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Morihei Ueshiba

Morihei Ueshiba (植芝 盛平, Ueshiba Morihei, December 14, 1883 – April 26, 1969) was a Japanese martial artist and founder of the martial art of aikido. He is often referred to as "the founder" Kaiso (開祖) or Ōsensei (大先生/翁先生), "Great Teacher/Old Teacher (old as opposed to waka (young) sensei)".

Morihei Ueshiba
Born(1883-12-14)December 14, 1883
Tanabe, Wakayama, Japan
DiedApril 26, 1969(1969-04-26) (aged 85)
Iwama, Ibaraki, Japan
Native name植芝 盛平
Other namesMoritaka Ueshiba (植芝守高), Tsunemori (常盛)
StyleAikido
Teacher(s)Takeda Sōkaku
Children
  • Matsuko Ueshiba
  • Takemori Ueshiba (died in infancy)
  • Kuneharu Ueshiba (died in infancy)
  • Kisshomaru Ueshiba
Notable studentssee List of aikidoka
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Map of Japan showing the major locations in Ueshiba's life

The son of a landowner from Tanabe, Ueshiba studied a number of martial arts in his youth, and served in the Japanese Army during the Russo-Japanese War. After being discharged in 1907, he moved to Hokkaidō as the head of a pioneer settlement; here he met and studied with Takeda Sōkaku, the founder of Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu. On leaving Hokkaido in 1919, Ueshiba joined the Ōmoto-kyō movement, a Shinto sect, in Ayabe, where he served as a martial arts instructor and opened his first dojo. He accompanied the head of the Ōmoto-kyō group, Onisaburo Deguchi, on an expedition to Mongolia in 1924, where they were captured by Chinese troops and returned to Japan. The following year, he had a profound spiritual experience, stating that, "a golden spirit sprang up from the ground, veiled my body, and changed my body into a golden one." After this experience, his martial arts technique became gentler, with a greater emphasis on the control of ki.

Ueshiba moved to Tokyo in 1926, where he set up what would become the Aikikai Hombu Dojo. By now he was comparatively famous in martial arts circles, and taught at this dojo and others around Japan, including in several military academies. In the aftermath of World War II the Hombu dojo was temporarily closed, but Ueshiba had by this point left Tokyo and retired to Iwama, and he continued training at the dojo he had set up there. From the end of the war until the 1960s, he worked to promote aikido throughout Japan and abroad. He died from liver cancer in 1969.

After Ueshiba's death, aikido continued to be promulgated by his students (many of whom became noted martial artists in their own right). It is now practiced around the world.

Tanabe, 1883–1912 Edit

Morihei Ueshiba was born in Nishinotani village (now part of the city of Tanabe), Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, on December 14, 1883, the fourth child (and only son) born to Yoroku Ueshiba and his wife Yuki.[1]: 3 [2]: 49 

The young Ueshiba was raised in a somewhat privileged setting. His father Yoroku was a wealthy gentleman farmer and minor politician, being an elected member of the Nishinotani village council for 22 consecutive years. His mother Yuki was from the Itokawa clan, a prominent local family who could trace their lineage back to the Heian period.[2]: 52–53  Ueshiba was a rather weak, sickly child and bookish in his inclinations. At a young age his father encouraged him to take up sumo wrestling and swimming and entertained him with stories of his great-grandfather Kichiemon, who was considered a very strong samurai in his era. The need for such strength was further emphasized when the young Ueshiba witnessed his father being attacked by followers of a competing politician.[3]: 3 

A major influence on Ueshiba's early education was his elementary schoolteacher Tasaburo Nasu, who was a Shinto priest and who introduced Ueshiba to the religion.[2]: 59  At the age of six Ueshiba was sent to study at the Jizōderu Temple, but had little interest in the rote learning of Confucian education. However, his schoolmaster Mitsujo Fujimoto was also a priest of Shingon Buddhism, and taught the young Ueshiba some of the esoteric chants and ritual observances of the sect, which Ueshiba found intriguing. His interest in Buddhism was sufficiently great that his mother considered enrolling him in the priesthood, but his father Yoroku vetoed the idea.[2]: 57  Ueshiba went to Tanabe Higher Elementary School and then to Tanabe Prefectural Middle School, but left formal education in his early teens, enrolling instead at a private abacus academy, the Yoshida Institute, to study accountancy.[2]: 61  On graduating from the academy, he worked at a local tax office for a few months, but the job did not suit him and in 1901 he left for Tokyo, funded by his father. Ueshiba Trading, the stationery business which he opened there, was short-lived; unhappy with life in the capital, he returned to Tanabe less than a year later after suffering a bout of beri-beri. Shortly thereafter he married his childhood acquaintance Hatsu Itokawa.[4][5]

In 1903, Ueshiba was called up for military service. He failed the initial physical examination, being shorter than the regulation 5 feet 2 inches (1.57 m). To overcome this, he stretched his spine by attaching heavy weights to his legs and suspending himself from tree branches; when he re-took the physical exam he had increased his height by the necessary half-inch to pass.[4] He was assigned to the Osaka Fourth Division, 37th Regiment, and was promoted to corporal of the 61st Wakayama regiment by the following year; after serving on the front lines during the Russo-Japanese War he was promoted to sergeant.[2]: 70  He was discharged in 1907, and again returned to his father's farm in Tanabe.[5] Here he befriended the writer and philosopher Minakata Kumagusu, becoming involved with Minakata's opposition to the Meiji government's Shrine Consolidation Policy.[4] He and his wife had their first child, a daughter named Matsuko, in 1911.[6]: 3 

Ueshiba studied several martial arts during his early life, and was renowned for his physical strength during his youth.[7] During his sojourn in Tokyo he studied Kitō-ryū jujutsu under Takisaburo Tobari, and briefly enrolled in a school teaching Shinkage-ryū.[2]: 64–65  His training in Gotō-ha Yagyū-ryu under Masakatsu Nakai started in 1903 and continued until 1908, though was sporadic due to his military service, yet he was granted a Menkyo Kaiden (certificate of "Total Transmission") in 1908.[4] In 1901 he received some instruction from Tozawa Tokusaburōin in Tenjin Shin'yō-ryū jujutsu and he studied judo with Kiyoichi Takagi in Tanabe in 1911, after his father had a dojo built on the family compound to encourage his son's training.[5] In 1907, after his return from the war, he was also presented with a certificate of enlightenment (shingon inkyo) by his childhood teacher Mitsujo Fujimoto.[2]: 66 

Hokkaidō, 1912–1920 Edit

 
Morihei Ueshiba at around 35 years old (1918)

In the early part of the 20th century, the prefectural government of Hokkaidō, Japan's northernmost island, were offering various grants and incentives for mainland Japanese groups willing to relocate there. At the time, Hokkaidō was still largely unsettled by the Japanese, being occupied primarily by the indigenous Ainu. In 1910, Ueshiba travelled to Hokkaidō in the company of his acquaintance Denzaburo Kurahashi, who had lived on the northern island before. His intent was to scout out a propitious location for a new settlement, and he found the site at Shirataki suitable for his plans. Despite the hardships he suffered on this journey (which included getting lost in snowstorms several times and an incident in which he nearly drowned in a freezing river), Ueshiba returned to Tanabe filled with enthusiasm for the project, and began recruiting families to join him. He became the leader of the Kishū Settlement Group, a collective of eighty-five pioneers who intended to settle in the Shirataki district and live as farmers; the group founded the village of Yubetsu (later Shirataki village) in August, 1912.[2]: 83–87  Much of the funding for this project came from Ueshiba's father and his brothers-in-law Zenzo and Koshiro Inoue. Zenzo's son Noriaki was also a member of the settlement group.[8]

