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  • 2014 NAGA ST. LOUIS GRAPPLING CHAMPIONSHIP – June 14th

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    Our own Matt Jacknewitz will be competing in the NAGA: Men’s No-Gi Heavyweight & Men’s No-Gi Absolute on June 14th 2014

    Registration here: http://shop.nagafighter.com/naga_cart/store/index.cfm?ac=ShowProducts&CatID=980&ECatID=85&SetCat=1

    Event page is here: http://www.nagafighter.com/index.php?module=eventinformationpage/367

    stlouis06-14_big2014 NAGA ST. LOUIS GRAPPLING CHAMPIONSHIP

    The North American Grappling Association (NAGA) is the world’s largest mixed grappling tournament circuit with over 220,000 competitors worldwide. On Saturday, June 14, 2014, NAGA returns to St. Louis, MO with its annual NAGA St. Louis Grappling Championship No-Gi & Gi tournament. Come as an individual or as a team to compete. You do not have to live in Missouri or be on a team to participate in this event. This event is nationally RANKEDDOWNLOAD EVENT FLYER/REGISTRATION FORM

    PRE-REGISTER ONLINE HERE or download the registration form, print it out and mail it in to the address on the form along with your check.

    1 Division = $80; 2 Divisions = $100. Spectator passes are $10. The price goes up to $15 after the pre-registration deadline. For family rates, download the event flyer/registration form, or click the Pre-Register Online link.
    Pre-registration closes at 5:00 PM on Friday, June 6.

    For weight classes, age category, and skill level information click the DIVISIONS tab.

    For weigh-in and registration location and times click the SCHEDULE tab.

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    100 CHAMPIONSHIP BELTS AWARDED
    NAGA will be awarding our new style, laser cut CHAMPIONSHIP BELTS to all its Children, Teen, Adult, Masters, Directors and Executive Expert Division Winners (Limit 1 per competitor per event). This award is unrivaled in quality and appearance.

    SAMURAI SWORDS TO CHILDREN & TEENS WINNERS

    NAGA will be awarding custom engraved SAMURAI SWORDS to all non-expert Children & Teen 1st place winners. Medals will be awarded to all 2nd & 3rd place winners along with non-expert Adult division winners. Adult competitors who place 1st-3rd will have the opportunity to obtain a samurai sword at the NAGA T-shirt booth for a nominal fee. For having the courage to compete, all children and teens who do not place 1st through 3rd will take home an award.

    TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP CUPS AWARDED
    NAGA awards customized championship cups to the tournament team champions. A cup can be won in: Adult Overall, Adult No-Gi, Adult Gi, and Children & Teens Overall. Please make sure your team registers under the same team name. Do not miss this opportunity to showcase the talent that your team possesses.

    REPEAT CUSTOMERS RECEIVE FREE NAGA MERCHANDISE

    Any NAGA competitor who competes in both the NAGA Tennessee event (May 31st) and the NAGA St. Louis event (June 14th) will receive their choice of a free NAGA Fighter item such as t-shirts, beanies, dog tags, DVD’s, etc. You can pick up your free item at the NAGA Charlotte event’s t-shirt booth. We appreciate your continued support of NAGA!

    GET YOUR GRAPPLING GEAR AT THE EVENT

    NAGA is bringing a truckload of grappling gear (Board shorts, gi bags, rash guards, t-shirts, hats, gi hoodies, patches, skull caps, stickers, dog tags, etc.) in children and adults sizes, for males and females. Check out the huge selection of gear and apparel at the NAGA event.

    NAGA ON THE WEB

    NAGA has established a presence online through our website and social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. We are expanding the material that is offered on these sites outside of the NAGA website. If you use any of these sites, please join us and be kept up to date with the latest NAGA news.
    – Get the monthly NAGA email by filling out this form. If you have already competed in NAGA you do not need to fill this out:http://www.nagafighter.com/index.php?module=joinpage
    – “Like” NAGA on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/nagafighter. You will be notified of the latest NAGA news and events.
    – Follow NAGA on Twitter: http://twitter.com/naga_fighter or @NAGA_FIGHTER. We will start to tweet what divisions are coming up at tournaments to help you as a competitor or fan stay informed.
    – Our YouTube page is: http://www.youtube.com/user/nagagrappling Submit links to YouTube videos of you competing in NAGA to youtube@nagafighter.com so that we can share your video with the rest of the NAGA community.

