training with him.

    Chinese Kenpo

    Chinese kenpo has a curriculum that encompasses all areas of self-defense. Practitioners learn a range of attacking angles, realistic scenarios and methods for defending from any position with any weapon. The main weakness is a lack of emphasis on ground maneuvers, along with limited kicking and knee striking.

    Okinawa-Te

    The original system had a complete arsenal of weapon and non-weapon skills. It had the perfect blend of old-school, pain-tolerance training with scientific skills that utilized the least amount of effort and time to produce the maximum amount of damage. Its weaknesses are the amount of time it takes to learn all the long animal forms (there are 36, with one having up to 500 moves) and a lack of “balanced” ground maneuvers.

    Judo

    Although it was created along the lines of a non-jutsu activity — which means it was designed mainly for exercise and sport — the best bouncers I’ve ever worked with were judo black belts. Because judoka spend most of their time doing tug-of-war-type drills with partners on the mat, they’re very successful in reality combat, even with their limited striking ability.

    Aikijutsu

    Its tactics for off-balancing an opponent before leveraging him — as opposed tojujutsu, which is more concerned with straight leverage — is a good system to bridge the gap between the sport/exercise aspects of the old-school (read: hard-core) jutsu forms and the free-flowing sport forms we see on TV. Beware of the “consumer” atmosphere found in some schools today and the lack of effective striking skills when practicing self-defense drills.

    Kickboxing

    This style can offer the very best of realistic, upright striking skills, hands down. If you learn the old muay boran knees, the head butt, the bleeding and cutting techniques, and the old-school takedowns, this system cannot be beat. Its weakness is a lack of attention to self-defense as opposed to sport. The conditioning drills taught at most authentic schools make up for any need to practice purely self-defense scenario.

    Boxing

    Few martial arts teach these two defensive skills: Use the head to protect the head and the body to protect the body. Instead, they use weapon-fighting tactics — using the hands to protect the head or the body. For self-defense from the pocket, it would be hard to defend against a good boxer. Of course, boxing’s lack of elbow strikes, groin attacks and ground defense is limiting, but for pain tolerance and conditioning, it can’t be beat

    About the Author:

    “[Joe Lewis] was one of the most significant figures in the history of the American martial arts,” writes Mark Jacobs in his tribute to Lewis published in the December 2012 issue of Black Belt. “From his early advocacy of boxing to his creation of kickboxing to his analysis of key fighting principles like critical distance and angles of attack, his influence was vast and his passing is a loss to the martial arts world.”

    * Mr. Lewis died August 31, 2012, this article is a reprint


  • Was “Ju-jitsu Girl” the first ever super-heroine?

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    Brother Steve Todd sent this article here.  It should be interesting for those of you who know our lineage regarding Yukio Tani, Bill Underwood & Defendo or are interested in how Sherlock Holmes learned to fight.

    Was “Ju-jitsu Girl” the first ever super-heroine?

    Was &quot;Ju-jitsu Girl&quot; the first ever super-heroine?

    Was &quot;Ju-jitsu Girl&quot; the first ever super-heroine?

    In real life, Florence Gardiner (c. 1891-?) was a pioneering advocate of Asian martial arts as feminist self defense. Her theatrical and literary alter ego, “Florence ‘Flossie’ Le Mar, the Ju-Jitsu Girl” may just qualify as one of the first superheroines.

    Florence and her husband, professional wrestler and showman Joe Gardiner, toured vaudeville theaters throughout New Zealand prior to the First World War. Their signature act showed audiences how a Lady might defeat an aggressive Hooligan (mugger) via the skilled application of jujitsu.

    According to a 1913 poem promoting the vaudeville act:

    In ‘The Hooligan and Lady’, they are smart, clean, clever, straight.
    No act in this world is better – fast, and strictly up-to-date.
    This act’s a small-sized drama – constructed round Jitsu
    A Japanese discovery, wherein they show to you,
    How it’s possible for a lady, when molested by a cad,
    Maybe tackled by a robber, in fact, any man that’s bad,
    Can hold her own against him and quickly put him through,
    When she knows the locks and holds – pertaining to the art Jitsu.

