Throughout the course of our karatedo training, we take for granted the grading system that awards our belt
ranking and titles. Sometimes this system is manifestly personal, with the headmaster--and only he--bestowing each promotion
directly, according to his own standards. Often, the testing for and awarding of rank is a more bureaucratic affair, with
a committee exercising a perfunctory duty in a formally standardized and even routine mannerless ceremony, yet somehow more
officious.
The recent writings of Hanshi Richard Kim of the Butoku-kai (Dojo Fall 1993) taught how the dan/kyu (degree)
system was adopted by modem budo systems, promulgated by the Butoku-kai, and codified in its final form for Japanese karatedo
by the Federation of All Japan Karatedo Organizations (FAJKO). To truly understand this ranking system, it is important to
gain a clearer insight into how the various masters obtained their ranking, since that forms the basis for your rank.
This much we know for certain: On April 12, 1924, Gichin Funakoshi, the "Father of Modern Karate," awarded
karate's first black belt dan upon seven men. The recipients included Hironori Ohtsuka, founder of wado-ryu karatedo, Shinken
Gima, later of gima-ha shoto-ryu, and Ante Tokuda, Gima's cousin, who received a nidan (second degree) black belt. Like Gima,
Tokuda had trained extensively in Okinawa before coming to Japan proper. The others were Kasuya, Akiba, Shimizu and Hirose.
This beginning was a highly personal, yet formal ceremony in which Funakoshi is said to have handed out lengths of black belting
to his pupils. Still there is no evidence that Funakoshi himself had ranking in any budo under the dan/kyu system.
Actually, Funakoshi was greatly influenced by Jigoro Kano, aristocratic founder of judo, and originator
of the dan/kyu system. Kano was a highly respected individual, and Funakoshi prided himself on being an educated and "proper"
man who rightly believed that he was acting correctly. Kano's system was not only being applied to judo, but to other budo
as well under the aegis of the Butoku-kai and the Japanese Ministry of Education. Funakoshi, then, just adopted the order
of the day: a ranking system officially sanctioned by Japan's greatest martial arts entities. Funakoshi's own rank was of
no consequence, since it seems that belt ranking was really just something for the students, not for headmasters.
For its part, the Butoku-kai issued instructor's licenses: the titles renshi (the lowest), kyoshi, and hanshi
(the highest). It would be a while before the dan/kyu system became universal in karate. By the end of the 1930s, each karate
group was called upon to register with the butoku-kai for official sanctioning, and in 1938, a meeting of the Butoku-kai's
official karatedo leaders was held in Tokyo. Its purpose was to discuss the standards for awarding rank within their art.
Attending, among others, were Hironori Ohtsuka of wado-ryu, Kenwa Mabuni of shito-ryu, Kensei Kinjo (Kaneshiro) and Sannosuke
Ueshima of kushin-ryu, Tatsuo Yamada of Nippon kempo, Koyu Konishi of shindo-jinen-ryu, and a young Gogen Yamaguchi of goju-ryu.
Most of these men were founders of their own styles, and as such automatically became the highest rank that their agreed-on
respective standards allowed. Yamaguchi assumed leadership of goju-ryu because, we are told, goju-ryu's founder, Chojun Miyagi,
personally asked him to take the leadership of the style in Japan. About then, Funakoshi also finalized the grading standards
for use at his shotokan dojo.
Of course, the Butoku-kai continued to sanction head teachers directly. This was not without controversy,
however, since Konishi sat on the board that awarded Funakoshi his renshi and Konishi had been Funakoshi's student. Of course,
Konishi had inside ties to the Butoku-kai by virtue of birth, something the Okinawan Funakoshi could not have.
Back on Okinawa, the dan/kyu system did not become universal until after World War II. It was not unknown
there, however, and some individual teachers did utilize the black belt. Judo had been practiced on Okinawa at least since
the 1920s. In fact, it was at a Judo Black Belt Association (Yudanshakai) meeting on Okinawa that Miyagi and shito-ryu's Kenwa
Mabuni demonstrated karate kata (forms) for Jigoro Kano garnering praises from the judo founder. Miyagi, it should be noted,
became the first karate expert given the title of kyoshi (master) from the butoku-kai in 1937. Miyagi was then appointed chief
of its Okinawan branch
After the ravages of war in the Pacific, the surviving karate leaders had to begin anew. With the Butoku-kai
administration shut down for years to come, each karate group was on its own. The acknowledged leaders of each faction, as
well as individual dojo chiefs, gave out dan ranks based upon all original sanctioning by the Butoku-kai or mandates inherited
directly from the ryu's founder.
