Indeed, he was many things to many people. Like Sir Thomas
Moore, a man for all seasons. His many worlds encompassed
much of value to Japan. From scattered quotes taken from
various sources close to him, we can only glimpse Jigoro
Kano, the man:
"He used to take an umbrella with him every day
because he didn't like to worry about whether or not it
would rain."
"When he returned home, he would go straight into the living
room, which meant on most days I would not see my father
at all.
"Just after I graduated from Waseda University, he sent
me a cable: 'Your father has been looking for a wife for
you. What sort of woman do you have in mind for a wife?'
Less than three years later, I married his daughter."
"He was very strict with us at school. I had to get up at
5 o'clock every morning and help clean the rooms and the
garden."
"He was so proud of his legs he used to pull up his hakama
just to show off his big calves."
"He wept when he heard of my sister's (his daughter's) death."
He was a perfectionist, a disciplinarian and a traditionalist.
But, at the same time, an innovator, an internationalist
and a man of great generosity. More important, he was a
famous educator and the father of modern sports in Japan.
But above all, Jigoro Kano was the founder of judo!
When he first saw the light of day on Oct. 28, 1860, Japan's
feudal period was rapidly drawing to a close. Across the
seas in America, the United States was embarked on a tragic
civil war. Just as today, it was a time of turmoil and change
around the world.
He was fortunate enough to be born into a family that was
reasonably well off, at least well enough placed to get
Jigoro into the elite Tokyo Imperial University. His grandfather
had launched the family into the business of making sake
in Nada, Shiga Prefecture, near the Biwa Lake in central
Japan. In fact, it was this same sake-brewing clan that
organized the other sake makers in the area to help finance
the Fujimi-cho Dojo which served as the Kodokan in the latter
half of the 1880s.
Since Jigoro's father was not the eldest son, the sake
business was not passed down into his hands. Even at that,
his father did all right for himself at Kobe-Jigoro's birthplace-as
both a Shinto priest and a high-ranking government official
in charge of purchasing agents for shipping lines. It was
this side of the Kano family that prompted the building
of Japan's first steel ships, coastal vessels designed to
carry sake.
The third son in a family of three boys and two girls,
young Jigoro was physically weak in his early years. In
fact, he was beaten up so often by local bullies he resolved
to strengthen himself the best way he could. It was this
unrelenting drive to learn how to defend himself that eventually
led to his formulation of judo. One wonders what would have
happened had Jigoro Kano been a big brute of a man instead
of the 5-foot, 2-inch, 90-pound weakling he was in his teens.
Jujitsu was flourishing during Jigoro's boyhood. One might
even term the mid-19th century the golden age of jujitsu.
So it was with rather anxious expectation Jigoro looked
forward to moving to Tokyo, where most of the jujitsu activity
was going on. When he was 17, his father ordered him to
go to the capital on board one of the sake-carrying steel
ships, but he insisted on traveling by land. His father
relented -- and a good thing, too, because the vessel he
was to sail on broke up in stormy seas en route to Tokyo
and sank.
Obsessed With Learning
Jigoro enrolled the following year at Tokyo Imperial University
at the age of 18. When he wasn't in class or studying, he
would go off in search of an osteopath because they had
all received jujitsu training. Apparently, he was still
obsessed with the desire to learn the art of manly self-defense
and concluded jujitsu offered him the best hope. His search
finally led him to the door of a bone doctor in Nihonbashi
named Teinosuke Yagi who promised to introduce him to a
jujitsu teacher living in the neighborhood.
Jigoro Kano had actually started his training in jujitsu
at the age of 17, but his instructor, Ryuji Katagiri, felt
he was too young for serious training. As a result, Katagiri
gave him only a few formal exercises for study and let it
go at that. The determined young man was not about to be
put off so easily, however, and finally wound up at the
dojo of Hachinosuke Fukuda, a master in the Tenjin-Shinyo
School of Jujitsu who had been recommended by Dr. Yagi.