    NATIONALLY RANKED EVENT

    All NAGA events are part of the nationwide ranking system entitled RANKED. Our goal is to determine who the best grapplers in the country are for various age, gender, and skill levels. This tournament will be nationally ranked so do not miss your opportunity to gain points towards a true national title. More details can be found at www.nationallyranked.com.

    SANDBAGGERS BEWARE

    NAGA works diligently to prevent “sandbagging”, or the practice of fighting down skill levels to ensure one takes home an award. NAGA has been working with RANKED to track all fighters and ranked grappling events to produce true “national standings.” A by-product of these standings is our knowledge of who has competed and at which level. Front door personnel will use RANKED data to determine whether or not individuals who have fought in past events belong in a higher skill level (i.e. placed 1st at a prior NAGA event).


  • From high school prankster to kajukenbo grandmaster

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    From high school prankster to kajukenbo grandmaster

    By Tony Wade, from page D1 of The Daily Republic {May 06, 2012}

    Kajukenbo Senior Grand Master Emil Bautista illustrates a technique to his students George Higgins, right, and Gabriel Tomboc at Bautista's Kajukenbo Self-Defense Institute of Vallejo. (Robinson Kuntz/Daily Republic)

    Kajukenbo Senior Grand Master Emil Bautista illustrates a technique to his students George Higgins, right, and Gabriel Tomboc at Bautista’s Kajukenbo Self-Defense Institute of Vallejo. (Robinson Kuntz/Daily Republic)

    By 
    From page D1 | May 06, 2012

    FAIRFIELD — While attending Armijo High school in the 1950s, Emil Bautista was one of the Pizzarino Boys, a group of standout athletes who loved to pull pranks. No one, least of all Bautista himself, could predict he would one day go from being a high school prankster to a kajukenbo grandmaster.

    His transformation came about because of two chance meetings.

    In 1961, Bautista was working at Travis Air Force Base, filling vending machines. While refilling one in the gymnasium, he heard hollering and, tracing the sources of the sounds, discovered an instructor, Aleju Reyes, and two airmen, Don Nahoolewa and Richard Peralta, practicing kajukenbo. They invited Bautista to try it out and he accepted.

    Bautista trained for months on the base but then the company he was working for lost its contract and getting on base was not such an easy task. Bautista found another job in Vallejo for which he rode the bus from Fairfield. When walking by the old Greyhound bus station on Jefferson Street, he heard the same type of yelling he’d heard on base. It was coming from the kajukenbo school of Tony Ramos. Bautista began to train under Ramos’s tutelage, and in 1966 was promoted to student black belt.

    “Kajukenbo was something that no one else around here knew how to do, it was different,” Bautista said.”We all played baseball, basketball and football, but this was not a major activity. At that time there were no kids in it, it was all adults.”

    One of the things that initially drove Bautista in his early training was that a member of the Hay Buckers, a group of Future Farmer of America guys who were rivals/friends of the Pizzarino Boys, was in training. Bautista figured since he had played major sports, he could definitely outdo the local hayseed. He watched him and mimicked all his movements.

    “Afterward, I died. He had been doing it for six months, but my body was not used to it and I overestimated my abilities,” Bautista said. “I had to brush my teeth by moving my head and not my arm for a while. I learned the lesson that it takes time to build on what you learn.”

    Kajukenbo was founded in 1947 when five masters of different styles of martial arts got together in Oahu, Hawaii, to develop a system to deal with the local criminal element. When the Korean War broke out, four of the five martial arts masters were drafted, leaving only Adriano Directo Emperado to carry on the art. He established a school in 1950. Emperado, who died in 2009, is called by the title Sijo, which means founder.

    “You’ve heard the term mixed martial arts? Kajukenbo has been a mixed martial art since 1947,” Bautista said. “You have your Korean karate (ka), which is like taekwondo, you’ve got your judo/jujitsu (ju), which is Japanese, you got your kenpo (ken), which is Okinawan, and you’ve got your bo (bo), which is Chinese and American boxing. I teach a variation of everything, but our base is kenpo.”

