Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Images of John Evans Sensei













These are some photos of John Evans Sensei, SMAA Senior Advisor, and his students in London. Evans Sensei is a seventh dan in Nakamura Ryu swordsmanship as well as an accomplished teacher of yoga. He lived for many years in Japan, where he studied directly under the founder of Nakamura Ryu.

Interested in iaido? The SMAA has a well-established iaido division lead by Nicklaus Suino Sensei and Guy Power Sensei, both seventh dan. Membership is open to legitimate practitioners of authentic systems of Japanese iaido. Within our iaido section are accomplished students of Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu, Toyama Ryu, Nakamura Ryu, Muso Shinden Ryu, Hontai Yoshin Ryu, Takeuchi Ryu, and other iaido systems (or ryu that include iaido in their curriculum). To learn more about the SMAA Iaido Division, visit www.smaa-hq.com.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Member Profile: John Evans Sensei

John Evans Sensei is our first SMAA Senior Advisor in Europe. Mr. Evans’ training in martial arts began in his teens when he visited the Anchorhold, an Anglican monastery in the UK, where tai chi chuan and yoga were taught as ways to facilitate contemplative prayer. At Oxford University, he trained in Shotokan karate-do. After graduation, he lived at the Anchorhold for five years, continuing his study of tai chi chuan and yoga.

In 1981, John Evans Sensei travelled to Japan, where he was introduced to Mikkyo (esoteric Buddhism). He studied Mikkyo with yamabushi near Mount Takao. Yamabushi ("one who lies in the mountains") are Japanese mountain ascetics, or hermits, with a long tradition as warriors said to be endowed with supernatural powers. They follow an integration of esoteric Buddhism and Shinto elements (Mikkyo). Largely solitary, in old Japan they sometimes formed loose associations with certain temples, and they also participated in battles alongside samurai and warrior monks. Yamabushi emphasize asceticism and feats of endurance for spiritual training. White & saffron-robed yamabushi carrying conch-shell trumpets are a common sight in the sacred mountains of Kumano and Omine.

Mikkyo (literally "secret teachings") refers to the esoteric practices of Shingon Buddhism and related methods which make up part of Tendai Buddhism. Mikkyo is a little-understood, and sometimes sensationalized, synergy of esoteric Japanese religions, and it lies at the core of Japanese mysticism.

Teachings and practices that came to be called Mikkyo began in Indian and Chinese esoteric traditions. In the early ninth century, the concepts which became the core of Mikkyo—Shingon and Tendai Buddhism—were brought to Japan by monks who traveled to China to study. To these beliefs were added magic and healing methods that gradually reached Japan through itinerant shamans, who left China after the fall of the Tang Dynasty. Blending with Shinto practices and pre-Buddhist folk traditions connected with sacred mountains, these new teachings, combining Chinese Tantric Buddhism, magic, Taoism, and eventually Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, became Mikkyo.

Evans Sensei’s training also included a mixture of Shugendo and kenjutsu (traditional swordsmanship). Shugendo is an ancient Japanese religion in which enlightenment is obtained by studying of the relationship between human beings and nature. Shugendo, "the path of training and testing," centers on an ascetic, mountain-dwelling lifestyle and incorporates teachings from ancient Shinto, Buddhism, and other Asian philosophies (including folk animism). The goal of Shugendo is the development of spiritual experience and power. En-no-Gyoja first organized Shugendo as a doctrine.

After three years of intensive practice of Mikkyo, Shugendo, and kenjutsu, Evans Sensei was introduced by the yamabushi to two of the most senior teachers of swordsmanship in Japan, Nakamura Taisaburo Sensei, founder of Nakamura Ryu battodo, and Danzaki Tomoaki Sensei, head of the Kenshukan Dojo of Muso Shinden Ryu. At the Kenshukan, Evans Sensei studied Muso Shinden Ryu iaido and Shindo Muso Ryu jodo (“the way of the four-foot staff”). One year later, he also began weekly trips to Kashima in Ibaragi prefecture, where he trained at the Kashima Shinto Ryu school of classical swordsmanship under Yoshikawa Koichiro Sensei. In 1987, his training regime of swordsmanship and Shugendo was profiled in a 30 minute NTV program in Japan entitled Igirisujin no Musha Shugyo (“An Englishman’s Warrior Discipline”).