Fukuda stressed technique over formal exercises, or kata.
His method was to give an explanation of the exercises,
but to concentrate on free-style fighting in practice sessions.
Jigoro Kano's emphasis on "randori" in judo undoubtedly
found its beginnings here under Fukuda's influence. The
Kodokan's procedure of teaching beginners the basis of judo,
then having them engage in randori and only after they had
attained a certain level of proficiency, teaching them the
formal kata, came from Fukuda and a later sensei named Iikubo.
In 1879, a year after Jigoro started working out at Fukuda's
dojo, the jujitsu master suddenly became gravely ill and
died at the age of only 52. The 19-year-old youth soon joined
another branch of the Tenjin-shinyo-ryu run by a 62-year-old
jujitsu instructor named Masatomo Iso. Located in the Kanda
section of Tokyo near the center of the city, Iso's dojo
was known for its excellence in kata. Iso, himself, was
only 5 feet tall, but had a powerful body and an energetic
personality.
Over the next two years, Jigoro Kano ate, drank and slept
jujitsu, practicing night and day at the point of exhaustion.
Things got so bad he was even having nightmares about the
martial art, shouting jujitsu terms in his sleep and kicking
out at his quilt.
The sensei saw his dedication and promise and soon made
him an assistant. Jigoro instructed 20 or 30 students, starting
with kata and then moving on to free fighting. By the time
he was 21 years old in 1881, Kano had become a master in
Tenjin-shinyo-ryu jujitsu. But Iso, like Fukuda before him,
became ill and Kano decided to move on, feeling he still
had much to learn and wanting to study rather than teach.
The next step seemed almost inevitable. Jigoro Kano met
Tsunetoshi Iikubo, master of the Kito School of Jujitsu,
and began training at his dojo. Even when no one else showed
up, Kano would work out alone. Like Fukuda, Iikubo put the
stress on free fighting and he was especially skillful at
teaching nage-waza.
Reforming Jujitsu
It was during these early jujitsu training days Jigoro
Kano worked out some new throws and turned his attention
more and more to ways of reforming jujitsu into some kind
of new system. While practicing at the Tenjin-shinyo Training
Hall, he ran up against a big, 200-pound bruiser named Kenkichi
Fukushima. Outweighed by 100 pounds, the lightweight youth
invariably lost to the bigger man. He wanted to beat Fukushima
so badly he could taste it, studying everything he could
get his hands on -- books on sumo techniques, training books
from abroad, etc.
Finally, Jigoro worked out a new technique. The next time
he met his burly rival he charged in low, lifted Fukushima
onto his shoulders, whirled him around and easily tossed
him on the mat. He promptly dubbed his new throw "kata-guruma,"
or shoulder whirl. Other throws he worked out include "uki-goshi"
(rising hip throw) and "tsuri-komi-goshi" (lift-pull hip
throw).
The original idea was merely to reform jujitsu rather than
found a new system. Kano was well aware of the shortcomings,
but felt these could be weeded out with the result that
jujitsu could be beneficial to young men -- not only as
a martial art, but also as a form of physical education
as well as training and discipline of the spirit; in short,
a valuable preparation for one's daily life.
He dedicated himself to formulating a system of reformed
jujitsu founded on scientific principles, integrating combat
training with mental and physical education. He borrowed
the "katamewaza" (mat techniques) and "atemi-waza" (throwing
techniques) of Kito-ryu, holding onto those techniques that
conformed to scientific principles and rejecting all others.
All harmful and dangerous techniques were eliminated.
Eishoji Temple: the
birthplace of Judo |
When 22-year-old Jigoro Kano took nine of his private students
from the Kito-ryu Training Hall in February 1882 and set
up his own dojo in Eishoji Temple, judo didn't automatically
spring into being. In fact, Kito-ryu master Iikubo came
to the temple two or three times a week to help instruct
Kano's students. So what they were getting was more jujitsu
than judo training. Two years were to elapse before the
by-laws of the first Kodokan were drawn up.