    The technical title for the martial art Bautista teaches is the Kajukenbo system, Emperado method, Ramos style, Bautista influence.

    After working out with students in garages or in parks, Bautista opened his school, the Kajukenbo Self-Defense Institute of Vallejo, in 1968 on Benicia Road in a building where an old five-and-dime store had been. It helped him indirectly in his night job years ago.

    “I used to tend bar at a jumping night club called the Coronado Inn in Vallejo,” Bautista said. “Sometimes, guys would get drunk and belligerent and I had to settle a lot of disputes. Someone else would point at me and say ‘karate instructor’ and that would be enough.”

    As the school’s name states, the instruction is for teaching self-defense, not building bullies.

    “We are trying to teach students to protect themselves in case they need to. We teach survival for themselves and their families,” Bautista said. “At tournaments, if students win, I am a good teacher. If they lose, I’m still a good teacher because they lose gracefully. I want them to be better people.”

    As he became more proficient in his craft, Bautista was awarded higher levels of belts and titles and became a ninth-degree Grandmaster in 1999.

    “There are 10 degrees in kajukenbo; Sijo Emperado is the 10th degree and so if I went to 10th, then I am equal to him, and I’m not,” Bautista said. “He’s the one who started this system, so why should I claim to be equal to him? At one time, he was a sixth and seventh degree, but as he progressed, we progressed.”

    In kajukenbo, respect, loyalty and humility are as important as learning blocks and kicks. On June 29 in San Diego, enthusiasts will meet to compete in a tournament, fellowship and pay tribute to their founder.

    Before he died, Emperado set up a board of directors, of which Bautista is a member, and in 1993 Emperado awarded a certificate to Bautista, stating that his school was the Northern California Headquarters of the Kajukenbo Self Defense Institute Inc.

    Now in his 44th year at the same spot in Vallejo, Bautista uses handshakes and his word instead of now-standard business practices.

    “I do not have contracts — there are some places that you sign a contract and if you don’t come there six months later they will come after you for the money, but that is not true at my place,” Bautista said.

    Students range in age from preteen to early 60s. Over the years they have done demonstrations at the Solano County Fair, Dixon May Fair, California State Fair, San Quentin State Prison and other locations. One thing that Bautista finds distasteful is the current fascination with mixed martial arts.

    “It’s like the Roman gladiators, audiences go because they want to see blood,” Bautista said. “In kajukenbo, we bow, our execution of moment is more controlled and we wear protective gear. Is all that blood good for our kids to look at? What’s missing is the culture of respect.”

    Bautista’s calm, humble demeanor is the antithesis of a preening Ultimate Fighting Champion. He related recently seeing a student, who just became a black belt, performing a certain technique which he realized he had analyzed wrong and by watching her obtained the right perspective on it.

    “To me, all being a grandmaster means is that I have more time than you,” Bautista said. “My knowledge is limited like everyone else. I am still learning.”

    Reach Fairfield writer Tony Wade at getthelowdown@sbcglobal.net.

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  • Kajukenbo Seminar near Dekalb, IL

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    SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT pdf

    SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT: Saturday May 3, 2014
    [ about a 4.5 hour drive from St. Louis, MO ]

    A morning of open seminars presented by:

    Grandmasters Emil Bautista & Andrew Torok
    Sigungs Tim Rochford & Shelly Gustin and Sifu instructors from Northern Illinois
    The seminars will present basic martial arts drills and self-defense techniques, thus they are relevant for all karate ranks, including beginners.  In the event of a large turnout, seminars will run at the same time and participants will be divided into smaller groups. Instructors will rotate so that all groups receive the same instruction.

    If there is enough interest, there will also be a children’s seminar.

    After a lunch break, student promotion testing will follow at 1 p.m.

    Location: Empower Martial Arts: 1213 S. Bridge Street, Yorkville, IL 60560
    Date: Saturday May 3, 2014
    Time: 9 a.m. sharp to 12 noon
    Ages: 10 through adult; (children’s seminar at 10 a.m. ages 5 through 9 – $15)
    Format: seminars will each be 45 minutes
    Cost: early registration by April 19 is $35, by April 26 $45, at the door $50
    Family discount: second and subsequent members receive a $10 discount

    Information & signup: your instructors or GM Torok at gr-ndm-stertorok@gmail.c0m
    Phone: (931) 232-9126 {email address obfuscated; -:a / 0:o}

    Originally from the Kajukenbo Cafe

    http://www.kajukenbo.com/cafe/index.php/topic,6790.msg59041.html#msg59041

    — NOTES —

    (1) There are about 4 hours of seminars on Saturday, then the belt testing.