Poor soil conditions and bad weather led to crop failures during the first three years of the project, but the group still managed to cultivate mint and farm livestock. The burgeoning timber industry provided a boost to the settlement's economy, and by 1918 there were over 500 families residing there.[2]: 101  A fire in 1917 razed the entire village, leading to the departure of around twenty families. Ueshiba was attending a meeting over railway construction around 50 miles away, but on learning of the fire travelled back the entire distance on foot. He was elected to the village council that year, and took a prominent role in leading the reconstruction efforts.[2]: 101–103  In the summer of 1918, Hatsu gave birth to their first son, Takemori.[4][5]

The young Ueshiba met Takeda Sōkaku, the founder of Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu, at the Hisada Inn in Engaru, in March 1915. Ueshiba was deeply impressed with Takeda's martial art, and despite being on an important mission for his village at the time, abandoned his journey to spend the next month studying with Takeda.[2]: 94  He requested formal instruction and began studying Takeda's style of jūjutsu in earnest, going so far as to construct a dojo at his home and inviting his new teacher to be a permanent house guest.[9]: 22 [10] He received a kyōju dairi certificate, a teaching license, for the system from Takeda in 1922, when Takeda visited him in Ayabe.[9]: 36  Takeda also gave him a Yagyū Shinkage-ryū sword transmission scroll.[11] Ueshiba then became a representative of Daitō-ryū, toured with Takeda as a teaching assistant and taught the system to others.[12][13] The relationship between Ueshiba and Takeda was a complicated one. Ueshiba was an extremely dedicated student, dutifully attending to his teacher's needs and displaying great respect. However, Takeda overshadowed him throughout his early martial arts career, and Ueshiba's own students recorded the need to address what they referred to as "the Takeda problem".[12][14]: 137–139 [15]

Ayabe, 1920–1927 Edit

In November 1919, Ueshiba learned that his father Yoroku was ill, and was not expected to survive. Leaving most of his possessions to Takeda, Ueshiba left Shirataki with the apparent intention of returning to Tanabe to visit his ailing parent. En route he made a detour to Ayabe, near Kyoto, intending to visit Onisaburo Deguchi, the spiritual leader of the Ōmoto-kyō religion (Ueshiba's nephew Noriaki Inoue had already joined the religion and may have recommended it to his uncle).[8] Ueshiba stayed at the Ōmoto-kyō headquarters for several days, and met with Deguchi, who told him that, "There is nothing to worry about with your father".[2]: 113  On his return to Tanabe, Ueshiba found that Yoroku had died. Criticised by family and friends for arriving too late to see his father, Ueshiba went into the mountains with a sword and practised solo sword exercises for several days; this almost led to his arrest when the police were informed of a sword-wielding madman on the loose.[2]: 116 

Within a few months, Ueshiba was back in Ayabe, having decided to become a full-time student of Ōmoto-kyō. In 1920 he moved his entire family, including his mother, to the Ōmoto compound; at the same time he also purchased enough rice to feed himself and his family for several years.[2]: 117  That same year, Deguchi asked Ueshiba to become the group's martial arts instructor, and a dojo—the first of several that Ueshiba was to lead—was constructed on the centre's grounds. Ueshiba also taught Takeda's Daitō-ryū in neighbouring Hyōgo Prefecture during this period.[16] His second son, Kuniharu, was born in 1920 in Ayabe, but died from illness the same year, along with three-year-old Takemori.[9]: 32–34 

Takeda visited Ueshiba in Ayabe to provide instruction, although he was not a follower of Ōmoto and did not get along with Deguchi, which led to a cooling of the relationship between him and Ueshiba.[15] Ueshiba continued to teach his martial art under the name "Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu", at the behest of his teacher.[17] However, Deguchi encouraged Ueshiba to create his own style of martial arts, "Ueshiba-ryū", and sent many Ōmoto followers to study at the dojo. He also brought Ueshiba into the highest levels of the group's bureaucracy, making Ueshiba his executive assistant and putting him in charge of the Showa Seinenkai (Ōmoto-kyō's national youth organisation) and the Ōmoto Shobotai, a volunteer fire service.[2]: 118, 128, 137 

His close relationship with Deguchi introduced Ueshiba to various members of Japan's far-right; members of the ultranationalist group the Sakurakai would hold meetings at Ueshiba's dojo, and he developed a friendship with the philosopher Shūmei Ōkawa during this period, as well as meeting with Nisshō Inoue and Kozaburō Tachibana. Deguchi also offered Ueshiba's services as a bodyguard to Kingoro Hashimoto, the Sakurakai's founder.[14]: 142–149 [18] Ueshiba's commitment to the goal of world peace, stressed by many biographers, must be viewed in the light of these relationships and his Ōmoto-kyō beliefs. His association with the extreme right-wing is understandable when one considers that Ōmoto-kyō's view of world peace was of a benevolent dictatorship by the Emperor of Japan, with other nations being subjugated under Japanese rule.[19]: 638–639 

In 1921, in an event known as the First Ōmoto-kyō Incident (大本事件, Ōmoto jiken), the Japanese authorities raided the compound, destroying the main buildings on the site and arresting Deguchi on charges of lèse-majesté.[20] Ueshiba's dojo was undamaged and, over the following two years, he worked closely with Deguchi to reconstruct the group's centre, becoming heavily involved in farming work and serving as the group's "Caretaker of Forms", a role which placed him in charge of overseeing Ōmoto's move towards self-sufficiency.[2]: 154  His son Kisshomaru was born in the summer of 1921.[5][9]: 32–34 

Three years later, in 1924, Deguchi led a small group of Ōmoto-kyō disciples, including Ueshiba, on a journey to Mongolia at the invitation of retired naval captain Yutaro Yano and his associates within the ultra-nationalist Black Dragon Society. Deguchi's intent was to establish a new religious kingdom in Mongolia, and to this end he had distributed propaganda suggesting that he was the reincarnation of Genghis Khan.[21] Allied with the Mongolian bandit Lu Zhankui, Deguchi's group were arrested in Tongliao by the Chinese authorities. Fortunately for Ueshiba, whilst Lu and his men were executed by firing squad, the Japanese group was released into the custody of the Japanese consul. They were returned under guard to Japan, where Deguchi was imprisoned for breaking the terms of his bail.[9]: 37–45  During this expedition Ueshiba was given the Chinese alias Wang Shou-gao, rendered in Japanese as "Moritaka" – he was reportedly very taken with this name and continued to use it intermittently for the rest of his life.[2]: 163 

After returning to Ayabe, Ueshiba began a regimen of spiritual training, regularly retreating to the mountains or performing misogi in the Nachi Falls. As his prowess as a martial artist increased, his fame began to spread. He was challenged by many established martial artists, some of whom later became his students after being defeated by him. In the autumn of 1925 he was asked to give a demonstration of his art in Tokyo, at the behest of Admiral Isamu Takeshita; one of the spectators was Yamamoto Gonnohyōe, who requested that Ueshiba stay in the capital to instruct the Imperial Guard in his martial art. After a couple of weeks, however, Ueshiba took issue with several government officials who voiced concerns about his connections to Deguchi; he cancelled the training and returned to Ayabe.[9]: 45–49 