Following his return to England in 1993, he decided to concentrate on Nakamura Ryu battodo and founded the Fudokan dojo in London. Incorporating the training methods from Shugendo and Shadow yoga, he developed a system of tanren (“spiritual forging”) and misogi (“purification”) to cultivate the internal energy required to perform the kata of Nakamura Ryu. Fudokan students also use wooden sword drills and kendo armor to enhance the paired kata of Nakamura Ryu. Since Nakamura Sensei’s death in 2003, Mr. Evans has continued his Nakamura Ryu training in Japan with Suzuki Kunio Sensei, eighth dan, and Sato Shimeo Sensei, ninth dan. Evans Sensei received seventh dan in Nakamura Ryu in 2008.

In addition to his high rank in Nakamura Ryu, Evans Sensei has obtained rank in the following traditional Japanese sword and weapon arts: Muso Shinden Ryu iaido (third dan), Kashima Shinto Ryu kenjutsu (shomon certificate), Shindo Muso ryu jodo (second dan), and Kurikara ryu kenjutsu (third dan).

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Joining the SMAA


The SMAA has attracted a number of prominent members. These distinguished martial artists include Dave Lowry, a well-known martial arts writer; Hunter Armstrong, director of the International Hoplology Society (founded by the late Donn Draeger); and Wayne Muromoto, editor of Furyu--The Budo Journal of Classical Martial Arts and Culture.


APPLICATION FORMS
Prospective members: print the Application for New Members
Current members: print the
Application for Current Members
Membership Levels
There are two levels of membership in the SMAA:

Associate Membership: allows you to be affiliated with the SMAA and receive an Associate Member certificate, our quarterly newsletter, and discounts at SMAA events. Associate members are not eligible to apply for rank or teaching titles. The annual membership fee at this level is $20.00 (US).

Full Membership: allows you to be affiliated with the SMAA and receive our quarterly newsletter and discounts at SMAA events. In addition, full members may apply for rank and teaching titles. The annual membership fee at this level is $25.00 (US).

How to Obtain an Application Form
You may request an application form using one of the following methods:

via the Web: print out the
online application form with your web browser

via e-mail: send a message to shudokan@smaa-hq.com

via mail: send a letter to the SMAA HQ at the following address:


SMAA HQ
PO Box 6022
Ann Arbor, MI 48106-6022
USA

The SMAA Welcomes John Evans Sensei to its Board of Advisors


The SMAA has a new Senior Advisor in England. His name is John Evans Sensei, and he is the chief instructor of the Battodo Fudokan Dojo in London. He lived in Japan from 1981-1992, where he studied Toyama Ryu and Nakamura Ryu battodo (forms of swordsmanship) under the late Nakamura Taisaburo Sensei, tenth dan. Evans Sensei has received Kyoshi and seventh dan from the International Battodo Federation, an association founded by Nakamura Sensei, creator of Nakamura Ryu. Evans Sensei also has dan grades (or an equivalent classical rank) in Muso Shinden Ryu iaido, Kashima Shinto Ryu kenjutsu, Kurikara Ryu kenjutsu, and Shindo Muso Ryu jodo.

The SMAA is happy to welcome Mr. Evans to our Board of Advisors.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

SMAA Online Store


The Shudokan Martial Arts Association (SMAA, Shudokan Budo-Kai) was founded in January 1994 by a group of martial artists who were concerned with promoting and safeguarding Nihon budo and bujutsu--the traditional martial arts and ways of Japan. The SMAA is a small, fraternal organization with a decidedly noncommercial outlook on budo and bujutsu. It includes separate divisions for karate-do, aikido, judo, traditional jujutsu, iaido, and goshin-jutsu (modern self-defense systems stemming from budo or bujutsu). Both associate membership (without rank) and regular membership (with rank) are available to individuals sincerely interested in researching and training in the classical martial systems of Japan.


The SMAA has developed an online shop in order to provide unique SMAA logo products for its members. All of the income from the SMAA online store goes to support our nonprofit organization and to further the preservation of traditional budo around the world. To get your own official SMAA hats, shirts, stickers, calendars, and other logo items, just drop by http://www.cafepress.com/shudokan/.

An Upcoming Change for the "SMAA Journal"



In 2009, we’re planning on moving the SMAA Journal in an all electronic direction. In short, we’re hoping to gradually eliminate the print version of this publication. Unless you do not have e-mail access, at some point in 2009 you’ll no longer receive a print version of our association’s official periodical. There are several simple and compelling reasons for this change:

The majority of the people in the USA now have Internet access, and we think the situation is the same for most of our members, including those living outside the US. The quality of computer monitors and printers has dramatically improved over the years. The full-color images you see in the electronic version of the SMAA Journal are vastly clearer than the black and white, photocopied edition. What’s more, if you print our electronic journal with your home printer, it looks better than the print version of this small magazine. (And the cost of publishing the SMAA Journal in color would be huge.)