Rushing in to fill the vacuum left by the Butoku-kai, various dojo coalesced to perpetuate the art and legitimize
its members' ranks. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, each new association, including the Gojukai, Shito-kai, Chito-kai,
Shotokai and Japan Karate associations codified their rules and issued rank accordingly. Generally, several instructors created
a board of directors or council to govern the association. Some officer, be it the chief instructor, president, director or
chairman would have signature authority on menjo (rank certificates). In this way, the senior-most members would attain their
rank by being acknowledged and "signed off" by the board or committee. Other times, a senior member of one faction would attain
high enough rank from the faction-head to then go out and form his own style or organization. Supposedly, the famous Masutatsu
Oyama received his eighth dan from Goju-kai head Gogen Yamaguchi. Oyama later formed his own style that was not completely
a type of goju-ryu.
Usually in a legalistic and officious way these groups would simply adopt or adhere to some even higher
authority or granting agency to further legitimize their actions. Recognition by the Japanese Ministry of Education was the
ultimate sanction for individuals and groups in these times. Also new associations -- both in Japan proper and in Okinawa
-- appeared. These became the grantor ranking authority, much in the way the Butoku-kai had acted previously. These new organizations
were to set the pattern and be the original source for today's ranking. As with the single-style clubs, the head instructors
often assumed the rank for which they were qualified, based on criteria they wrote themselves.
One of the first was the All Japan Karatedo Federation, which seems to have started shortly after World
War II as a confederation of headmasters such as Funakoshi, Chitose, Mabuni, Yamaguchi and Toyama. They regularized the dan/kyu
system to some extent, and with this group the modern Japanese karate ranking system became the norm. This unity did not last
however. For example, the ranking was not consistent from group to group in the upper levels. The shotokan associations such
as the JKA and the Shotokai only used up to godan (fifth rank) at this time. As a result, some groups had ceased to participate
by the early 1950s.
Even more reminiscent of the Butoku-kai was the International Martial Arts Federation (IMAF), known as the
Kokusai Budoin. Originally named the National Japan Health Association, IMAF was launched in 1952 by powerful martial artists
from several disciplines. From judo there was Kyuzo Mifune, Kazuo Ito and Shizuo Sato. From kendo came Hakudo Nakayama and
Hiromasa Takano, and from karatedo there was Hironori Ohtsuka. Its first chairman was Prince Tsunenori Kaya. From the start,
IMAF was set up by senior martial artists to preserve and promote various budo to create a mutually supportive network. A
ranking system consisting of first through tenth dan, as well as the title system of renshi, kyoshi and hanshi, was adopted.
Now highly respected and skilled instructors could have a direct avenue for promotion themselves. Several karateka including
Gogen Yamaguchi, Hironori Ohtsuka (I and II), and more recently, Hirokazu Kanazawa of shotokan, received their highest grades
through IMAF.
For Okinawa, the dan/kyu system did not really take hold until 1956, with the formation of the Okinawa Karate
Association (OKF). Chosin Chibana, first to name his system shorin-ryu, was the first president. According to the historical
data of the Shudokan (a Japanese group started by Kanken Toyama in Tokyo), Chibana and Toyama were officially recognized by
the Japanese Ministry of Education to grant any rank in the art of karate, regardless of style. Chibana helped organize the
OKF, and it was then that the mainstream Okinawan groups, on a widespread basis, began differentiating their black belt ranks
as other than simple teacher and student demarcations.
A talented and, some say, colorful character, Toyama gave several certifications as largess to dojo heads
in Okinawa and Japan proper. These were usually shibucho ("superintendent," from the feudal area commander title) diplomas.
These certifications set up the individuals so named as head of their own branch of the All Japan Karatedo Federation and,
by extension, of their own groups. Eizo Shimabuku, founder of the shobayashi-ryu/shorin-ryu faction (a Kyan-type tomarite/shurite
shorin-ryu blend), traces his own tenth dan to a Toyama certification. Shimabuku's assumption of the tenth dan, and his wearing
of a red belt, was not without dispute, and it was controversies of this type that led most Okinawan leaders to eschew the
red belt altogether.
The AJKF did not last as a unified group of different styles in Japan proper. Toyama's foray back to Okinawa
did lead later to the formation of the AJKF-Okinawa Branch with the organizing help of Isamu Tamotsu. Tamotsu became a student
of Okinawa's Zenryo Shimabuku (of Kyan-type shorinryu) and would become known as the soke (style head) of the Japanese faction
of Shorinji-ryu. In 1960, the Okinawan branch of the AJKF organized with Zenryo Shimabuku as president. A constituent group
of this AJKF was the Okinawa Kempo League headed up by Shigeru Nakamura and Zenryo Shimabuku as a loose confederation of various
technique sharing dojo.
Like other associations, the AJKF Okinawa Branch provided for the ranking of its member instructors. It
operated as a rival to the Okinawa Karate Federation. However, it did not last long either and its member schools drifted
away and formed other alliances. Its emblem did not die, however. The same patch is still used by Tsuyoshi Chitose's Chito-kai.