Tokyo, 1927–1942 Edit

 
Morihei Ueshiba in 1938

In 1926 Takeshita invited Ueshiba to visit Tokyo again. Ueshiba relented and returned to the capital, but while residing there was stricken with a serious illness. Deguchi visited his ailing student and, concerned for his health, commanded Ueshiba to return to Ayabe. The appeal of returning increased after Ueshiba was questioned by the police following his meeting with Deguchi; the authorities were keeping the Ōmoto-kyō leader under close surveillance. Angered at the treatment he had received, Ueshiba went back to Ayabe again. Six months later, this time with Deguchi's blessing, he and his family moved permanently to Tokyo. This move allowed Ueshiba to teach politicians, high-ranking military personnel, and members of the Imperial household; suddenly he was no longer an obscure provincial martial artist, but a sensei to some of Japan's most important citizens.[19]: 134  Arriving in October 1927, the Ueshiba family set up home in the Shirokane district. The building proved too small to house the growing number of aikido students, and so the Ueshibas moved to larger premises, first in Mita district, then in Takanawa, and finally to a purpose-built hall in Shinjuku. This last location, originally named the Kobukan (皇武館), would eventually become the Aikikai Hombu Dojo. During its construction, Ueshiba rented a property nearby, where he was visited by Kanō Jigorō, the founder of judo.[9]: 50–53 

During this period, Ueshiba was invited to teach at a number of military institutes, due to his close personal relationships with key figures in the military (among them Sadao Araki, the Japanese Minister of War[19]: 639 ). He accepted an invitation from Admiral Sankichi Takahashi to be the martial arts instructor at the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy,[2]: 201  and also taught at the Nakano Spy School, although aikido was later judged to be too technical for the students there and karate was adopted instead.[14]: 154–155  He also became a visiting instructor at the Imperial Japanese Army Academy after being challenged by (and defeating) General Makoto Miura, another student of Takeda Sōkaku's Daitō-ryū.[2]: 207–208 [19]: 639  Takeda himself met Ueshiba for the last time around 1935, while Ueshiba was teaching at the Osaka headquarters of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper. Frustrated by the appearance of his teacher, who was openly critical of Ueshiba's martial arts and who appeared intent on taking over the classes there, Ueshiba left Osaka during the night, bowing to the residence in which Takeda was staying and thereafter avoiding all contact with him.[14]: 139 [19]: 135  Between 1940 and 1942 he made several visits to Manchukuo (Japanese occupied Manchuria) where he was the principal martial arts instructor at Kenkoku University.[9]: 63  Whilst in Manchuria, he met and defeated the sumo wrestler Tenryū Saburō during a demonstration.[22]

The "Second Ōmoto Incident" in 1935 saw another government crackdown on Deguchi's sect, in which the Ayabe compound was destroyed and most of the group's leaders imprisoned. Although he had relocated to Tokyo, Ueshiba had retained links with the Ōmoto-kyō group (he had in fact helped Deguchi to establish a paramilitary branch of the sect only three years earlier[19]: 134 ) and expected to be arrested as one of its senior members. However, he had a good relationship with the local police commissioner Kenji Tomita and the chief of police Gīchi Morita, both of whom had been his students. As a result, although he was taken in for interrogation, he was released without charge on Morita's authority.[2]: 233–237 

In 1932, Ueshiba's daughter Matsuko was married to the swordsman Kiyoshi Nakakura, who was adopted as Ueshiba's heir under the name Morihiro Ueshiba. The marriage ended after a few years, and Nakakura left the family in 1937. Ueshiba later designated his son Kisshomaru as the heir to his martial art.[23][19]: 134 

The 1930s saw Japan's invasion of mainland Asia and increased military activity in Europe. Ueshiba was concerned about the prospect of war, and became involved in a number of efforts to try and forestall the conflict that would eventually become World War II. He was part of a group, along with Shūmei Ōkawa and several wealthy Japanese backers, that tried to broker a deal with Harry Chandler to export aviation fuel from the United States to Japan (in contravention of the oil embargo that was currently in force), although this effort ultimately failed.[14]: 156  In 1941 Ueshiba also undertook a secret diplomatic mission to China at the behest of Prince Fumimaro Konoe. The intended goal was a meeting with Chiang Kai-shek to establish peace talks, but Ueshiba was unable to meet with the Chinese leader, arriving too late to fulfil his mission.[2]: 236–237 

Iwama, 1942–1969 Edit

 
The Aiki Shrine in Iwama

From 1935 onwards, Ueshiba had been purchasing land in Iwama in Ibaraki Prefecture, and by the early 1940s had acquired around 17 acres (6.9 ha; 0.027 sq mi) of farmland there. In 1942, disenchanted with the war-mongering and political manoeuvring in the capital, he left Tokyo and moved to Iwama permanently, settling in a small farmer's cottage.[19]: 639  Here he founded the Aiki Shuren Dojo, also known as the Iwama dojo, and the Aiki Shrine, a devotional shrine to the "Great Spirit of Aiki".[24][5][9]: 55  During this time he travelled extensively in Japan, particularly in the Kansai region, teaching his aikido. Despite the prohibition on the teaching of martial arts after World War II, Ueshiba and his students continued to practice in secret at the Iwama dojo; the Hombu dojo in Tokyo was in any case being used as a refugee centre for citizens displaced by the severe firebombing. It was during this period that Ueshiba met and befriended Koun Nakanishi, an expert in kotodama. The study of kotodama was to become one of Ueshiba's passions in later life, and Nakanishi's work inspired Ueshiba's concept of takemusu aiki.[2]: 267 

The rural nature of his new home in Iwama allowed Ueshiba to concentrate on the second great passion of his life: farming. He had been born into a farming family and spent much of his life cultivating the land, from his settlement days in Hokkaidō to his work in Ayabe trying to make the Ōmoto-kyō compound self-sufficient. He viewed farming as a logical complement to martial arts; both were physically demanding and required single-minded dedication. Not only did his farming activities provide a useful cover for martial arts training under the government's restrictions, it also provided food for Ueshiba, his students and other local families at a time when food shortages were commonplace.[1]: 18–19 [19]: 135 

The government prohibition (on aikido, at least) was lifted in 1948 with the creation of the Aiki Foundation, established by the Japanese Ministry of Education with permission from the Occupation forces. The Hombu dojo re-opened the following year. After the war Ueshiba effectively retired from aikido.[25] He delegated most of the work of running the Hombu dojo and the Aiki Federation to his son Kisshomaru, and instead chose to spend much of his time in prayer, meditation, calligraphy and farming.[9]: 66–69  He still travelled extensively to promote aikido, even visiting Hawaii in 1961.[4]: xix  He also appeared in a television documentary on aikido: NTV's The Master of Aikido, broadcast in January 1960.[5] Ueshiba maintained links with the Japanese nationalist movement even in later life; his student Kanshu Sunadomari reported that Ueshiba temporarily sheltered Mikami Taku, one of the naval officers involved in the May 15 Incident, at Iwama.[14]: 159–160 

In 1969, Ueshiba became ill. He led his last training session on March 10, and was taken to hospital where he was diagnosed with cancer of the liver. He died suddenly on April 26, 1969.[9]: 72  His body was buried at Kozan-ji Temple Tanabe-shi Wakayama Japan, and he was given the posthumous Buddhist title "Aiki-in Moritake En'yū Daidōshi" (合気院盛武円融大道士); parts of his hair were enshrined at Ayabe, Iwama and Kumano.[3]: 13  Two months later, his wife Hatsu (植芝 はつ Ueshiba Hatsu, née Itokawa Hatsu; 1881–1969) also died.[2]: 316–317 [6]: 3 

Development of aikido Edit

Aikido—usually translated as the Way of Unifying Spirit or the Way of Spiritual Harmony—is a fighting system that focuses on throws, pins, and joint locks together with some striking techniques. It emphasizes protecting the opponent and promotes spiritual and social development.[26]

The technical curriculum of aikido was derived from the teachings of Takeda Sōkaku; the basic techniques of aikido stem from his Daitō-ryū system.[12][27] In the earlier years of his teaching, from the 1920s to the mid-1930s, Ueshiba taught the Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu system; his early students' documents bear the term Daitō-ryū.[15] Indeed, Ueshiba trained one of the future highest grade earners in Daitō-ryū, Takuma Hisa, in the art before Takeda took charge of Hisa's training.[28]

