Shinkendo
Our Shinkendo group is in the process of finding a new
location. We will post our new location shortly.
~ June 2012
Toshishiro Obata Soke is the founder,
director and chief instructor of The Kokusai Shinkendo
Renmei (International Shinkendo Federation), an organization
dedicated to teaching authentic Japanese swordsmanship.
The Shinkendo school emphasizes very traditional and
effective swordsmanship, which with serious training,
leads to both practical ability as well as an understanding
of classical martial arts. Shinkendo is steeped in the
traditions of the samurai, in such ways as Heiho (strategy),
Reiho (proper Bushido etiquette) and philosophy.
The core of any Japanese feudal warrior's
martial education was that of swordsmanship. Shinkendo
is a comprehensive reunification of what the Samurai
once used and relied upon for survival, and can be classified
as a combination of the founder's own technical and
structural innovations and an amalgamation of several
traditions of Japanese swordsmanship that have evolved
and splintered over time. Unified, Shinkendo is a historically
accurate and comprehensive style of Japanese Swordsmanship.
Training
Sword training revolves around our structure of "Gorin
Goho Gogyo" (five equally balanced interacting
rings that symbolize the five major methods of technical
study). This includes: Suburi (sword swinging drills),
Tanrengata (solo forms), Battoho (combative drawing
and cutting methods), Tachiuchi (sparring) and Tameshigiri/Shizan
(cutting straw and bamboo targets). Students typically
train using a Bokuto (wooden sword), and later advance
to training with Iaito (or mugito, non-sharpened sword)
and finally Shinken, or 'live blade'. At more advanced
levels, the student begins to test their acquired skills
through test cutting practice on tatami omote makiwara
(rolled up tatami mats, previously soaked in water),
and eventually Nihondake or Mosodake (Japanese or Chinese
bamboo).
While Shinkendo requires rigorous physical
training, depth of coordination, and intense focus,
one of the most important aspects of Shinkendo is the
emphasis on spiritual forging, which inspires "Bushi
Damashii" (the Samurai/ warrior spirit), a quality
that we feel is as relevant now as it was hundreds of
years ago. Proper practice of Shinkendo should provide
one with not only a strong body and mind, but also a
calm, clear and focused spirit.
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