    So clever is the lady that when the tough with pistol, knife
    And bludgeon tries to rough her and mayhap take her life,
    Like lightning-flash she meets him and quickly stays his hand,
    By tumbling him hard earthwards – I tell you it is grand –
    And proves to me and all here what women folk can do
    When attacked, if they but study Miss Le Mar at Ju Jitsu.

    These techniques were also explained and illustrated in Florence’s book, The Life and Adventures of Miss Florence Le Mar, the World’s Famous Ju-Jitsu Girl, which is undoubtedly one of the rarest and strangest self defence manuals ever written.

    Was &quot;Ju-jitsu Girl&quot; the first ever super-heroine?

    In addition to jujitsu lessons, the book offered a great deal of feminist polemic and a series of six fantastical tales describing her hair-raising adventures as the Ju-Jitsu Girl, taking on desperadoes including opium smugglers in Sydney, crooked gamblers in New York City and an English “lunatic” who believed he was a bear. The Jujitsu Girl defended the weak and innocent, solved crimes and punished villains through her mastery of the martial arts, pre-dating comic book superheroines like Lady Luck, Black Canary, Phantom Lady and Wonder Woman by nearly three decades.

    Though not without charm, these short stories have the sharp corners and hard edges typical of early 20th century dime novels. They are also undeniably theatrical and, in combination with Florence’s biography and her fierce feminism, inspired the production of a play, The Hooligan and the Lady, which was a hit at the 2011 New Zealand Fringe Festival.

    Florence’s heroic “Ju-Jitsu Girl” persona is also featured in the upcoming graphic novel trilogy Mrs. Pankhurst’s Amazonsin which she is a member of a secret society of radical London suffragettes who protect the leaders of their movement from arrest and assault. Mrs. Pankhurst’s Amazons is due to be published in early 2014 by Jet City Comics, a new imprint of Amazon Publishing.

     

     

     

    Click here for the original article on io9.com.

    Click here for more on “Mrs. Pankhurst’s Amazons”: a thrilling tale of Suffragette super-heroine at the Bartitsu Society


  • Gene LeBell podcast

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    Adam Smith found this on Joe Rogan’s site.  It is a podcast with “Judo” Gene LeBell.

    JRE #423 – GENE LEBELL 12.02.13

    #423. Gene LeBell is an American martial artist, instructor, stunt performer, and professional wrestler.

    Gene LeBell has worked on over 1,000 films and TV shows and has authored a number of books.

    There are a number of stories floating around about his encounters with other martial artists on different film sets.

     


  • Class cancelled Tues 2014-Feb-04

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    Winter Weather Advisory for Jefferson, MO
    until 6:00 AM CST, Wed., Feb 05, 2014

    Other affected areas:
    Bond, IL; Fayette, IL; Clinton, IL; Madison, IL; St. Clair, IL; Monroe, IL; Gasconade, MO; St. Charles, MO; Franklin, MO; St. Louis, MO; St. Louis City, MO; Jefferson, MO; Crawford, MO; Washington, MO

    Issued by The National Weather Service
    St. Louis, MO
    Tue, Feb 4, 2014, 11:42 AM CST
    Updated Feb 4, 2014, 2:15pm CST

    … WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6 AM CST WEDNESDAY…
    * TIMING… SNOW IS EXPECTED THIS AFTERNOON AND WILL CONTINUE INTO TONIGHT.
    * ACCUMULATIONS… 4 TO 6 INCHES OF SNOW.
    * WINDS… NORTHEAST 10 TO 15 MPH WITH GUSTS UP TO 20 MPH.
    * IMPACTS… RAPID ACCUMULATIONS OF SNOW WILL MAKE FOR HAZARDOUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS.
    PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…
    A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY MEANS THAT UP TO 5 INCHES OF SNOW IS EXPECTED ACROSS THE ADVISORY AREA. ROADS MAY RAPIDLY BECOME SLIPPERY ONCE THE SNOW BEGINS… SO MOTORISTS SHOULD PLAN FOR A SLOWER THAN NORMAL TRIP. BE ESPECIALLY ALERT WHEN APPROACHING BRIDGES… OVERPASSES… AND CURVES.