The early form of training under Ueshiba was noticeably different from later forms of aikido. It had a larger curriculum, increased use of strikes to vital points (atemi), and greater use of weapons. The schools of aikido developed by Ueshiba's students from the pre-war period tend to reflect the harder style of the early training. These students included Kenji Tomiki (who founded the Shodokan Aikido sometimes called Tomiki-ryū), Noriaki Inoue (who founded Shin'ei Taidō), Minoru Mochizuki (who founded Yoseikan Budo) and Gozo Shioda (who founded Yoshinkan Aikido). Many of these styles are therefore considered "pre-war styles", although some of these teachers continued to train with Ueshiba in the years after World War II.[19]: 134–136 

During his lifetime, Ueshiba had three spiritual experiences that impacted greatly his understanding of the martial arts. The first occurred in 1925, after Ueshiba had defeated a naval officer's bokken (wooden katana) attacks unarmed and without hurting the officer. Ueshiba then walked to his garden, where he had the following realization:

I felt the universe suddenly quake and a golden spirit sprang up from the ground, veiled my body, and changed my body into a golden one. At the same time, my body became light. I was able to understand the whispering of the birds and was aware of the mind of God, the creator of the universe. At that moment I was enlightened: the source of budō [the martial way] is God's love – the spirit of loving protection for all beings ... Budō is not the felling of an opponent by force; nor is it a tool to lead the world to destruction with arms. True Budō is to accept the spirit of the universe, keep the peace of the world, correctly produce, protect and cultivate all beings in nature.[29]

His second experience occurred in 1940 when engaged in the ritual purification process of misogi.

Around 2 a.m., I suddenly forgot all the martial techniques I had ever learned. The techniques of my teachers appeared completely new. Now they were vehicles for the cultivation of life, knowledge, and virtue, not devices to throw people with.[30]

His third experience was in 1942 during the worst fighting of World War II when Ueshiba had a vision of the "Great Spirit of Peace".[1]: 18 

The Way of the Warrior has been misunderstood. It is not a means to kill and destroy others. Those who seek to compete and better one another are making a terrible mistake. To smash, injure, or destroy is the worst thing a human being can do. The real Way of a Warrior is to prevent such slaughter – it is the Art of Peace, the power of love.[31]: 223 

After these events, Ueshiba seemed to slowly grow away from Takeda, and he began to change his art.[32] These changes are reflected in the differing names with which he referred to his system, first as aiki-jūjutsu, then Ueshiba-ryū, Asahi-ryū,[33] and aiki budō.[31]: 89  In 1942, when Ueshiba's group joined the Dai Nippon Butoku Kai, the martial art that he developed finally came to be known as aikido.[16][34][35]

As Ueshiba grew older, more skilled, and more spiritual in his outlook, his art also changed and became softer and more gentle. Martial techniques became less important, and more focus was given to the control of ki.[36][37] In his expression of the art there was a greater emphasis on what is referred to as kokyū-nage, or "breath throws" which are soft and blending, utilizing the opponent's movement to throw them. Ueshiba regularly practiced cold water misogi, as well as other spiritual and religious rites, and viewed his studies of aikido as part of this spiritual training.[6]: 17 

 
Ueshiba with a group of his international students at the Hombu dojo in 1967.

Over the years, Ueshiba trained a large number of students, many of whom later became famous teachers in their own right and developed their styles of aikido. Some of them were uchi-deshi, live-in students. Ueshiba placed many demands on his uchi-deshi, expecting them to attend to him at all times, act as training partners (even in the middle of the night), arrange his travel plans, massage, and bathe him, and assist with household chores.[38]

There were roughly four generations of students, comprising the pre-war students (training c.1921–1935), students who trained during the Second World War (c.1936–1945), the post-war students in Iwama (c.1946–1955) and the students who trained with Ueshiba during his final years (c.1956–c.1969).[10] As a result of Ueshiba's martial development throughout his life, students from each of these generations tend to have markedly different approaches to aikido.[38] These variations are compounded by the fact that few students trained with Ueshiba for a protracted period; only Yoichiro Inoue, Kenji Tomiki, Gozo Shioda, Morihiro Saito, Tsutomu Yukawa and Mitsugi Saotome studied directly under Ueshiba for more than five or six years.[25][39] After the war, Ueshiba and the Hombu Dojo dispatched some of their students to various other countries, resulting in aikido spreading around the world.[40][19]: 136 

Honors Edit

Works Edit

  • Morihei Ueshiba, The Heart of Aikido: The Philosophy of Takemusu Aiki (2010), Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-7700-3114-3
  • Morihei Ueshiba, The Secret Teachings of Aikido (2008), Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-7700-3030-6
  • Morihei Ueshiba, The Essence of Aikido: Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba (1994), Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-7700-1727-7
  • Morihei Ueshiba, The Art of Peace: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (1992), Shambhala, ISBN 978-0-8777-3851-0 - selection from Morihei's talks, poems, calligraphy and oral tradition, including excerpt from Budo, Aikido: The Spiritual Dimension, and Aiki Shinzui compiled and translated by John Stevens[1]
  • Morihei Ueshiba, Budo: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (1991), Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-7700-1532-7