Much has been written about those early days at Eishoji,
and it is this temple that is generally regarded by most
people as the birthplace of judo. The transition from jujitsu
to judo was made slowly but surely, although it is difficult
to pinpoint the day when what that handful of students were
learning was no longer jujitsu, but judo.
It might have been the day when Kano first defeated Iikubo.
Until then he had never managed to get the better of the
Kito-ryu stylist. But that day in randori practice, Kano
blocked every move Iikubo made, then called on his "uki-waza"
and "sumi-otoshi" to throw the jujitsu master no less than
three times.
Kano explained: "Force your opponent to make his body rigid
and lose his balance, and then when he is helpless, you
attack." Iikubo replied: "From now on, you teach me."
Iikubo soon retired as an instructor and Kano finally received
his accreditation as a Kito-ryu master. Apparently, Iikubo
was a vigorous fighter because every time he came to teach
at the 12-mat dojo at Eishoji, training got a bit more violent
than usual. And the tablets would come tumbling down!
A Chiding Buddhist Priest
It seems the converted dojo adjoined the main hall of the
temple in which the image of Buddha was located together
with hundreds of mortuary tablets presented by various worshippers.
And every time Jigoro Kano and his students practiced, these
clay tablets bounced up and down and banged against each
other, several falling to the floor. This went on until
one day head priest Choshumpo rushed into the dojo and declared:
"He may be young, but Mr. Kano is really an outstanding
man. What a fine person he would be if he would only leave
this judo alone."
Despite the priest's occasional protestations, the practice
sessions continued at Eisho Temple. Sometimes the training
would be so rough the dojo floor sagged and even broke in
some places. Nighttime would find the indefatigable Kano
crawling under the floor with a lantern repairing the broken
boards.
The year before, in 1881, Kano had graduated from Tokyo
Imperial University and soon secured a position as a literature
instructor at Gakushuin (Peer's School), an exclusive school
for the children of high-born Japanese. His instruction
at the dojo had to be sandwiched between his work at the
school and the preparation for the next day's classes. It
wasn't unusual for him to keep going into the wee hours
of the morning.
He was tough on both his academic and his judo students,
a disciplinarian of sorts. But he was also a very generous
man, offering his judo students barley tea and rice mixed
with lotus roots at the temple. He provided his poorer students
with practice clothes, which he even laundered for them.
Priest Choshumpo finally came to the end of his tether
and presented Kano with an ultimatum: "Either leave the
temple or give up practice there." Being an enterprising
young man, Kano made a deal for using an empty lot next
to Eishoji and built a tiny training hall there measuring
only 12 by 18 feet. But this was only a temporary move and
Kano set up his next dojo in his own home in 1883. With
20 mats, it was the largest training hall up to this time.
But 1884 was the key year when the Kodokan by-laws were
drawn up. Kano declared, "Taking together all the merits
I have acquired from the various schools of jujitsu, and
adding my own devices and inventions, I have founded a new
system for physical culture, mental training and winning
contests. This I call Kodokan judo."
Randori and kata became firmly established and even made
the subjects of lectures and debates as well as a part of
education. But the big difference from jujitsu was the "do"
in judo -- finding the way. Kano saw judo, then, as a way
of life. He saw it in terms of a sport, whereas jujitsu
was merely another of the martial arts, a method of defense.
The dangerous techniques of jujitsu were eliminated from
the judo contests, but retained as part of judo's defense
system. This especially applied to "atemi."
Another essential difference from jujitsu was judo's application
of "kuzushi," a theory devised by Jigoro Kano during his
jujitsu training and used so successfully against Kito-ryu
master Tsunetoshi Iikubo. "Using a minimum amount of strength,
it is possible to throw your opponent if you force him off-balance
by breaking his posture." According to Kazuzo Kudo, kyu-dan
director of the Kodokan and author of "Dynamic Judo," Jigoro
Kano's "fame and greatness are based on this principle just
as much as they are on him as the founder of judo."