In the past, a major contributing factor in the size and amount of content found in our publication has been printing and mailing costs. We simply have not had the budget to offer a bigger journal, and the printing/mailing costs for our quarterly represent a large percentage of the expenses we incur annually. By shifting to an exclusively electronic format, we’ll be able to gradually offer you a bigger and more interesting publication. We’ll get it to you faster as well.

The money and time saved by significantly reducing the number of printed copies of the SMAA Journal can be used in other more productive ways to benefit our membership and our association. Presently, a large number of members have opted for the “e-mail only” version of our journal, so this change will not impact many of you.

This new direction will take place progressively, and if you don’t have an e-mail account, we encourage you to get a free Yahoo account or something similar. If you do not own a computer, we’ll have an option, which will allow you to contact the SMAA and request a print version of this publication. More information will follow in the coming months.

Member Profile: Herbert Wong

Herbert Z. Wong Sensei's first exposure to the martial arts occurred in the Chinese schools he attended as a young boy in San Francisco's Chinatown. Martial arts were taught as part of the cultural arts curriculum and on an ad hoc basis at Chinese community centers. In 1959, Wong Sensei began his formal martial arts training in karate-do with Walter E. Todd Sensei at the International Judo, Karate and Aikido School. He was one of the first group of students at the school to earn a black belt in karate, which he received in 1961. He continued to train diligently and was awarded his second dan in 1963.

The United States Army drafted Wong Sensei in 1963 and sent him to Okinawa. During that time, he began training with Grandmaster Shimabukuro Eizo in Shobayashi Shorin Ryu karate-do. Throughout the time he was in Okinawa, Wong Sensei managed to train almost every single day. Because of this dedication and his previous experience, Wong Sensei earned his black belt in Shorin Ryu near the end of 1964. He was awarded his second dan in August of 1965, which was shortly before he finished his military service and returned to the United States.

After returning from Okinawa, Wong Sensei resumed his undergraduate studies at San Francisco State University and continued to practice Shorin Ryu. In 1965, he started the Asian Martial Arts School in San Francisco with Andrew Chan Sensei. He also began training in Sil-Lum Hung Gar (Tiger-Crane) kung fu under Master Y.C. Wong in San Francisco that same year. Wong Sensei was one of Master Wong's first three students in the United States. Wong Sensei continued to train with Master Wong and teach at the Asian Martial Arts School until he left the San Francisco Bay area to pursue his graduate studies.

In September of 1970, Wong Sensei started in the doctoral program at The University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. While simultaneously pursuing his doctorate degrees in clinical and organizational psychology, he was also teaching classes in Okinawan karate-do and Chinese kung fu. In the beginning, Wong Sensei accepted only four students, including Karl W. Scott Sensei and Gary Hu Sensei.

After almost four years, Wong Sensei tested his assistant instructors and promoted them to black belt. Shortly after these promotions, he strongly suggested that one of them, with the help of the others, should open a full-time martial arts school. In 1974, Hu Sensei and Scott Sensei opened a school in Ann Arbor. This school has continued to exist since that time and is now known as the Asian Martial Arts Studio. Scott Sensei has been the Director of Training at the school since 1979 and he continues to carry on Wong Sensei's karate legacy in Ann Arbor. In 1974, Wong Sensei was also made the head of Shorin Ryu for the Midwestern and Southern Divisions of the United States by Grandmaster Shimabukuro.

After receiving his doctorate degrees, Wong Sensei returned to the San Francisco Bay area in 1975 to run a psychiatric clinic and psychology training center. A few years later he started doing consulting work in addition to running the clinic. He now has his own consulting firm that specializes in management consulting and organizational development.


Over the years, Wong Sensei and Andrew Chan Sensei also ran a number of martial arts schools together. Wong Sensei also made regular trips to Ann Arbor to teach seminars, classes, and private lessons at the Asian Martial Arts Studio. In addition, he continued to travel to Okinawa to train with Grandmaster Shimabukuro. He received a number of promotions over the years and was awarded his eighth dan in 2005. He was also awarded the title of Shihan ("Full Professor" or "Teaching Model") by Grandmaster Shimabukuro.