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ueshiba, Morihei (3 December 2002). The Art of Peace. Translated by Stevens, John. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 978-0-8348-2168-2.
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morihei, ueshiba, peace, redirects, here, other, uses, peace, disambiguation, 植芝, 盛平, ueshiba, morihei, december, 1883, april, 1969, japanese, martial, artist, founder, martial, aikido, often, referred, founder, kaiso, 開祖, Ōsensei, 大先生, 翁先生, great, teacher, te. The Art of Peace redirects here For other uses see The Art of Peace disambiguation Morihei Ueshiba 植芝 盛平 Ueshiba Morihei December 14 1883 April 26 1969 was a Japanese martial artist and founder of the martial art of aikido He is often referred to as the founder Kaiso 開祖 or Ōsensei 大先生 翁先生 Great Teacher Old Teacher old as opposed to waka young sensei Morihei UeshibaBorn 1883 12 14 December 14 1883Tanabe Wakayama JapanDiedApril 26 1969 1969 04 26 aged 85 Iwama Ibaraki JapanNative name植芝 盛平Other namesMoritaka Ueshiba 植芝守高 Tsunemori 常盛 StyleAikidoTeacher s Takeda SōkakuChildrenMatsuko Ueshiba Takemori Ueshiba died in infancy Kuneharu Ueshiba died in infancy Kisshomaru UeshibaNotable studentssee List of aikidokaTanabeShiratakiAyabeTokyoIwamaclass notpageimage Map of Japan showing the major locations in Ueshiba s life The son of a landowner from Tanabe Ueshiba studied a number of martial arts in his youth and served in the Japanese Army during the Russo Japanese War After being discharged in 1907 he moved to Hokkaidō as the head of a pioneer settlement here he met and studied with Takeda Sōkaku the founder of Daitō ryu Aiki jujutsu On leaving Hokkaido in 1919 Ueshiba joined the Ōmoto kyō movement a Shinto sect in Ayabe where he served as a martial arts instructor and opened his first dojo He accompanied the head of the Ōmoto kyō group Onisaburo Deguchi on an expedition to Mongolia in 1924 where they were captured by Chinese troops and returned to Japan The following year he had a profound spiritual experience stating that a golden spirit sprang up from the ground veiled my body and changed my body into a golden one After this experience his martial arts technique became gentler with a greater emphasis on the control of ki Ueshiba moved to Tokyo in 1926 where he set up what would become the Aikikai Hombu Dojo By now he was comparatively famous in martial arts circles and taught at this dojo and others around Japan including in several military academies In the aftermath of World War II the Hombu dojo was temporarily closed but Ueshiba had by this point left Tokyo and retired to Iwama and he continued training at the dojo he had set up there From the end of the war until the 1960s he worked to promote aikido throughout Japan and abroad He died from liver cancer in 1969 After Ueshiba s death aikido continued to be promulgated by his students many of whom became noted martial artists in their own right It is now practiced around the world Contents 1 Tanabe 1883 1912 2 Hokkaidō 1912 1920 3 Ayabe 1920 1927 4 Tokyo 1927 1942 5 Iwama 1942 1969 6 Development of aikido 7 Honors 8 Works 9 ReferencesTanabe 1883 1912 EditMorihei Ueshiba was born in Nishinotani village now part of the city of Tanabe Wakayama Prefecture Japan on December 14 1883 the fourth child and only son born to Yoroku Ueshiba and his wife Yuki 1 3 2 49 The young Ueshiba was raised in a somewhat privileged setting His father Yoroku was a wealthy gentleman farmer and minor politician being an elected member of the Nishinotani village council for 22 consecutive years His mother Yuki was from the Itokawa clan a prominent local family who could trace their lineage back to the Heian period 2 52 53 Ueshiba was a rather weak sickly child and bookish in his inclinations At a young age his father encouraged him to take up sumo wrestling and swimming and entertained him with stories of his great grandfather Kichiemon who was considered a very strong samurai in his era The need for such strength was further emphasized when the young Ueshiba witnessed his father being attacked by followers of a competing politician 3 3 A major influence on Ueshiba s early education was his elementary schoolteacher Tasaburo Nasu who was a Shinto priest and who introduced Ueshiba to the religion 2 59 At the age of six Ueshiba was sent to study at the Jizōderu Temple but had little interest in the rote learning of Confucian education However his schoolmaster Mitsujo Fujimoto was also a priest of Shingon Buddhism and taught the young Ueshiba some of the esoteric chants and ritual observances of the sect which Ueshiba found intriguing His interest in Buddhism was sufficiently great that his mother considered enrolling him in the priesthood but his father Yoroku vetoed the idea 2 57 Ueshiba went to Tanabe Higher Elementary School and then to Tanabe Prefectural Middle School but left formal education in his early teens enrolling instead at a private abacus academy the Yoshida Institute to study accountancy 2 61 On graduating from the academy he worked at a local tax office for a few months but the job did not suit him and in 1901 he left for Tokyo funded by his father Ueshiba Trading the stationery business which he opened there was short lived unhappy with life in the capital he returned to Tanabe less than a year later after suffering a bout of beri beri Shortly thereafter he married his childhood acquaintance Hatsu Itokawa 4 5 In 1903 Ueshiba was called up for military service He failed the initial physical examination being shorter than the regulation 5 feet 2 inches 1 57 m To overcome this he stretched his spine by attaching heavy weights to his legs and suspending himself from tree branches when he re took the physical exam he had increased his height by the necessary half inch to pass 4 He was assigned to the Osaka Fourth Division 37th Regiment and was promoted to corporal of the 61st Wakayama regiment by the following year after serving on the front lines during the Russo Japanese War he was promoted to sergeant 2 70 He was discharged in 1907 and again returned to his father s farm in Tanabe 5 Here he befriended the writer and philosopher Minakata Kumagusu becoming involved with Minakata s opposition to the Meiji government s Shrine Consolidation Policy 4 He and his wife had their first child a daughter named Matsuko in 1911 6 3 Ueshiba studied several martial arts during his early life and was renowned for his physical strength during his youth 7 During his sojourn in Tokyo he studied Kitō ryu jujutsu under Takisaburo Tobari and briefly enrolled in a school teaching Shinkage ryu 2 64 65 His training in Gotō ha Yagyu ryu under Masakatsu Nakai started in 1903 and continued until 1908 though was sporadic due to his military service yet he was granted a Menkyo Kaiden certificate of Total Transmission in 1908 4 In 1901 he received some instruction from Tozawa Tokusaburōin in Tenjin Shin yō ryu jujutsu and he studied judo with Kiyoichi Takagi in Tanabe in 1911 after his father had a dojo built on the family compound to encourage his son s training 5 In 1907 after his return from the war he was also presented with a certificate of enlightenment shingon inkyo by his childhood teacher Mitsujo Fujimoto 2 66 Hokkaidō 1912 1920 Edit nbsp Morihei Ueshiba at around 35 years old 1918 In the early part of the 20th century the prefectural government of Hokkaidō Japan s northernmost island were offering various grants and incentives for mainland Japanese groups willing to relocate there At the time Hokkaidō was still largely unsettled by the Japanese being occupied primarily by the indigenous Ainu In 1910 Ueshiba travelled to Hokkaidō in the company of his acquaintance Denzaburo Kurahashi who had lived on the northern island before His intent was to scout out a propitious location for a new settlement and he found the site at Shirataki suitable for his plans Despite the hardships he suffered on this journey which included getting lost in snowstorms several times and an incident in which he nearly drowned in a freezing river Ueshiba returned to Tanabe filled with enthusiasm for the project and began recruiting families to join him He became the leader of the Kishu Settlement Group a collective of eighty five pioneers who intended to settle in the Shirataki district and live as farmers the group founded the village of Yubetsu later Shirataki village in August 1912 2 83 87 Much of the funding for this project came from Ueshiba s father and his brothers in law Zenzo and Koshiro Inoue Zenzo s son Noriaki was also a member of the settlement group 8 Poor soil conditions and bad weather led to crop failures during the first three years of the project but the group still managed to cultivate mint and farm livestock The burgeoning timber industry provided a boost to the settlement s economy and by 1918 there were over 500 families residing there 2 101 A fire in 1917 razed the entire village leading to the departure of around twenty families Ueshiba was attending a meeting over railway construction around 50 miles away but on learning of the fire travelled back the entire distance on foot He was elected to the village council that year and took a prominent role in leading the reconstruction efforts 2 101 103 In the summer of 1918 Hatsu gave birth to