Fierce Rivalry Springs Up
Yoshiaki Yamashita |
As might be expected, a fierce rivalry sprang up between
judo and jujitsu. The martial art had been steadily declining
toward the end of the 19th Century and its masters were
getting desperate to hold onto their students who were beginning
to trickle away to judo. Kudo says reports of street fighting
by judo and jujitsu students jealous of their own prowess
were exaggerated. Critics claim jujitsu had a bad reputation
for terror tactics by goon squads and it made rowdies out
of youths.
Sakujiro Yokoyama |
Among the now-famous pupils of Kano in those early days
were Yoshiaki Yamashita, who later taught judo to President
Theodore Roosevelt; Tsunejiro Tomita, father of the noted
author of the judo novel "Sugata Sanshiro"; Seiko Higuchi;
Shiro Saigo, who became a student in 1884 at the age of
16 and developed into a kind of judo genius, especially
noted for his "yama-arashi" and "harai-goshi"; and Sakujiro
Yokoyama who was such a fighting demon he was known as "Devil
Yokoyama."
Tsunjiro Tomita |
These students were Kano's judo stalwarts in the early
contests with the police and other jujitsu dojo. The first
"shiai" probably started informally in the Kodokan, but
by 1884 the first Red and White Contest was inaugurated,
continuing biannually until the present day. The following
year the Kodokan won its first shiai -- against the police,
who had adopted jujitsu. "Kagami-Biraki," or Rice-Cake Cutting
Ceremony, was instituted in 1884 and has been observed ever
since on the second Sunday in January.
By 1886, Kano changed the Kodokan once again from his home
in Koji-machi to the Fujimi-cho residence of the Meiji Era
magnate, Baron Yajiro Shinagawa. And it was here during
the next three or four years that Kodokan judo achieved
supremacy over the rival jujitsu schools.
Although he was a man of many interests, Jigoro Kano always
thought in terms of judo. To him, a kyudoka was a judoman
using a bow and arrow and a kendoka was a judoka with a
sword.
Once the Kodokan was firmly established, Kano's thoughts
turned toward the spread of judo on a nationwide basis and
eventually throughout the world. In fact, Kano went on his
first overseas visit in 1889 to spread the good word about
this new Japanese sport.
In the latter 1880s Yajiro Shinagawa, a magnate of the
Meiji Period, was appointed ambassador to England and asked
Kano to take care of his house at Koji-machi while he was
gone. The young judo master agreed, but was soon tempted
into turning the house into a judo dojo. Thus, Ambassador
Shinagawa's home became the next Kodokan, with 40 mats available
for practice. Fortunately, Shinagawa was a generous and
broadminded man.
By 1892, there were still less than 100 judo students practicing
at the Kodokan. Kano preferred tachi-waza (standing techniques),
to ne-waza (mat work), at which he was less skillful and,
thus, avoided whenever possible. Indeed, he had a tough
time of it when he was forced onto the mat. To compensate
for this, his assistants and students trained especially
hard in ne-waza in order to beat jujitsu rivals.
Ninety-one-year-old Saburo Nango, a nephew of Jigoro Kano
and 18 years his junior, remembers doing randori with his
uncle in those early years. "He was small, but a very good
technician," Nango recalls. "He was also fast and very strong."
Nango also occasionally thinks back to the first judo kangeiko
when students ran from the dojo at Kami-ni-bancho to Toranomon
and back again in the dead of winter -- a distance of six
or seven miles. The first kangeiko was launched in 1894,
while the first shochugeiko (midsummer training) began two
years later in 1896.
Management of the Kodokan was handled by Kano himself until
1894 when a consultative body, the Kodokan Council, was
set up. To say that Kano was busy would be putting it mildly.