    (2) There is a dinner with the Kajukenbo GM’s Friday night if you are there.

    (3) GM Torok has a JKD, Jiu-jitsu and Muay Thai background, but GM Emil Bautista brought him in under the Emperado method.  This is a different lineage from ours.

    (4) My students only pay the $35 “Early Registration” rate, even if you pay at the door.

    (5) There is a possibility that I might teach a seminar.

    (6) Bring & wear your uniforms and belts if you attend, of course.

    — Dave


  • Kajukenbo Co-Founder Frank Ordonez Performs At Palama Settlement

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    On May 29, 2009, Co-Founder Frank Ordonez talked about classes in the early days of Kajukenbo and explained some of the training techniques and self-defense approaches he used to teach.  GM Jason Groff assisted.  Also present: Aunty Lydia Ordonez, Professor Woody Sims of Vallejo, CA, Professor Tim Gagnier and Sifu Becky of Oregon and GM Pat Tyrell.

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  • 2014 KSDI 64th Annivesary Seminar and Tournament

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    2014 KSDI 64th Anniversary Seminar and Tournament

    Tournament Flyer 2014 V.Final

    “ALOHA!   Kajukenbo K.S.D.I. Family & Martial Artists from around the world:

    It gives us great pleasure to host the 64th Anniversary  2014 K.S.D.I. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS & OPEN KARATE TOURNAMENT & SEMINAR. We have been fortunate to have so many talented Martial Artists participate in our events.  Please join us in promoting the Unity and the Good Sportsmanship that represents the true meaning of Martial Arts.  Your participation and your support in this event contributes to carrying on the Legacy of our great Founder, Sijo Adriano D. Emperado.

    Special discounted Seminar fee this year for KSDI card members issued by me, SGM Dechi Emperado.   Verification of membership will be done at registration on seminar day.  It is not necessary to bring your card, just mention at registration you are a member and we will verify.  Your discounted Seminar fee will be $30.  

    Welcome, Good Luck, and God Bless

    Thank You for your Support !

    Senior Grand Master Dechi Emperado”

    ——————————————————————————————

    From the Kajukenbo Cafe post:

    ‘SIJO’S CHALLENGE~

    Sijo’s vision was to encourage and develop a martial art that was effective and ever evolving and he accomplished just that….Kajukenbo.

    Sijo’s desire was to spread Kajukenbo across the world and have it continuously grow and live FOREVA! He did just that, and we carry his desire on.

    Sijo’s challenge was to bring Kajukenbo together, to gather united to support each other’s organization, lineage, schools, and individual students. This challenge is now left to us, those who practice the art and honor Sijo.

    The seed of Kajukenbo was planted and nurtured by Sijo many years ago, it’s time we move towards his dream unfinished…….

    Under the guidance of SGM DeChi Emperado the Kajukenbo Self Defense Institute World Wide calls upon all Kajukenbo warriors throughout the world, all nations, organizations, lineages, and schools to “Battlefield Las Vegas 2014–Sijo’s Ikaika Challenge and WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS!” Spread the word worldwide for the Kajukenbo event of a lifetime.

    “……….We all share a common destiny. We can master it only if we face it together”
    ~ Kofi Annan’

    KSDI 64th Anniversary Tournament and Seminar
    PLACE: Riviera Hotel and Casino Las Vegas
    ADDRESS: 2901 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109
    PHONE: (702) 734-5110
    DATE: 11-12 July 2014
    GROUP CODE: SKSDI14
    Limited rooms available
    $49 Thu (plus taxes and resort fee)
    $59 Fri & Sat (plus taxes and resort fee)

    Event page for further details: https://www.facebook.com/events/215541491958454/


  • Willie Nelson to Receive 5th-Degree Black Belt

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    Just passing it on for you Willie Nelson fans. — Dave

    Willie Nelson to Receive 5th-Degree Black Belt

    master-martial-artsWillie Nelson with Master Martial Arts Class – c/o Master Martial Arts

     

    Willie Nelson might be about to turn 81-years-old and be regarded as one of the world’s most famous living pacifists, but apparently hiding behind his friend-to-all disposition and grandfatherly sweetness is a mean roundhouse kick and lethal karate chop.