their first son Takemori 4 5 The young Ueshiba met Takeda Sōkaku the founder of Daitō ryu Aiki jujutsu at the Hisada Inn in Engaru in March 1915 Ueshiba was deeply impressed with Takeda s martial art and despite being on an important mission for his village at the time abandoned his journey to spend the next month studying with Takeda 2 94 He requested formal instruction and began studying Takeda s style of jujutsu in earnest going so far as to construct a dojo at his home and inviting his new teacher to be a permanent house guest 9 22 10 He received a kyōju dairi certificate a teaching license for the system from Takeda in 1922 when Takeda visited him in Ayabe 9 36 Takeda also gave him a Yagyu Shinkage ryu sword transmission scroll 11 Ueshiba then became a representative of Daitō ryu toured with Takeda as a teaching assistant and taught the system to others 12 13 The relationship between Ueshiba and Takeda was a complicated one Ueshiba was an extremely dedicated student dutifully attending to his teacher s needs and displaying great respect However Takeda overshadowed him throughout his early martial arts career and Ueshiba s own students recorded the need to address what they referred to as the Takeda problem 12 14 137 139 15 Ayabe 1920 1927 EditIn November 1919 Ueshiba learned that his father Yoroku was ill and was not expected to survive Leaving most of his possessions to Takeda Ueshiba left Shirataki with the apparent intention of returning to Tanabe to visit his ailing parent En route he made a detour to Ayabe near Kyoto intending to visit Onisaburo Deguchi the spiritual leader of the Ōmoto kyō religion Ueshiba s nephew Noriaki Inoue had already joined the religion and may have recommended it to his uncle 8 Ueshiba stayed at the Ōmoto kyō headquarters for several days and met with Deguchi who told him that There is nothing to worry about with your father 2 113 On his return to Tanabe Ueshiba found that Yoroku had died Criticised by family and friends for arriving too late to see his father Ueshiba went into the mountains with a sword and practised solo sword exercises for several days this almost led to his arrest when the police were informed of a sword wielding madman on the loose 2 116 Within a few months Ueshiba was back in Ayabe having decided to become a full time student of Ōmoto kyō In 1920 he moved his entire family including his mother to the Ōmoto compound at the same time he also purchased enough rice to feed himself and his family for several years 2 117 That same year Deguchi asked Ueshiba to become the group s martial arts instructor and a dojo the first of several that Ueshiba was to lead was constructed on the centre s grounds Ueshiba also taught Takeda s Daitō ryu in neighbouring Hyōgo Prefecture during this period 16 His second son Kuniharu was born in 1920 in Ayabe but died from illness the same year along with three year old Takemori 9 32 34 Takeda visited Ueshiba in Ayabe to provide instruction although he was not a follower of Ōmoto and did not get along with Deguchi which led to a cooling of the relationship between him and Ueshiba 15 Ueshiba continued to teach his martial art under the name Daitō ryu Aiki jujutsu at the behest of his teacher 17 However Deguchi encouraged Ueshiba to create his own style of martial arts Ueshiba ryu and sent many Ōmoto followers to study at the dojo He also brought Ueshiba into the highest levels of the group s bureaucracy making Ueshiba his executive assistant and putting him in charge of the Showa Seinenkai Ōmoto kyō s national youth organisation and the Ōmoto Shobotai a volunteer fire service 2 118 128 137 His close relationship with Deguchi introduced Ueshiba to various members of Japan s far right members of the ultranationalist group the Sakurakai would hold meetings at Ueshiba s dojo and he developed a friendship with the philosopher Shumei Ōkawa during this period as well as meeting with Nisshō Inoue and Kozaburō Tachibana Deguchi also offered Ueshiba s services as a bodyguard to Kingoro Hashimoto the Sakurakai s founder 14 142 149 18 Ueshiba s commitment to the goal of world peace stressed by many biographers must be viewed in the light of these relationships and his Ōmoto kyō beliefs His association with the extreme right wing is understandable when one considers that Ōmoto kyō s view of world peace was of a benevolent dictatorship by the Emperor of Japan with other nations being subjugated under Japanese rule 19 638 639 In 1921 in an event known as the First Ōmoto kyō Incident 大本事件 Ōmoto jiken the Japanese authorities raided the compound destroying the main buildings on the site and arresting Deguchi on charges of lese majeste 20 Ueshiba s dojo was undamaged and over the following two years he worked closely with Deguchi to reconstruct the group s centre becoming heavily involved in farming work and serving as the group s Caretaker of Forms a role which placed him in charge of overseeing Ōmoto s move towards self sufficiency 2 154 His son Kisshomaru was born in the summer of 1921 5 9 32 34 Three years later in 1924 Deguchi led a small group of Ōmoto kyō disciples including Ueshiba on a journey to Mongolia at the invitation of retired naval captain Yutaro Yano and his associates within the ultra nationalist Black Dragon Society Deguchi s intent was to establish a new religious kingdom in Mongolia and to this end he had distributed propaganda suggesting that he was the reincarnation of Genghis Khan 21 Allied with the Mongolian bandit Lu Zhankui Deguchi s group were arrested in Tongliao by the Chinese authorities Fortunately for Ueshiba whilst Lu and his men were executed by firing squad the Japanese group was released into the custody of the Japanese consul They were returned under guard to Japan where Deguchi was imprisoned for breaking the terms of his bail 9 37 45 During this expedition Ueshiba was given the Chinese alias Wang Shou gao rendered in Japanese as Moritaka he was reportedly very taken with this name and continued to use it intermittently for the rest of his life 2 163 After returning to Ayabe Ueshiba began a regimen of spiritual training regularly retreating to the mountains or performing misogi in the Nachi Falls As his prowess as a martial artist increased his fame began to spread He was challenged by many established martial artists some of whom later became his students after being defeated by him In the autumn of 1925 he was asked to give a demonstration of his art in Tokyo at the behest of Admiral Isamu Takeshita one of the spectators was Yamamoto Gonnohyōe who requested that Ueshiba stay in the capital to instruct the Imperial Guard in his martial art After a couple of weeks however Ueshiba took issue with several government officials who voiced concerns about his connections to Deguchi he cancelled the training and returned to Ayabe 9 45 49 Tokyo 1927 1942 Edit nbsp Morihei Ueshiba in 1938In 1926 Takeshita invited Ueshiba to visit Tokyo again Ueshiba relented and returned to the capital but while residing there was stricken with a serious illness Deguchi visited his ailing student and concerned for his health commanded Ueshiba to return to Ayabe The appeal of returning increased after Ueshiba was questioned by the police following his meeting with Deguchi the authorities were keeping the Ōmoto kyō leader under close surveillance Angered at the treatment he had received Ueshiba went back to Ayabe again Six months later this time with Deguchi s blessing he and his family moved permanently to Tokyo This move allowed Ueshiba to teach politicians high ranking military personnel and members of the Imperial household suddenly he was no longer an obscure provincial martial artist but a sensei to some of Japan s most important citizens 19 134 Arriving in October 1927 the Ueshiba family set up home in the Shirokane district The building proved too small to house the growing number of aikido students and so the Ueshibas moved to larger premises first in Mita district then in Takanawa and finally to a purpose built hall in Shinjuku This last location originally named the Kobukan 皇武館 would eventually become the Aikikai Hombu Dojo During its construction Ueshiba rented a property nearby where he was visited by Kanō Jigorō the founder of judo 9 50 53 During this period Ueshiba was invited to teach at a number of military institutes due to his close personal relationships with key figures in the military among them Sadao Araki the Japanese Minister of War 19 639 He accepted an invitation from Admiral Sankichi Takahashi to be the martial arts instructor at the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy 2 201 and also taught at the Nakano Spy School although aikido was later judged to be too technical for the students there and karate was adopted instead 14 154 155 He also became a visiting instructor at the Imperial Japanese Army Academy after being challenged by and defeating General Makoto Miura another student of Takeda Sōkaku s Daitō ryu 2 207 208 19 639 Takeda himself met Ueshiba for the last time around 1935 while Ueshiba was teaching at the Osaka headquarters of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper Frustrated by the appearance of his teacher who was openly critical of Ueshiba s martial arts and who appeared intent on taking over the classes