Sosai Masutatsu Oyama
[1924 - 1994]
Born in 1923, Masutatsu Oyama began studying kenpo at
the age of nine and had attained the first level of
proficiency (shodan) by his second year in middle
school.
In 1928, he began studying at a karate dojo, which
was headed by Gichin Funakoshi who introduced Karate
into Japan from Okinawa. At the age of seventeen, Oyama
had attained his second dan. Then In 1941, he
matriculated into Takushoku University and, in 1943,
began studying with Sodeiju, a leading figure in the
karate world of the time. By the age of twenty, he was
fourth dan.
In 1945, he volunteered for service in the Japanese
army and was sent south, where the fighting was taking
place. After World War 2 had come to an end soon
thereafter, he isolated himself in a temple on Mt.
Minobu and trained in karate for a full year. In 1947,
Having taken first place in the initial post-war
All-Japan Championship Tournament, he decided to devote
the rest of his life exclusively to this martial art.
In 1948, he constructed a rude hut for himself on Mt.
Kiyozumi, in Chiba Prefecture, and once again trained
strenuously, this time for one year and eight months,
during which he fed himself on grasses and berries.
After coming down from the mountain in 1949, in order to
train in breaking horns from bulls, he took up residence
not far from a slaughter yard. During his stay there, he
broke the horns of fifty bulls.
In
1952, together with Kokichi Endo, an out-standing judo
expert, he travel to the United States, where he gave
270 exhibition matches and appeared on television seven
times. Demonstrations that showed his ability to break
whiskey bottles with his bare hands surprised American
viewers and earned him the nick-name "The Divine Fist."
He was then challenged by two American professional
boxers and one professional wrestler and he defeated all
three. From that time onward, he has traveled
extensively while teaching and giving lectures in
America, Europe, and around the world. For the sake of
trainees all over the world, he wrote: What Is Karate?
in 1958 (which sold over 120 thousand copies); in 1964,
This Is Karate (which sold 60 thousand copies in 2
years), and in 1970 Advanced Karate.
In 1958, he opened a branch in Hawaii, making this
the first foreign Kyokushin Karate School
outside of Japan. By 1960, there were already
72 branches in 16 different countries such as the United
States and European countries.
True Meaning of Kyokushin
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Kyokushin Way.
The Kyokushin Way is centered in posture...
"Kyokushin" means "Ultimate Truth" and Kyokushin
Karate is the pursuit of ultimate truth of mind,
technique, and body.
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Sosai Masutatsu Oyama
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Revered Masutatsu Oyama, also known as Mas
Oyama, was an unparalleled karate master who
founded Kyokushinkai, arguably the first and
most influential style of full contact karate.
Sosai had a remarkable and relevant philosophy
not only on the martial arts, but also on how to
conduct yourself in your every day life adopting
core values such as:
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Full Biography & History
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