He usually rode to work in a ricksha as headmaster of Gakushuin,
or Peer's School, but only after spending two hours instructing
at his own Kobun Gakuen (a school organized by Kano for
Chinese students). After work, he would go to the Kodokan
and supervise the training. Then late at night, he would
prepare his lectures for the following day.
Kano became headmaster of Gakushuin at the age of only
25. It customarily admitted only the children of the Imperial
family and titled, upper-class families, but after Kano
took over, enrollment was enlarged to include pupils from
other social strata, including commoners. According to Kazuzo
Kudo, Kano ranks along with Shain Yoshida as one of Japan's
modern educators. As headmaster of both Gakushuin and the
Tokyo Teachers Training School (the present-day Tokyo University
of Education) off and on for more than a quarter of a century,
Jigoro Kano laid the basis of modern education in Japan.
He turned Gakushuin into a boarding school, allowing his
students to go home only on weekends. He refused to go along
with the commonly accepted notion that the highborn were
inherently superior in mental potential and opened the doors
to commoners -- a revolutionary move at the time. He also
had his students perform menial tasks in order to discipline
them and teach them humility. Thus, the entire environment
changed under Kano's administration, and not too surprisingly
the parents of the students were full of admiration for
the wonders being worked at Gakushuin.
Unusually Strict with Students
Nango remembers Kano as unusually strict. "When I was a
student under him," Nango explained, "I had to get up at
5 o'clock every morning and help clean the rooms and the
garden."
Dr. T. Morohashi, today one of the leading professors of
Chinese culture at Tokyo University, called Kano sensei
a "confident and broad-minded president." When he entered
Tokyo Teachers Training School in 1904, Kano was 44 years
old. He called in a few of the students and asked them to
speak their minds frankly. Noting the meager resources of
the library, Morohashi insisted improvement of the library
should take precedence over building a big dojo. Kano replied
one could read anywhere, but one certainly couldn't practice
judo any old place. Even at that, the next time he met with
the vice minister of education, Kano pushed hard for a boost
in the school library budget.
Prof. Kano addressing
a group of Judo students at Kodokan promotion ceremony
about 1907. |
Jigoro's feelings about education are summed up in a statement
he made at the Kodokan's 50th anniversary in 1934. "Nothing
under the sun is greater than education. By educating one
person and sending him into the society of his generation,
we make a contribution extending a hundred generations to
come."
Kano often was at odds with superior authorities in the
field of education, but never once submitted a letter of
resignation over the matter. That's because he never thought
he was wrong! Dr. Morohashi also accused Kano of delivering
boring lectures, recalling once when only three students
showed up for one of his lectures. Kano was so angry he
cried: "Everyone in this course is dropped!"
It was in August of 1891 Jigoro Kano married Sumako, the
eldest daughter of Seisei Takezoe -- onetime ambassador
to Korea. They had nine children -- six daughters and three
sons, including Risei, who became head of the Kodokan and
the All-Japan Judo Federation.
A typical "kokushi" father, Kano ruled his family with
an iron hand; his word was law and disobedience unthinkable.
The eldest daughter, Noriko, wrote of her reminiscences
of her famous father. Tall and pretty with a well-shaped
nose, she was the favorite of her parents and perhaps closer
than the others to her father. Even at that, she writes:
"When he returned home, he would go straight into the living
room, which meant on most days I would not see my father
at all."
Risei Kano remembers his father as broad-minded and a man
with an international outlook. He learned judo techniques
from his father at the home dojo, but simply wasn't the
athletic type. Although Jigoro Kano was a strict disciplinarian,
he also had an emotional, warm-hearted side. "He wept,"
Risei recalls, "when he heard of Noriko's death."
Although Kano provided his children with fine training
and a good education, he was so busy most of the time his
family must have been lonely without him. "He left the children
almost entirely to the mother," Noriko writes in her "Recollections
of My Father". Sometimes, all they would see of their father
was when they lined up at the entrance of their home to
welcome him back -- "O-kaeri-nasai mase" -- before he disappeared
for the day into the living room.