there Ueshiba left Osaka during the night bowing to the residence in which Takeda was staying and thereafter avoiding all contact with him 14 139 19 135 Between 1940 and 1942 he made several visits to Manchukuo Japanese occupied Manchuria where he was the principal martial arts instructor at Kenkoku University 9 63 Whilst in Manchuria he met and defeated the sumo wrestler Tenryu Saburō during a demonstration 22 The Second Ōmoto Incident in 1935 saw another government crackdown on Deguchi s sect in which the Ayabe compound was destroyed and most of the group s leaders imprisoned Although he had relocated to Tokyo Ueshiba had retained links with the Ōmoto kyō group he had in fact helped Deguchi to establish a paramilitary branch of the sect only three years earlier 19 134 and expected to be arrested as one of its senior members However he had a good relationship with the local police commissioner Kenji Tomita and the chief of police Gichi Morita both of whom had been his students As a result although he was taken in for interrogation he was released without charge on Morita s authority 2 233 237 In 1932 Ueshiba s daughter Matsuko was married to the swordsman Kiyoshi Nakakura who was adopted as Ueshiba s heir under the name Morihiro Ueshiba The marriage ended after a few years and Nakakura left the family in 1937 Ueshiba later designated his son Kisshomaru as the heir to his martial art 23 19 134 The 1930s saw Japan s invasion of mainland Asia and increased military activity in Europe Ueshiba was concerned about the prospect of war and became involved in a number of efforts to try and forestall the conflict that would eventually become World War II He was part of a group along with Shumei Ōkawa and several wealthy Japanese backers that tried to broker a deal with Harry Chandler to export aviation fuel from the United States to Japan in contravention of the oil embargo that was currently in force although this effort ultimately failed 14 156 In 1941 Ueshiba also undertook a secret diplomatic mission to China at the behest of Prince Fumimaro Konoe The intended goal was a meeting with Chiang Kai shek to establish peace talks but Ueshiba was unable to meet with the Chinese leader arriving too late to fulfil his mission 2 236 237 Iwama 1942 1969 Edit nbsp The Aiki Shrine in IwamaFrom 1935 onwards Ueshiba had been purchasing land in Iwama in Ibaraki Prefecture and by the early 1940s had acquired around 17 acres 6 9 ha 0 027 sq mi of farmland there In 1942 disenchanted with the war mongering and political manoeuvring in the capital he left Tokyo and moved to Iwama permanently settling in a small farmer s cottage 19 639 Here he founded the Aiki Shuren Dojo also known as the Iwama dojo and the Aiki Shrine a devotional shrine to the Great Spirit of Aiki 24 5 9 55 During this time he travelled extensively in Japan particularly in the Kansai region teaching his aikido Despite the prohibition on the teaching of martial arts after World War II Ueshiba and his students continued to practice in secret at the Iwama dojo the Hombu dojo in Tokyo was in any case being used as a refugee centre for citizens displaced by the severe firebombing It was during this period that Ueshiba met and befriended Koun Nakanishi an expert in kotodama The study of kotodama was to become one of Ueshiba s passions in later life and Nakanishi s work inspired Ueshiba s concept of takemusu aiki 2 267 The rural nature of his new home in Iwama allowed Ueshiba to concentrate on the second great passion of his life farming He had been born into a farming family and spent much of his life cultivating the land from his settlement days in Hokkaidō to his work in Ayabe trying to make the Ōmoto kyō compound self sufficient He viewed farming as a logical complement to martial arts both were physically demanding and required single minded dedication Not only did his farming activities provide a useful cover for martial arts training under the government s restrictions it also provided food for Ueshiba his students and other local families at a time when food shortages were commonplace 1 18 19 19 135 The government prohibition on aikido at least was lifted in 1948 with the creation of the Aiki Foundation established by the Japanese Ministry of Education with permission from the Occupation forces The Hombu dojo re opened the following year After the war Ueshiba effectively retired from aikido 25 He delegated most of the work of running the Hombu dojo and the Aiki Federation to his son Kisshomaru and instead chose to spend much of his time in prayer meditation calligraphy and farming 9 66 69 He still travelled extensively to promote aikido even visiting Hawaii in 1961 4 xix He also appeared in a television documentary on aikido NTV s The Master of Aikido broadcast in January 1960 5 Ueshiba maintained links with the Japanese nationalist movement even in later life his student Kanshu Sunadomari reported that Ueshiba temporarily sheltered Mikami Taku one of the naval officers involved in the May 15 Incident at Iwama 14 159 160 In 1969 Ueshiba became ill He led his last training session on March 10 and was taken to hospital where he was diagnosed with cancer of the liver He died suddenly on April 26 1969 9 72 His body was buried at Kozan ji Temple Tanabe shi Wakayama Japan and he was given the posthumous Buddhist title Aiki in Moritake En yu Daidōshi 合気院盛武円融大道士 parts of his hair were enshrined at Ayabe Iwama and Kumano 3 13 Two months later his wife Hatsu 植芝 はつ Ueshiba Hatsu nee Itokawa Hatsu 1881 1969 also died 2 316 317 6 3 Development of aikido EditMain article Aikido Aikido usually translated as the Way of Unifying Spirit or the Way of Spiritual Harmony is a fighting system that focuses on throws pins and joint locks together with some striking techniques It emphasizes protecting the opponent and promotes spiritual and social development 26 The technical curriculum of aikido was derived from the teachings of Takeda Sōkaku the basic techniques of aikido stem from his Daitō ryu system 12 27 In the earlier years of his teaching from the 1920s to the mid 1930s Ueshiba taught the Daitō ryu Aiki jujutsu system his early students documents bear the term Daitō ryu 15 Indeed Ueshiba trained one of the future highest grade earners in Daitō ryu Takuma Hisa in the art before Takeda took charge of Hisa s training 28 The early form of training under Ueshiba was noticeably different from later forms of aikido It had a larger curriculum increased use of strikes to vital points atemi and greater use of weapons The schools of aikido developed by Ueshiba s students from the pre war period tend to reflect the harder style of the early training These students included Kenji Tomiki who founded the Shodokan Aikido sometimes called Tomiki ryu Noriaki Inoue who founded Shin ei Taidō Minoru Mochizuki who founded Yoseikan Budo and Gozo Shioda who founded Yoshinkan Aikido Many of these styles are therefore considered pre war styles although some of these teachers continued to train with Ueshiba in the years after World War II 19 134 136 During his lifetime Ueshiba had three spiritual experiences that impacted greatly his understanding of the martial arts The first occurred in 1925 after Ueshiba had defeated a naval officer s bokken wooden katana attacks unarmed and without hurting the officer Ueshiba then walked to his garden where he had the following realization I felt the universe suddenly quake and a golden spirit sprang up from the ground veiled my body and changed my body into a golden one At the same time my body became light I was able to understand the whispering of the birds and was aware of the mind of God the creator of the universe At that moment I was enlightened the source of budō the martial way is God s love the spirit of loving protection for all beings Budō is not the felling of an opponent by force nor is it a tool to lead the world to destruction with arms True Budō is to accept the spirit of the universe keep the peace of the world correctly produce protect and cultivate all beings in nature 29 His second experience occurred in 1940 when engaged in the ritual purification process of misogi Around 2 a m I suddenly forgot all the martial techniques I had ever learned The techniques of my teachers appeared completely new Now they were vehicles for the cultivation of life knowledge and virtue not devices to throw people with 30 His third experience was in 1942 during the worst fighting of World War II when Ueshiba had a vision of the Great Spirit of Peace 1 18 The Way of the Warrior has been misunderstood It is not a means to kill and destroy others Those who seek to compete and better one another are making a terrible mistake To smash injure or destroy is the worst thing a human being can do The real Way of a Warrior is to prevent such slaughter it is the Art of Peace the power of love 31 223 After these events Ueshiba seemed to slowly grow away from Takeda and he began to change his art 32 These changes are reflected in the differing names with which he referred to his system first as aiki jujutsu then Ueshiba ryu Asahi ryu 33 and aiki budō 31 89 In 1942 when Ueshiba s group joined the Dai Nippon Butoku Kai the martial art that he developed finally came to be known as aikido 16 34 35 As Ueshiba grew older more skilled and more