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Nijushiho

 

Nijushiho

Shotokan Karate Kata: Nijushiho

The origin of Nijushiho is unknown, but it is presumed that it originates from one of the Chinese Dragon styles. Alternating explosive and calm sequences lend it a very distinctive rhythm. Some Okinawan practicioners have likened it to the ebb and flow of the ocean crashing on a beach. This explosion and recession of movement is especially evident in the opening movements. This principle, applied throughout the kata, alludes to an understanding of reception of an attack, and suppression of the attacker in the same motion. Like most good karate, it imparts the important principle of defending and responding in one movement.

Niseishi to Nijushiho- "The Twenty Four Steps"

In an effort to make his Okinawan (and thus, foreign) art more palatable to the then-nationalistic Japanese, Funakoshi changed the name of the kata from Niseishi to Nijushiho. Both names mean "24 steps." However, this is not simply an interpretation of the number of movements or techniques extant in the kata. 24 is related to 108, which is an auspicious number in Buddhist scriptures. Both 2 and 4 are lowest common denominators of the larger number. 108 refers to the 108 'afflictions' of the soul, which are to be symbolically stricken down in events like Kagamai Baraki (Japanese New Year). The kata Gojushiho (originally Ueseishi) is "54 steps", another set of lowest common denominators. It is a likely possibility that both kata were so named as a reference to this aspect of Buddhism. Although the kata have come down to karate practicioners via Okinawans, who mostly rejected Buddhism in favor of their own animistic beliefs, the original kata came from the Chinese, who embraced it.

This does not imply that the kata itself is a Buddhist exercise- the Buddhist symbology is only an artifact of its originators, who were most likely Buddhists of some flavor.

See also

Bunkai, Kata, Shotokan

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