  • CANCELLED: 2014 Rakkasans Hall of Fame Banquet

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    “From: Gina Breadon <g…n@yahoo.com>

    Date: Tue, Feb 4, 2014 at 12:55 AM
    Subject: Fw: RAkkasans Hall of Fame Banquet cancellation for 2014

    AS  you may know Rakkasans has been hosting our Martial Arts Hall of Fame Awards Banquet each year for over a decade now. We want to thank everyone for their continued support and faith in our mission, to recognize and honor others from all styles who have become pillars in our martial arts community. Rakkasans has always done this as a not-for-profit organization with many of its own members and organizers contributing financially themselves to ensure its success.

    Although the past Hall of Fame Awards have been very rewarding and successful, many of our members and our banquet administrators have recently had to contend with the stressful economic downturn, greater employment responsibilities, and health issues, particularly in 2013 and into 2014. We know that these situations, among others, contributed to our low attendence last year.

    Therefore, the Rakassans board has decided that it is time for a reprieve and have cancelled the 2014 banquet. Instead, our focus and energies will be put into the 2015 banquet allowing us time to locate a new venue and vamp up our program.

    We welcome nominations for 2015 and encourage our up and coming Rakkasans to step forward and get involved by offering their skills (especially in computer and video) to make the 2015 Hall of Fame the best it can be.

    We have already begun planning and we are actively soliciting nominations for 2015.

    Again, we sincerely appreciate everyone’s support. Have a healthy and prosperous 2014!
    We will see you in 2015. Please pass this information on to your students and friends.

    Rakkasans Board of Directors.”

    ** LOCATION IS TENTATIVE **

    The date is Saturday April 12, 2014 at   6:30 pm – 10:30 pm approximately.  Same location as last year.

    Wyman Directions <PDF>

    Wyman Map <PDF>

    Location: Wyman Center, 600 Kiwanis Drive, Eureka, MO 63025   This is the Kling Building at the front of Wyman property.  It is NOT on the PDF map.

    Meal cost: $25.00 per person (Credit cards, cash or checks are acceptable. Make checks payable to CODA/Rakkasans, PO box 292, Pacific, MO 63069)

    Note: Consider carpooling if necessary to save gas and on parking.  Parking space is somewhat limited.

    Reservations and payment can be made immediately, you do not need to wait for invitations, and the names of your parties will be placed on the attendance list
    Attire is: Business (coat and tie for men), cocktail dresses or suits for women.

    Guests are welcome.  RSVP’s can be sent to Gina Breadon.
    Listen for a phone call from a Rakkasans representative reminding past attendees about the banquet

    Instructors, please forward this invitation to all your students and friends who love martial arts.

    Nominations for Hall of Fame Honors can be sent to Gina or to Charlie Parson as well as to you sponsor at your school.
    Candidates must meet the following criteria: outstanding integrity, community service and involvement, propagating the arts through consistent training or through a recognized school. We must have their name address current phone number & current address. Include the length of time they have been training and their instructor’s name who will be sponsoring them. They must also provide a bio about their martial arts journey so that we can announce them properly when present awards.

    Nominees must not have any criminal records or felonies.
    Must have 30 or more to be eligible for Hall of Fame. Other that support or are the right hand man of a schools owner is an excellent candidate for the Honorable Mention.
    We also announce new black belts so give us a list of most recent black belts since last year.
    Please remember to send this email out to students and friends right away. don’t wait for invitations this year.
    Honorable Mention are also give awards

    Keep Gina posted quickly and efficiently if you have nominees.   Emails are always appreciated too.


  • Discover Lua, Hawaii’s Martial Art

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    Brother John Rentschler found this Black Belt Magazine article, “Discover Lua, Hawaii’s Martial Art”, from March 21, 2011.