Commands Instant Obedience
Jigoro Kano teaching
uki goshi |
Those were the days of Meiji (1868-1912) when the father
was a benevolent despot, when children were seldom seen
and rarely heard, when they were not allowed to venture
into the living room if he were there, when they were not
allowed to take their meals with him, when they feared and
respected rather than loved him and when his commands elicited
instant obedience from them.
Both Kudo and Nango remember visiting Kano at his home,
usually in the morning. Kano was not always burdened with
weighty matters, for Kudo recalls they often talked of trifling
things. "Kano sensei never smoked, but he liked his sake
and his face got red quickly when he was drinking." He refused
to indulge in the Japanese tradition of exchanging sake
cups with fellow drinkers and drinking from theirs. Since
this custom was greatly admired in the rural areas, farmers
invariably wanted to swap sake cups with Kano, but he considered
it to be an unhealthy practice and grew angry when they
asked him.
Jigoro Kano only stood five feet, two inches but he weighed
over 165 pounds. He had broad shoulders and chest and big
calves. Kudo says "Shihan was so proud of his calves he
was always pulling up his hakama to show them off." Kudo
was also amazed at Kano's speed. "I was surprised at how
quickly he threw me."
According to Kudo, Jigoro Kano was always smiling, even
when he was angry. "He laughed deeply when he was pleased."
Takasaki, his son-in-law, confirmed this by saying Kano
had a keen sense of humor, and although easily angered,
he was also quick to laugh.
Takasaki also remembers Kano liked sake, but knew his limit
and usually stopped before he had too much. "If he over-imbibed,
he invariably got sick."
In his active days no one practiced harder than Jigoro
Kano. He kept at it until he was a mass of wounds, barely
able to stagger home. His judogi is on display at the Kodokan
and is made of brown linen on the outside and cotton inside.
He repaired it himself with kite twine. With the bottom
in tatters, the judogi is discolored with oil and sweat
-- mute testimony to Jigoro Kano's strength and fierce fighting
spirit.
In 1907 Kano had the sleeves and pants of the judogi fully
lengthened to cover the arms and legs and protect the elbows
and knees. The jacket was also shortened. Thus, the judogi
assumed the final form in which it is still used today.
This was in sharp contrast to the early days when judoka
wore shorts and a jacket that left half the arms as well
as the knees and legs exposed. By the time Kano was 60 he
gave up wearing a judogi, simply putting on a haori (formal
shirt) and performing his kata in that way.
The Kodokan officially became a foundation in May 1909,
and two years later in April 1911 the Judo Teachers' Training
Department was set up. Then in 1922, the Kodokan Dan Grade
Holders Association was organized, followed by the Judo
Medical Research Society in 1932.
When Kano called judo "a way of human development understandable
by people all over the world," he was attempting to formulate
an idea he had of organizing an international judo federation
to spread interest in judo. By 1912, the Shihan had made
no less than nine trips abroad to create interest in the
new Japanese sport.
By this time, many foreigners -- mostly sailors and merchant
seamen -- were training at the Kodokan. Books on judo in
foreign languages were being written. Thus, before the outbreak
of World War I, dojo had been set up in the United States,
Britain, France, Canada and India as well as in Russia,
China and Korea.
A Russian by the name of A. Oshichenikov visited Japan
in 1911 and spent six years training at the Kodokan. Before
he returned home in 1917, he had been promoted to nidan.
He not only proceeded to teach judo techniques to the Red
Army and the secret police, but was also instrumental in
organizing Russia's judo-like sport of sambo in the 1930s.
Yoshitsuge Yamashita's staging of a worldwide jujitsu meet
at the Japan Police Ministry in 1893 must have started Kano
thinking along the same lines for judo. But first he had
to spread it throughout Japan. Nango recalls Kano lecturing
him along the following lines: "Japan is a small, mountainous
and highly-populated country, short of resources, and so
we Japanese must perform to the utmost of our ability. We
must mutually support one another and make the best use
of energy to keep Japan independent." Here are embodied
two of his key judo principles, "the best use of energy"
and "mutual prosperity."