    You may not see Willie step into the octagon anytime soon, but apparently he’s been training for 20 years in the art of Gong Kwon Yu Sul — a modern Korean martial arts system similar to Tae Kwon Do that “emphasizes the application of striking, locking and throwing techniques in practical, free-flowing fighting situations, rather than static situations.” Willie has been training in the art so long he will be awarded his 5th degree black belt in the discipline on April 28th in Austin—the day before his 81st birthday. Grand Master Sam Um of Austin will be doing the honors at his Master Martial Arts studio as part of a promotional event.

    10 Badass Willie Nelson Moments

    Willie Nelson has been studying martial arts most of his life, starting in Nashville when he was a burgeoning songwriter. “I got into some martial arts and kung fu,”  Willie told Men’s Health Magazine last year. “I liked it. We used to offer kung fu lessons to the kids in town. It’s good for you.”  Apparently Willie trains on his famous tour bus The Honeysuckle Rose while on tour to pass the time and to stay healthy.

    Speaking of tours, Willie is getting ready to embark on a landmark tour starting May 1st with Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, as well as select dates with Jason Isbell, Kacey Musgraves, and The Devil Makes Three.

    Move over “World’s Most Interesting Man”, Willie Nelson might have you beat.

    willie-nelson-martial-arts

    Younger Willie with Master Sam Um

    Original article here


  • The limits of Kata

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    The limits of Kata

    When (Choki) Motobu was about 18 years old, he met Komesu Magii from the Gaja District in Nishibary village, who was the strongest wrestler in all Okinawa. Motobu, the son of a nobleman, asked Komesu to a bout, but Komesu was a commoner from a peasant’s family who knew that it would be improper to injure a nobleman in a fight, thus he politely declined. Also, Komesu was about fifteen years older and much taller than Motobu. But Motobu convinced Komesu that he was merely interested to analyze the differences between wrestling and karate. Thus, Komesu accepted the offer and since Motobu didn’t have a proper belt (obi) needed for such grappling bouts, he made one out of a straw rope and taught the young Motobu how to grib onto his obi.

    Motobu hoped to punch his opponent with his iron fist, but Komesu was too big and too powerful for the much smaller Motobu. After Motobu was defeated, he asked Komesu what one could do if one was grabbed from behind on his topknot. Back then it was the custom that men wore their hair in the topknot style. Komesu grabbed Motobu by his topknot and even though Motobu was struggling vigorously, he was helpless and unable to regain his stability.

    This wrestling experience taught Motobu that regardless of one’s prowess in karate, it was not possible to beat an opponent who is much larger and stronger. Sensei Motobu started to understand that kata has its limits, and he said that kata was not developed to be used against an experienced fighter, but against an unskilled fighter. Motobu sensei recited a poem which was handed down in karate history: “Kata and waza are both limited by themselves. They are useless until one learns how to apply them in any situation”.

    From the INTERNATIONAL SEISHINKAI KARATE UNION – ISKU


  • Champion Judo coach Willy Cahill is actually a Danzan-Ryu 10th degree

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    The gentle way: Judo master Willy Cahill receives Lifetime Achievement Award

    Willy Cahill, 10th Dan Professor of Danzan-Ryu Jujitsu

    July 20, 2013, 05:00 AM By David Egan Daily Journal

    Willy Cahill was diagnosed with polio at age 7.

    “Doctor told me I would never walk again,” said Cahill.

    He was just one of numerous children diagnosed with the crippling disease during World War II. His father guaranteed him that he would be out of the hospital in a year.

    As his father had predicted, Cahill was able to walk again after a year of message therapy from Professor Henry S. Okazaki {the founder of Kodenkan Danzan Ryu Jujutsu}, his father’s judo (sic) instructor who worked as a masseur for President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Since then, he has made the most of his life.