    I am posting the text of the article to make it easier to search.

    Discover Lua, Hawaii’s Martial Art

    “To the casual observer, Hawaii seems to be an unlikely place for fierce arts of self-defense to have originated. The mental picture of the Hawaii of olden times is one of peaceful Polynesians lazing under a warm sun, virtually isolated in the mid-Pacific and thus safe and secure from outside enemies. But this stereotype doesn’t fit the facts. Hawaii has had its share of invaders and war. And these lush tropical islands, cut off from the mainstream of the martial arts, produced one of the deadliest—some say the deadliest—form of unarmed self-defense systems ever invented.

    The Origin of Lua Martial Arts

    The art was called lua, a bone-breaking form of personal defense that bears a surprising resemblance to modern Japanese martial arts. Lua is something of a big, economy-sized art, incorporating elements similar to those of karate, judo, jujutsu, aikido and kendo. Every Hawaiian youngster has grown up hearing tales of it terrible power. And each generation has embellished those tales, so that it’s difficult now to distinguish fact from fancy.Lua has come to mean different things over the years. To some, it refers to the whole range of exotic defensive arts that seemed to grow with profusion in ancient Hawaii. They included various forms of boxing, wrestling, spear throwing and staff combat. A narrower version of lua refers to one specific art, a dreaded and secret method of defense that had many elements in common with the lawless forms of roughhouse jujutsu that flourished in Japan at the end of the 19th century.The secret art of lua was taught only to a select few, and what’s known has come down mainly by word of mouth, since the ancient Hawaiian language was spoken but not written. But what we do know provides a fascinating insight into the ways of the ancient Hawaiian warrior and the society in which he lived. For one thing, that society liked to hold competitions in the martial arts and sports, especially during the period known as Makahiki. That was the time of thanksgiving held each year in honor of Lono, the god of the farmer. But the old Hawaiians really knew how to celebrate, so instead of Makahiki being held for just one day, the festivities were spread out over three months—roughly from October 15 to January 15. During that period, all labor ceased, and the time was given over to feasting and merrymaking.

    Lau Martial Arts Competition

    As part of the merrymaking, the young bloods of the different villages gathered on the kahua, or playground, to compete in martial sports. The playing area was marked off by spears stuck into the ground. On the sidelines, the men of the village engaged in heavy betting on their favorites. Everything from property to wives might be staked on the outcome of a single match.A favorite sport was mokomo, a form of boxing in which we have a rare firsthand description written by a Westerner who was an on-the-scenes observer. One of the officers aboard the ship of Capt. Cook, the explorer who opened up the islands, writes about a mokomo match he witnessed in the late 18th century: “When the sports were ready to begin, the signal was given by the judges, and immediately two combatants appeared. As they approached, they frequently eyed each [other] from head to foot in a contemptuous manner … straining their muscles and using a variety of affected gestures. [Having] advanced within reach of each other, they stood with both arms held out straight before their faces, at which part their blows were aimed. They struck, in what appeared to be an awkward manner, with a full swing of the arm; made no attempt at parry, but eluded their adversary’s attack by an inclination of the body or by retreating. The battle was quickly decided; for if either of them was knocked down, or even fell by accident, he was considered as vanquished. … During the fight, the opponents generally hurled names at one another. Even the spectators often joined in by hurling taunts at the opponents of their favorites. The contestants depended heavily on their aumaka, or guardian angel, for victory. While engaged in the struggle, it was not unusual for the kahuna (priest) of one of the contestants to run to his side, especially if he appeared to be weakening, and try to encourage him by chanting aloud the records of his ancestors, and how it would be such an insult for them if he lost.”The bouts could be quite rough, and one blow could kill a man. The young Hawaiians were contemptuous of wearing any sort of protective clothing, and they engaged each other draped only in loincloths. The secret forms of lua were never performed at those gatherings. Written accounts of them came much later. And what we have is skimpy. The first definition of lua appears in Lorrin Andrews’ Dictionary of the Hawaiian Language, published in 1865. He defines lua as “bone-breaking … (and) much practiced in ancient times.” Its self-defense techniques were taught only to those who could control their tempers and supposedly was never to be used except in defense of life. According to legend, lua martial arts required a good knowledge of anatomy, physiology, and even a form of hypnotism and telepathy. A chilling feature of it, according to Lorrin Andrews, was that it also employed “noosing,” by which he probably meant garroting or strangling with a cord.