Besides his association with Gakushuin and the Tokyo Teachers
Training School (later known as Tokyo Education College),
Kano was responsible for founding Kobun Gakuen, a special
school for Chinese students which was attended by Sun Yat-sen.
Just before the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05, the Chinese
Premier invited Kano to visit China at the bequest of the
Empress in order to lay the basis for educating young Chinese
in Japan and thus strengthen China. Kano made a thorough
study of the situation, communicating with Chinese officials
by the written language of kanji which is used by both nations
(although the oral language is completely different).
School for Chinese in Japan
Kano recommended Kobun Gakuen be set up in Japan, but suggested
Prince Saionji be consulted first since he was the Japanese
Minister of Education. This was done, and in 1902 Saionji
asked Kano to organize the school using professors from
Gakushuin and Tokyo Educational College. The Japanese government
helped support the new Kobun Gakuen which educated several
hundred Chinese during the seven years of its existence.
Needless to say, judo was an integral part of the school's
athletic activities.
Although Kano was devoted to judo, he was interested in
all of sports. Just as he laid the basis of modern education
in Japan, he also became the father of modern sports in
the country. In 1911 he founded the Japan Athletic Association
(JAA) and became its first president. About the same time,
he was named Japan's first member of the International Olympic
Committee and attended the Fifth Olympiad in Stockholm in
1912 -- the first Olympics in which Japan took part.
In promoting sports and physical education in Japan, Kano
got a wealthy lawyer by the name of Kishi interested in
sports, resulting in Kishi donating a great deal of money
to the JAA. Today, the Kishi Kaikan is the headquarters
for the JAA. Kano continued as JAA president until 1922,
when he resigned and became honorary president of that organization.
Kazuzo Kudo entered the Kodokan in 1917 and started training
under Kano the following year, continuing until the Shihan's
death two decades later. He learned kata personally from
Kano and sometimes joined with him in demonstrating kata.
Takasaki, who was captain of the Waseda University judo
team, graduated in 1925 and immediately joined the Army's
Imperial Guard unit. A short time later he received a telegram
from Kano: "Your father has been looking for a good wife
for you. What sort of woman do you have in mind for a wife?"
"Less than three years later," Takasaki said, "I married
his youngest daughter Atsuko." When the first All-Japan
Judo Championships were held in 1930, 71-year-old Jigoro
Kano's son-in-law, Takasaki, emerged the winner.
Reminiscence of Nango
Prof. Kano (front
row, fourth from left) with several other jujitsu
masters teaching at the Kodokan in 1921. |
Nango, 91-year-old nephew of the Shihan (Nango's mother
was Kano's elder sister), also learned judo under Jigoro
Kano. He studied judo for eight years and went as high as
nidan. He still remembers doing randori with the judo master
at the "Kano Juku" (dojo). In later years he lent financial
support to the Kodokan and continued his close association
with Kano right up to the time of his uncle's death.
Nango's impressions of the Shihan were of a sincere, well-mannered
man who didn't drink too much and was not especially humorous
during the times they were together. He was strict and serious
when dealing with children, Nango remembers, and attempted
to be completely fair-minded. "Keichu Tokugawa, son of a
former shogun, was treated no differently in judo training
than any of Kano's other students."
Kudo saw him as responding easily to others, not quickly
angered -- an apparent contradiction to the way Takasaki
recalled him. He listened patiently to others, never interrupting
them, and then won them over to his way of thinking by logical
argumentation.
Kano always fearlessly carried out what he thought was
right, according to Kudo. He was extremely generous, Kudo
recalls, and opposed to killing anything -- even insects.
Dr. Morohashi viewed Kano as a person with a many-sided
personality. "He was a man of few words; once visited a
hospitalized friend and spent the entire day with him without
speaking a word."
