|
The Roots of Aiki Kempo Jiu
Jitsu |
|
|
Groundwork practice. |
|
This
page is (c) Guy Gratton, 2006. Please
feel free to copy or link any text, but you must say where it came from.
|
It is traditional at this point on a martial arts club’s webpage to explain why this is
a martial art, with a history of thousands of years, practiced by some
wizened oriental master living in a cave about 3000BC, and despite being
unchanged since then, it’s still the most devastatingly effective martial art
in history – learnable in a year, with your black belt in three. None of that is true for us, and it’s
probably not true for anybody else either! We call our
style Aiki Kempo Jiu Jitsu; reflecting roots at-least partly in
traditional Japanese martial arts.
“Aiki” means “to do with the use and flow of energy” (often called chi
or qi), “Kempo” means strictly “the way of the fist”, but we interpret it as
meaning that we include the use of striking, and in particular anatomically
precise striking in our art; “Jiu” (which could be spelled Ju – the only
truly correct spelling is in Kanji, or Japanese script!) means soft or
gentle, and “Jitsu” means “skill”. So,
we practice a gentle skill, that includes hitting people, and also relies
upon the use and flow of energy. That
may sound contradictory to somebody from outside the martial arts world, but
it’s pretty close to the truth. Whilst based
upon historical roots, particularly those from
We believe that
modern Kempo therefore forms one of the finest complete martial art
systems. It won’t make you invincible,
neither can it be learned quickly – a lifetime of study and you’ll probably
still be wanting to learn and develop your personal skills further. But it is good fun, good exercise,
effective self defence, and should also complement most other martial art
systems you might also have learned. There are
however two things that our style of kempo does not include. The first is competion – other than with
yourself to be as good as you can be.
The second his high kicking, which we genuinely believe belongs in
sports such as Tae Kwon Do or kickboxing, and not in a self-defence based
martial art such as Kempo. |
|
Bucks Kempo Website.
Quick navigator. |
||||