    Hawaiian Martial Arts History

    A better authority is John Papa Ii, who as a child was sent to King Kamehameha’s court in Honolulu. Kamehameha, called the “Napoleon of the Pacific,” united the Hawaiian Islands under one rule in a series of spectacular battles between 1790 and 1810. Kamehameha is known to have established three schools for lua martial arts, and smaller ones may have existed as well. A school was under the direction of a kahuna, a combination of priest, wizard and medicine man. However, there were various classes of kahuna, and each tended to specialize in a given field such as praying, healing, prophecy or lua.The kahuna adept at lua had a knowledge of anatomy, especially nerve and muscle centers. He also believed that the stomach was the “basis of strength, shrine of good health and seat of learning,” a view that disciples of aikido would find hard to quarrel with today. The Pacific Napoleon thought well enough of these martial art technique to select 24 boys from his court, including his son, to attend a lua martial arts school. One of those trained went on to become the father of two more Hawaiian kings, Kamehameha III and IV. In 1819 Kamehameha I returned to his original home on the island of Hawaii, and the schools were closed.Later in the 19th century, the colorful Kalahaua became king and began the restoration of Hawaiian culture, including its fighting arts. Kalahaua was called the “Merry Monarch” and with good reason, for he would often slip out of the palace at night to shoot pool and hoist a few with the boys. On a visit to Japan, he noticed the similarity between the various exhibitions of athletic skill put on in his honor and the contests he knew or heard about as a child. On his return home, he undertook to revive lua martial arts.The modern tourist to Hawaii is probably most grateful to him for reviving the hula, but a less homicidal form of lua was also restored. Among its adepts was Prince Kuhio, the popular and effective delegate who represented the islands in Congress after Hawaii became an American territory in 1898. From this point on, we begin to find more written material on the subject of lua. The late Professor Henry S. Okazaki, whose Nikko Restoration Sanatorium still flourishes in downtown Honolulu, studied diet, physical therapy, training methods and jujutsu at six Japanese schools. He was quoted as saying that while lua martial arts had many similarities to jujutsu, the Hawaiian martial arts techniques was more effective.But lua is still a lost art, and we have no specific descriptions of actual techniques. However, that has not stopped Hawaiians from talking about it and making observations down through the generations. The following is what one modern judo practitioner thinks: “Lua in its most savage form was developed to be used by a king’s or chief’s personal bodyguards. Hawaiian battles were fast, fierce and nasty. For instance, in one invasion of the island of Maui by the finest warriors of Oahu, only two out of 800 survived.”