    Cahill, 77, has trained more than 1,200 national and international judo champions, has coached for several Olympic teams and was inducted into the Black Belt Hall of Fame as a judo instructor in 1975. Even with all those accolades, Cahill says his biggest achievement is seeing all of his students live a better life for themselves through Judo, something he himself has achieved. His former students have gone on to have successful careers outside of the sport.

    Cahill was born in Honolulu in 1935 to John and Abbie Cahill, both professors and founders of the American Judo and Jujitsu Federation. In 1939, John Cahill opened his first dojo in Honolulu in which he taught both judo and jujitsu. His family moved to California in 1947, where they opened a judo and jujitsu school in Daly City. Martial arts for Cahill came naturally at a young age.

    Coming to California

    “I started training in judo in Hawaii, but I wasn’t serious about it,” Cahill said, adding it wasn’t until he came to California that he got serious with the sport.

    After the passing of his father, Cahill took over his father’s dojo at the request of his mother and moved the dojo to downtown San Bruno in 1963.

    “That was a big shock when my father died, because he was still young,” Cahill said.

    It was his father who made him the coach he is today, because his dad pointed out what he did right and wrong while keeping things in perspective. According to Cahill, if someone underperforms, they’re already upset with themselves, so they don’t need another person hounding at their ear.

    “It is best they receive constructive criticism,” said Cahill. Judo translates to gentle way and is very much a representation of the man himself.

    This is the philosophy that has elevated Cahill’s Judo Academy to become one of the most highly regarded dojos for more than 50 years. It has been the home to more than a thousand local, national, international and Olympic competitors and coaches.

    He has had the privilege of coaching the 1984 and 1988 U.S. Olympic Judo teams and two U.S. Paralympic judo teams, which includes the 2000 team that won the gold medal in Sydney, Australia.

    “This was the first time in U.S. Paralympics’ history a U.S. squad won gold for Judo,” Cahill said.

    Four year later, Cahill and Ron C. Peck would establish the Blind Judo Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping the blind and visually impaired compete in the sport of Judo.

    Lifetime achievement

    In recognition of his lifelong commitment to Judo, Willy Cahill along with Yoshihiro Uchida received the Lifetime Achievement Award from USA Judo at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Foster City July 19 {2013}.

    “It was a real honor to be recognized for my entire career,” said Cahill.

    It is an accumulation of what he and his family have worked for, but nothing expresses his accomplishments more so than his Judo Academy. His dojo’s walls are decorated with plaques and pictures of past and present students, each with their own story to tell by Cahill. His classroom is full of students old and young, and Cahill can give a synopsis of every one of them.

    “It has been a fun ride and I could not ask for a better life than this,” said Cahill. “Doesn’t matter what age you are but how serious you are in your endeavors. I have been fortunate to have all my students follow this philosophy.”

    — The takeaway is that Professor Willy Cahill is considered to be one of the best Judo coaches in the United States but he is actually a 10th Dan / Degree (Jūdan) black belt in Danzan-ryū: the original “JU” in KA*JU*KEN*BO!

    “This highest rank in Jujitsu was presented to him by Prof. Wally Jay in Sep. 1994 at the Ohana convention in Las Vegas.” — USA Ju-Jitsu Federation website

    Many people do not spot the difference between the KoDENkan (Danzan-ryu) and KoDOkan (Judo) and think they are the same places.  This has resulted in some people implying that there is judo and jujitsu in Kajukenbo, when really judo is simply a sport-focused version of jujitsu with some of the more dangerous techniques removed, ignored or modified.  There is a difference between the places and styles which I feel is important.  I expect my black belts to be “experts in the basics.”  That implies being experts about the basics of multiple martial arts – including the traditions, histories, tactics, strategies and differences between styles.  Not understanding the “differences” between judo and jujitsu makes you appear ignorant.

    Being a black belt in taekwondo or aikido does not automatically make you a ‘martial arts’ expert.  It merely means you are a black belt in that particular style; and you many not even an expert on that one!  By comparison, expect my students to be familiar with a lot of other martial arts, not just Kajukenbo.  They should know more about taekwondo’s history, strengths and weaknesses than most TKD black belts.  The same goes for aikido and many other styles.  My students should be experts in the martial arts -plural- not just a ‘black belt’ in one system.