Other things Dr. Morohashi remembers: "He used to take
an umbrella with him every day because he didn't like to
worry about whether or not it would rain. He also had the
same lunch-soba (noodles) every day simply because he hated
to bother his head about such trifling matters as what he
could eat. And there were times when he was so poor that
when he had to entertain important guests at his home he
first had to go to the pawnshop and get his formal kimono
out of hock."
Although Kano was a confirmed patriot he was never a nationalist
of the same ilk as Mitsuru Toyama or Morihei Uchiba. In
contrast, he took the international view and was a liberal,
cut from the same cloth as Prince Saionji.
In the last few years of his life Jigoro Kano concentrated
on the educational and spiritual aspects of judo until the
systems reached a level of intellectual and moral education
as well as an athletic activity and method of combat. Actually,
he referred to judo as a sport with the three aims of physical
education, contest proficiency and mental training. Its
ultimate object was "to perfect oneself and thus be of some
use to the world around oneself."
Prof. Kano teaches
a woman's self-defense class at the Kodokan. |
Kano taught kata until a very old age, sometimes demonstrating
its techniques with his assistants. His method of teaching
judo varied according to the age and experience of the student.
Although he stopped doing randori at a much earlier age,
he continued to stress it over kata. His idea was to have
the students engage in free practice and assimilate kata
naturally.
Kudo once asked Kano his reaction to proposals for dividing
judoka by weight classifications for tournament competition.
Kano replied, "now a small man can easily throw a big man,
but if small men want to be classed by weight, I'm willing
to give the proposition favorable consideration."
Opposed Subsidies
Kano was opposed to the idea of government subsidies, but
felt if the Kodokan rejected it, other foundations would
not be in a position to receive grants. To keep from hurting
the chances of other groups, he agreed to receive a subsidy
although it was quite small. The Shihan was actually short
of money and sought financial aid from the Kano clan in
Naha.
The Kodokan, then located at Suidobashi, celebrated its
50th anniversary in 1934 at an impressive ceremony held
in the presence of an imperial prince and with high-ranking
members attending from all over Japan. It was at this time
Jigoro Kano presented cash gifts to the memorial plaques
of each of his departed teachers and voiced gratitude for
all they had done for him. The money eventually went to
the families of those instructors.
Jigoro Kano at historic
moment of 1936 Olympics in Berlin when Jesse Owens,
US, was awarded a gold medal in the decathlon. |
As a member of the International Olympic Committee, Kano
attended every Olympic Games from the Fifth Olympiad in
1912 in Stockholm to the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, including
the 10th Olympiad in Los Angeles in 1932. Kudo asked Kano
if judo should be included in the Olympics and the Shihan
replied: "If the IOC asks Japan to include it, then Japan
will consider it." In 1913 Jigoro Kano, accompanied by Takasaki
and S. Kotani, now international secretary of the Kodokan,
went to Geneva to offer Tokyo as the site for the 12th Olympiad
in 1940.
In 1935 Kano received the Asahi Prize for outstanding contributions
in the fields of art, science and sports. Three years later
he went to an IOC meeting in Cairo and succeeded in getting
Tokyo nominated for the site of the 1940 Olympics at which
judo was to be included as one of the events for the first
time.
It turned out to be the Shihan's crowning achievement although
a cataclysmic world war was to force its postponement for
another quarter of a century. On his way home from that
momentous conference on board the SS Hikawa Maru on May
4, 1938, Jigoro Kano died from pneumonia. He was 78 years
old.
Another dream, an International Judo Federation, plans
for which Kano revealed in 1933, came true in 1952. Today,
more than six million persons practice judo in over 30 countries
around the world. In October of 1969 thousands of judo fans
watched the sixth World Judo Championships in Mexico City-vivid
proof of Jigoro Kano's prophetic statement, "When I die,
Kodokan judo will not die with me because all things can
be studied if these principles (best use of energy and mutual
prosperity) are studied."
By Andy Adams, 1970
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