    Known Techniques of Lua Martial Arts

    In battles relying on spears, slings, clubs and rocks, weapons were easily lost or made useless by grappling. The trained Hawaiian bodyguards, like the samurai, were ready to provide the ultimate protection for a chief. That would include training in savage hand-to-hand combat. Through the years, lua was apparently used for purposes ranging from the homicidal to the diversionary. At times it was a military art whose ultimate purpose was death, and at other times it was a regimen for self-discipline, self-protection and physical development.For example, the ancient Hawaiians came naturally to any contest involving grappling. They lived in one of the world’s most gentle climates and could practice or play by day or night. They dressed scantily and had no need to change to sports attire when they had hundreds of square miles of sandy beaches and tall grass and weeds, all of which lessened the chances of injury when thrown.At an early age, Hawaiian children played loulou, which consisted of hooking fingers or forearms and attempting to pull an adversary off-balance. In another version, two contestants sat facing each other with their legs intertwined and hands on each other’s shoulders or bodies. The object was to tip the opponent over sideways.In honuhonu, two opponents sat face to face, hands on each other’s shoulders and knees touching. Then an attempt was made to rock each other off-balance. In kahau, wrestling was done on stilts.Hakoko was a rugged form of wrestling in which the adversary was grabbed, then tripped with a foot. In this sport, brute strength counted most. Another form of lua martial arts, kaala, was described as “rough wrestling … rough-and-tumble tossing and gripping.”Out of the variety of trials for supremacy by bodily contact, there evolved something resembling judo. Kuialua was one version of it. Whereas a simple bow suffices for the beginning of a modern judo match, the Hawaiians had an elaborate ritual called hoopapa. The two contestants exchanged repartee before engaging, shouting insults at each other as if entering into a kind of oratorical contest. Kulakulai was a sport that combined elements of boxing and wrestling. The antagonists pushed each other around, striking their palms against the chest of the opponent. The first one knocked down was the loser. Incidentally, an almost identical slapping technique is used today in sumo.There are other marked similarities between Japanese and Hawaiian arts, one of which is kakalaau. It’s the Hawaiian art of stick fighting, and in many ways it is similar to kendo and bojutsu. In ancient Hawaii, kakalaau opponents used sticks 6 feet long, but unlike kendo, protective clothing was shunned. This similarity to the Japanese arts has not escaped the attention of others who have studied the Hawaiian self-defense methods. Charles W. Kenn, who comes from Hawaiian-Japanese ancestry, wrote a series of articles in the 1930s on the subject.Charles W. Kenn found parallels between bushido, the code of chivalry in feudal Japan, and aloha. The latter word now brings to mind pretty Hawaiian girls draping lei around the necks of tourists, but in ancient Hawaii, it also meant fierce loyalty and unswerving obedience to the island king or clan chief. Charles W. Kenn subscribes to the theory that at some time prior to the discovery of Hawaii by Capt. Cook, one or more Japanese ships, or survivors of shipwrecks, reached Hawaii. If so, such arrivals may have passed on certain aspects of their own culture, including these martial arts techniques.That line of reasoning, when followed to its utmost, leads to some intriguing conclusions. For instance, it’s pointed out that Buddhism, with its attendant mental and physical discipline, spread north from India through China and eventually to Japan. Some ethnologists believe that the Polynesian ethnic group also originated in India, perhaps around the Bay of Bengal. The Polynesians, however, spread east to Easter Island and Hawaii. It’s interesting to speculate that judo, jujutsu, karate, aikido, kendo—and lua—all had a common source.

    The Lost Art of Lua

    The decline and gradual extinction of lua and other local martial arts is often attributed to the influence of Christian missionaries, who arrived in 1820 bearing a more peaceful message. As a matter of fact, much of the old Hawaiian culture went into decline after their arrival. However, the cause of the decline is a little more complicated than that. Just before the arrival of the missionaries, the widow and son of Kamehameha I had abolished the taboo system. This bewildering system of prohibitions was so closely interwoven with idol worship and belief in multiple gods that the missionaries merely dealt the coup de grace to a dying culture.True to their Yankee heritage, the missionaries laid great stress on education, and the Hawaiians took to literacy as they previously took to playing. Even old people enrolled in kindergartens, and between learning and making a living, there was little time left to devote to the martial sports. In any event, we may be assured that the missionaries who abolished infanticide and the hula wouldn’t take kindly to any contest that might entail maiming, bone-breaking or the dislocation of limbs. One final factor undoubtedly contributed to the fall of lua. That was the introduction of firearms. With guns, the Hawaiian kings found they had a substitute for the old hand-to-hand methods of defense.But while lua martial arts and its related arts gradually died out, the legacy of violent defensive forms still hangs on. A recent example was the famous—or infamous, depending upon how you look at it—Emporado school of karate, which was so prominent only a short time ago. This type of lawless karate was so rugged that some students were reported to have fortified themselves with several stiff belts of liquor before class so they could endure the rough going-over they got from their instructors. With this type of background, it’s little wonder that today’s Hawaiians are so proficient in the modern—and more disciplined—Japanese martial arts.”

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