The center karate leaders continued on their own or became part of other groups, using authority inherited mostly from members
of one of the original Okinawan organizations, the most significant is the All Okinawa Karate and Kobudo Rengokai. Formed
by Seitoku Higa as a successor to the Okinawa Federation in 1967, the Okinawa detail of the emblem was used to distinguish
each member group. Seiyu Oyata can be seen wearing this patch in Dojo, Fall 1993, page 13.
Chitose was a founding member of the original Japanese AJKF, but his tenth dan was issued in 1958, according
to the Chitokai, by the All Okinawa Karate Kobudo Rengokai. His hanshi title was issued by the same group in 1962. This is
confusing however, since the AOKK-Rengokai was not formed until 1967. It grew out of an earlier group: the Okinawa Kobudo
Federation that was organized in 1961. This later group was organized by Seitoku Higa (of various lineages related to shorin-ryu)
and Seikichi Uehara (molobu-ryu). Higa had been ranked by Toyama while living in Japan and may have been connected with the
original AJKF.
As we learned from Richard Kim, the most significant event in the use of the dan/kyu system in karate was
the formation of the FAJKO in 1964. All the major groups and factions of Japanese karatedo were brought under FAJKO's umbrella.
By 1971, a ranking structure was adopted that standardized all the systems. High rank was issued to FAJKO member instructors
by the organization's board. In this way, heads of constituent organizations could be upgraded, much as in earlier attempts
at confederacy. An earlier, but smaller, confederacy of schools with rank-sanctioning authority was the Japan Karatedo Rengokai,
which still exists and is a member of FAJKO.
After the birth of FAJKO, the JKA upgraded its own ranking requirements to conform. Sixth and eighth dans
were awarded in the JKA back in the mid-1960s, and Hidetaka Nishiyama in Los Angeles was one of those upgraded at that time.
Though not all groups participate in FAJKO these days, most still are tied to that organization in terms of rank structure
and sanction. Others, not so tied, have conformed to the FAJKO criteria and standards nonetheless.
Shortly after FAJKO was launched, the Okinawans formed the All Okinawa Karatedo Federation as a successor
to the old OKF. Members of both the OKF and AJKF-Okinawa Branch became part of the new association. Some of Okinawa's most
mainstream karate leaders formed the AOKF board. These included Nagamine, Zenryo Shimabuku, Meitoku Yagi of gojuryu, Kanei
Uechi of uechi-ryu and Yuchoku Higa of shorin-ryu. They adopted a dan/kyu and renshi, kyoshi, hanshi (plus a hanshisei) system
almost identical to FAJKOs.
Other karate leaders continued on their own or became part of other groups, using authority inherited mostly
from members of one of the original Okinawan organizations. Probably the most significant is the All Okinawa Karate and Kobudo
Rengokai. Formed by Seitku Higa as a successor to the Okinawa Kobudo Federation in 1967, the Okinawa Rengokai also adopted
very similar standards to the AOKF. Higa's organizations had certified as hanshi--and hence supreme instructor--several who
were style or group heads in their own right. These included Shinsuke Kaneshima of Tozan-ryu from shurite, Hohan Soken of
matsumura shorin-ryu, Shinpo Matayoshi of matayoshi kobudo Kenko Nakaima of ryuel-ryu, ShianToma of shorin-ryu (Kyan type)
and motobu-ryu, Tatsuo Shimabuku of isshin-ryu, Shosei Kina of uhuchiku kobudo, and Zenryo Shimabuku of shorin-ryu.
It is clear that karate ranks sprang from several original sources -- a relatively modem construct on an
old martial art. It was issued by individuals and institutions with set standards that were recognized by other prestigious
groups and individuals. And this is the crux of the matter: For rank to be recognized, the bestower must be recognized within
karate's mainstream community. It must be based in tradition, and linked to a body or sanctioned individual who is perceived
as beyond reproach. The standards by which rank is achieved and given must be recognizable, and conform to already existing
norms in the Okinawan/Japanese martial arts hierarchy. Anyone can print up or write a fancy certificate, but absent of any
governmental or legal guidelines, it is the recognition and acceptance by existing groups and institutions that give each
ranking group or individual its legitimacy.
The development of the ranking system is a typically human development, with rivalries and contradictions,
and our own masters received their rank in different ways. The highest-ranked of the old masters did not-could not-receive
the tenth dan from their "style." They were invariably ranked by someone else and applied this grade to their own group. This
is still true. As in a medieval European knighting, originally any knight could dub another, then regal institutions took
over. However, it is the skill and knowledge that gains the rank, not vice versa. The quest for rank, per se, misses the point. |