sosai mas oyama
History of Sosai Masutatsu Oyama
Sosai (President) Masutatsu
Oyama, the founder of Kyokushin Karate,
was born in southern Korea in 1923. While living at his
sister's farm in Manchuria at the age of nine, he began
his lifelong journey along the Martial Way when he began
studying the southern Chinese form of kempo know as
"Eighteen Hands". When Mas Oyama returned to
Korea at the age of 12, he continued his training in
Korean kempo.
In
1938, at the age of 15, Mas Oyama moved to Japan to
train as an aviator, and continued his martial arts
training by participating in judo and boxing. Shortly
afterwards, he began training at the dojo of Gichin
Funakoshi, who had brought karate from Okinawa to Japan
and developed what is now known as Shotokan Karate. Mas
Oyama's training progressed so rapidly that by the age
of 17, he was a Nidan (2nd Dan), and by the age of 20,
he was a Yondan (4th Dan) in Shotokan. At this point,
Mas Oyama took a serious interest in Judo, and in less
than four years he achieved the rank of Yondan in Judo
as well.
After the end of World War II, Mas Oyama began
training under So Nei Chu, one of the highest
authorities in Japan of Goju Ryu, an Okinawan karate
style. So Nei Chu, renowned for the power of his body as
well as his spiritual insight, encouraged Mas Oyama to
dedicate his life to the Martial Way. He suggested that
Mas Oyama retreat from civilization for three years to
train his mind and body without the distractions of the
outside world.
Around this time, Mas Oyama also met Eiji Yoshikawa,
the author of the novel Musashi, which was based on the
life and exploits of Miyamoto Musashi, Japan's most
famous Samurai warrior. Both the novel and the author
helped to teach him the meaning of Bushido, the Way of
the Warrior. That same year, Mas Oyama went to Mt.
Minobu in Chiba Prefecture, where Musashi had developed
his style of sword fighting. Mas Oyama thought that this
would be an appropriate place to begin the rigorous
training he had planned for himself. Accompanied by a
student, he went into the wilderness there to train,
with a friend bringing food supplies to them once a
month. After six months of training, his student was
unable to handle the solitude and secretly fled during
the night, leaving Mas Oyama completely alone to
continue his training. After fourteen months of training
in the wilderness, his friend informed Mas Oyama that he
could no longer provide the monthly supplies of food,
and Mas Oyama had to return to civilization.
A few months later, in 1947, Mas Oyama won the karate
section of the first Japanese National Martial Arts
Championships after World War II. However, still
feeling empty for not having completed the three years
of solitude, he decided to dedicate his life completely
to karate. Once again Mas Oyama left civilization for
the wilderness, this time going to Mt. Kiyozumi, also in
Chiba Prefecture, which he chose for its spiritually
uplifting environment. This time his training was
fanatical - 12 hours a day, every day, with no rest
days, standing under cold buffeting waterfalls, breaking
river stones with his hands, using trees as makiwara
(striking boards), jumping over rapidly growing flax
plants hundreds of times each day. Each day also
included a period of study of the ancients classics on
the martial arts, Zen, and philosophy. After eighteen
months of rigorous training, Mas Oyama returned to
civilization fully confident in himself and able to take
control of his life.
In the 1950s, Mas Oyama began demonstrating his power
and skill by fighting bulls. In all, he fought 52 bulls,
three of which he killed instantly and 49 of whose horns
he took off with shuto (knife hand) strikes. In 1952,
Mas Oyama traveled throughout the United States for a
year, demonstrating his karate live and on national
television. During subsequent years, he took on all
challengers, resulting in fights with 270 different
people. He defeated the vast majority of his opponents
with just one technique. A fight never lasted more than
three minutes, and rarely lasted more than a few
seconds. Mas Oyama's fighting technique was based on the
Samurai warriors' principle of "Ichi geki hissatsu", or
"One strike, certain death". If he got through to you,
the fight was over. If he hit you, you broke - if you
blocked his punch, your arm was broken or dislocated, if
you didn't block it, your rib was broken. Because of his
strength and skill, he became known as "the Godhand".
In
1953, Mas Oyama opened his first "dojo" on a grass lot
in Tokyo. In 1955, he opened his first real dojo in a
former ballet studio behind Rikkyo University. In 1957,
the name "Kyokushin", or "Ultimate Truth", was adopted
for Mas Oyama's karate organization, which had 700
members by then, despite the high drop-out rate due to
the severity of training. Practitioners of other styles
also came to train here for the jis-sen kumite (full
contact fighting). Mas Oyama would observe those other
styles and adopt any techniques that would be useful in
a fight. By doing so, Kyokushin Karate evolved into one
of the most formidable styles of martial arts in the
world. It soon became known as "The Strongest Karate",
not only because of the incredible feats of strength and
endurance that Mas Oyama performed, but also because of
the rigorous requirements of the training and
tournaments.
In
order to test his own abilities, Mas Oyama decided to
perform a three hundred man kumite (fight) in
three days. He chose the strongest students in his
dojo to fight him one at a time. After each
had a turn, they started from the beginning again until
all three hundred fights were completed. Each
student had to face Mas Oyama about four times over the
three days, though some never made it
past the first day due to Oyama's powerful blows.
He defeated all of his opponents, never wavering in his
resolve, despite the fact that he was injured in the
process. Legend has it that Mas Oyama was willing
to go for a fourth day, but no opponents were willing or
able to do so.
Since its inception, Kyokushin Karate
has spread to more than 120 countries, with more than
twelve million practitioners, making it one of the
largest martial arts styles in the world.
Sadly, Mas Oyama (a non-smoker) died of lung cancer
in 1994.
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Sosai Masutatsu Oyama
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Revered Masutatsu Oyama, also known as Mas
Oyama, was an unparalleled karate master who
founded Kyokushinkai, arguably the first and
most influential style of full contact karate.
Sosai had a remarkable and relevant philosophy
not only on the martial arts, but also on how to
conduct yourself in your every day life adopting
core values such as:
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Full
Biography & History
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