Probably the event most responsible for the worldwide popularity of karate is
Master Choki Motobu's defeat of a western boxer in 1925. Initially ridiculed by
the audience at an "all-comers" prizefight in Kyoto, Japan, laughter turned to
stunned silence when the middle-aged and rather portly Okinawan karate man
knocked his strongly built young opponent unconscious within seconds. Karate
became an overnight sensation, and the mainland Japanese embraced the art as
their own.
So spectacular it was featured in Kingu, Japan's most popular magazine of the
era, the victory sadly did little for Motobu personally. Illustrations used in
the magazine implied the victor was Gichin Funakoshi, a man inferior in both
social status and fighting ability to Motobu, infuriating the latter, and
ensuring instant fame for Funakoshi who went on to found the Shotokan style of
karate and become a karate legend.
Nonetheless, Motobu's technical influence on Karate was immense. His students
included Shoshin Nagamine (Matsubayashi Shorin Ryu), Yasuhiro Konishi (Shindo
Jines Ryu) and Hironori Otsuka (Wado Ryu), all of whom formed their own Karate
styles based, in part, upon his teachings.
On the death of Choki Motobu in 1944 his unique form of karate seemed
destined for extinction. Few members of his original Daidokan Dojo survived the
war, and so little was known of Motobu sensei's private life that most were
unaware of his son Chosei who was destined to carry his father's style into the
21st century.
This is the Motobu family system of Tode (karate) presented by Chosei Motobu
and Takeji Inaba including the Kumite techniques and their applications. It is
the only reference work in the West on this style, and is released with full
cooperation and approval of the Motobu family and the Japan Karate Do Motobukai.
Contents: A History of the Founder and his style. Kata Naihanchi 1, Kata
Naihanchi 2, Jiyu Hon Kumite (the twelve true fighting methods of Motobu Ryu
Karate).
System: NTSC
Ref # T055