spiritual in his outlook his art also changed and became softer and more gentle Martial techniques became less important and more focus was given to the control of ki 36 37 In his expression of the art there was a greater emphasis on what is referred to as kokyu nage or breath throws which are soft and blending utilizing the opponent s movement to throw them Ueshiba regularly practiced cold water misogi as well as other spiritual and religious rites and viewed his studies of aikido as part of this spiritual training 6 17 nbsp Ueshiba with a group of his international students at the Hombu dojo in 1967 Over the years Ueshiba trained a large number of students many of whom later became famous teachers in their own right and developed their styles of aikido Some of them were uchi deshi live in students Ueshiba placed many demands on his uchi deshi expecting them to attend to him at all times act as training partners even in the middle of the night arrange his travel plans massage and bathe him and assist with household chores 38 There were roughly four generations of students comprising the pre war students training c 1921 1935 students who trained during the Second World War c 1936 1945 the post war students in Iwama c 1946 1955 and the students who trained with Ueshiba during his final years c 1956 c 1969 10 As a result of Ueshiba s martial development throughout his life students from each of these generations tend to have markedly different approaches to aikido 38 These variations are compounded by the fact that few students trained with Ueshiba for a protracted period only Yoichiro Inoue Kenji Tomiki Gozo Shioda Morihiro Saito Tsutomu Yukawa and Mitsugi Saotome studied directly under Ueshiba for more than five or six years 25 39 After the war Ueshiba and the Hombu Dojo dispatched some of their students to various other countries resulting in aikido spreading around the world 40 19 136 Honors EditMedal of Honor Purple Ribbon Japan 1960 2 306 Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Rosette 1964 41 2 309 Order of the Sacred Treasure Japan 1968 42 Works EditMorihei Ueshiba The Heart of Aikido The Philosophy of Takemusu Aiki 2010 Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 3114 3 Morihei Ueshiba The Secret Teachings of Aikido 2008 Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 3030 6 Morihei Ueshiba The Essence of Aikido Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba 1994 Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 1727 7 Morihei Ueshiba The Art of Peace Teachings of the Founder of Aikido 1992 Shambhala ISBN 978 0 8777 3851 0 selection from Morihei s talks poems calligraphy and oral tradition including excerpt from Budo Aikido The Spiritual Dimension and Aiki Shinzui compiled and translated by John Stevens 1 Morihei Ueshiba Budo Teachings of the Founder of Aikido 1991 Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 1532 7References Edit a b c d Ueshiba Morihei 3 December 2002 The Art of Peace Translated by Stevens John Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 0 8348 2168 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Ueshiba Kisshomaru 2008 A Life in Aikido The Biography of Founder Morihei Ueshiba New York Kodansha ISBN 978 1 56836 573 2 a b Stevens John Shirata Rinjiro 1984 Aikido the Way of Harmony Boston Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 0 394 71426 4 a b c d e f Stevens John Krenner Walther 2004 Training with the Master Lessons with Morihei Ueshiba Founder of Aikido Boston amp London Shambhala pp ix xxii ISBN 978 1 57062 568 8 a b c d e f g Ueshiba Kisshomaru Ueshiba Morihei 1996 Introduction Budo Teachings of the Founder of Aikido Tokyo New York London Kodansha International pp 8 23 ISBN 4 7700 2070 8 a b c Dang Phong Thong Seiser Lynn 2006 Advanced Aikido Tuttle Publishing p 3 ISBN 978 0 8048 3785 9 Stone J Myer R 1995 Aikido in America Frog Books p 2 ISBN 978 1 883319 27 4 a b Pranin Stanley The Co founder of Aikido Ignored by History Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Retrieved 27 February 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k Stevens John 1999 Invincible Warrior A Pictorial Biography of Morihe Ueshiba the Founder of Aikido Boston London Shambhala ISBN 978 1 57062 394 3 a b Pranin Stanley 2006 Interview with Kisshomaru and Morihei Ueshiba Aikidojournal com Retrieved 4 August 2014 Amdur Ellis Errata from Hidden in Plain Sight PDF Retrieved 25 July 2014 a b c Schaefer Jean The Morihei Ueshiba Biography From Sumo to Aikido Black Belt Cruz Bay Publishing Archived from the original on 2016 12 16 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Nelson Gail E February 1986 Aikijujutsu vs Aikido Black Belt Magazine 24 2 34 38 Retrieved 27 February 2017 a b c d e f Amdur Ellis 2017 Duelling with O sensei Grappling with the Myth of the Warrior Sage Revised Expanded Edition 2017 ed Wheaton IL Freelance Academy Press ISBN 978 1 937439 24 8 a b c Pranin Stanley The love hate relationship between Morihei Ueshiba and Sōkaku Takeda Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Retrieved 1 March 2017 a b Guttmann Allen Thompson Lee Austin January 2001 Japanese Sports A History University of Hawaii Press pp 148 149 ISBN 978 0 8248 2464 8 Pranin Stanley Historical photo The amazing chameleon photo of O Sensei from 1922 Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 1 March 2017 Retrieved 28 February 2017 Pranin Stanley 2010 Aikido Pioneers Prewar Era Interviews with 20 of the Top Students of Aikido Founder Morihei Ueshiba Aiki News ISBN 978 4 904464 17 5 a b c d e f g h i j k Green Thomas A Svinth Joseph R 11 June 2010 Martial Arts of the World An Encyclopedia of History and Innovation 2 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 244 9 Offner Clark B Straelen Henricus Johannes Josephus Maria 1963 Modern Japanese Religions With Special Emphasis Upon Their Doctrines of Healing Brill Archive p 69 GGKEY RH5B37ENWUL Bulag Uradyn E 16 July 2010 Collaborative Nationalism The Politics of Friendship on China s Mongolian Frontier Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 41 ISBN 978 1 4422 0433 1 Pranin Stanley Sumo champion Tenryu and Morihei Ueshiba Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Retrieved 28 February 2017 Pranin Stanley Focus on History Ueshiba Family Tree The Line of Succession Screencast Aikido Journal Retrieved 26 June 2013 Strozzi Heckler Richard 1985 Aikido and the New Warrior North Atlantic Books p 21 ISBN 978 0 938190 51 6 a b Pranin Stanley Is O Sensei Really the Father of Modern Aikido Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 4 March 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 Westbrook Adele Ratti Oscar 1 July 2001 Aikido and the Dynamic Sphere An Illustrated Introduction Tuttle Publishing pp 17 20 ISBN 978 0 8048 3284 7 Pranin Stanley From Aikijujutsu to Aikido Where did it come from how did it evolve Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 21 September 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Pranin Stanley Historical photo Takuma Hisa the bridge between Daito ryu and Aiki Budo Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Ueshiba Kisshomaru 1985 Aikido Tokyo Hozansha Publications Nepo Mark 14 July 2015 The Endless Practice Becoming Who You Were Born to Be Simon and Schuster pp 302 303 ISBN 978 1 4767 7466 4 a b Wagner Winfried 19 June 2015 AiKiDo The Trinity of Conflict Transformation Springer ISBN 978 3 658 10166 4 Donohue John 4 November 2004 The Overlook Martial Arts Reader Overlook Press p 90 ISBN 978 1 58567 463 3 Takeda Tokimune 2006 Sōkaku Takeda in Osaka Aikidojournal com Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 4 August 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Saunders Neil 2003 Aikido The Tomiki Way Trafford Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 1 4120 0668 2 Bennett Alexander C 31 July 2015 Kendo Culture of the Sword Univ of California Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 520 28437 1 Ohama Gary Ueshiba and Timing Pre War vs Post War Technique Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 15 March 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Von Krenner Walther G Apodaca Damon Jeremiah Ken 14 May 2013 Aikido Ground Fighting Grappling and Submission Techniques North Atlantic Books p 18 ISBN 978 1 58394 621 3 a b Perry Susan 12 November 2002 Remembering O Sensei Living and Training with Morihei Ueshiba Founder of Aikido Shambhala p xiv xv ISBN 978 0 8348 2946 6 Pranin Stanley When Koichi Tohei and Morihiro Saito met for the last time October 29 2001 Aikido Journal Aikido Journal Archived from the original on 22 June 2017 Retrieved 29 March 2017 Stevens John 9 July 1996 The Shambhala Guide to Aikido Shambhala p 27 ISBN 978 0 8348 0010 6 Japanese Govt Decorates Aikido Master Uyeshiba Black Belt 3 7 50 July 1965 ISSN 0277 3066 Retrieved 4 April 2017 L ORDRE DU TRESOR SACRE JAPON in French L Harmattan Retrieved 4 August 2014 nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Morihei Ueshiba Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Japan nbsp Martial arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morihei Ueshiba amp oldid 1173744073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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