| Koichi
Tohei Sensei
Founder of Ki no Kenkyukai
Biography (for more information got to Ki
no Kenkyukai HQ English website )
Tohei-sensei
was born in 1920 and grew up in an upper class Japanese family,
north of Tokyo. He was sickly as a child and was introduced to Judo
and Zen by his father, a 4th dan in Judo, to try to strengthen his
constitution. By fifteen, Tohei had acheived 1st dan in Judo and
later 2nd dan. After training so hard at judo that he developed
pleurisy and had to leave school and rest for a year he decided
to work on strengthening himself mentally and physically. He devoted
a great amount of time to Zen meditation and Misogi breathing. He
learned Zen from Master Josei Ohta, head of the Daitokuji Temple
in Kyoto, and Misogi from Master Tetsuju Ogura, one of the leading
disciples of the famous Master Tesshu Yamaoka, and from his successor,
Master Tesso Hino. These events and training shaped much of what
was to develop in his later life.
In
1939, he met Morihei Ueshiba Sensei and was introduced to the art
of Aikido (known as aiki-budo at that time). He expressed some amazement
that despite his Judo training he was unable to deal with this much
older man and quickly became a serious student. In 1942, he was
called up to the army and spent time in action in China. During
this time, he became aware of the importance of a calm mind and
the unification of mind and body that were to shape much of his
later training, and developed quite a reputation as a "lucky"
officer who never lost a single man under his command even during
the most fierce fighting.
After
the war he returned to his role as uchi-deshi to Morihei Ueshiba
Sensei, becoming one of the strongest and most influential figures
within the Aikido world. In those days, challenges to the teacher
were common and it was Tohei Sensei who usually had to respond to
people coming to the dojo to test Ueshiba sensei. Quite a few people
were "bounced on their heads" including a group of US
wrestlers who had previously tried to arrange a challenge at the
Kodokan Judo HQ!
In
1953, he was sent by Ueshiba sensei to Hawaii, becoming the first
teacher to introduce Aikido to the United States. Over the next
decade or so, Tohei-sensei came to the US many times and was responsible
for training many of the fine teachers in the U.S. today. It was
during this period that his Aikido underwent a lot of change, since
dealing with HUGE Americans was quite different to the conventional
training in Japan. During this period, his practice also started
to drift away from some of what was being practiced by other instructors,
as can be seen if you compare the book written in the late 50s by
Tohei-sensei with that written about the same time by K. Ueshiba-sensei
-- both of which were approved by O-sensei.
Tohei
Sensei rose to the position of Chief Instructor at the Aikikai Hombu
dojo and was the only person awarded 10th Dan by Ueshiba Sensei
and issued with a formal scroll of rank. In a video tape of an American
TV show from 1957, Tohei Sensei acts as interpreter for Ueshiba
Sensei during an interview. He was certainly one of the most noticeable
figures in the Aikido world, due to his large outgoing personality.
After Ueshiba sensei's death, his son, Kisshomaru Ueshiba Sensei,
became the second Aikido Doshu, and Tohei Sensei continued to be
the Chief Instructor. For the next few years things continued as
before, but there were tensions building within the senior Aikido
teachers.
Tohei
Sensei had very clear ideas about the best way of teaching Aikido,
ideas that were based largely on the principles of Unification taught
by one of his Yoga teachers, Tempu Nakamura founder of Tempukai
(1919) who called his practice Shin Shin Toitsu Do(Way of Mind and
Body Coordination), and his first hand experience of Ueshiba Sensei's
aikido. By all accounts, Nakamura Sensei and Ueshiba Sensei, men
of the same generation who had both fought in the Russo-Japanese
war, knew each other well and were friends. Many Aikikai teachers
trained at the Tempukai in the 1950's and 1960's while both men
were still alive. Tohei Sensei proposed to introduce this system
of teaching Ki within the Aikikai but met with much resistance from
the second Doshu and senior teachers that preferred to conduct classes
in the traditional Japanese manner of Ueshiba Sensei (watch and
copy, no explanation, no questions, steal what you can, practice
many times till you find the answers). So, in 1971, while still
the Chief Instructor of the Aikikai, Tohei Sensei founded the Ki
no Kenkyukai, to teach the principles of Ki and Coordination of
Mind and Body, without using Aikido and based on Shin Shin Toitsu
Do. This situation continued for a few more years until the rift
between Tohei Sensei and the second Doshu of the Aikikai became
too big and he officially resigned from the Aikikai. He then added
Shin Shin Toitsu Aikido, to teach Aikido in accordance with the
Ki principles, as part of the arts in Ki training taught at Ki no
Kenkyukai (Ki Society HQ). These arts include Aikido, Ki Development
exercises, Ki Breathing, Ki Meditation, Kiatsu Ryoho (massage therapy)
and various forms of Misogi. The purpose of all these is to unify
mind and body so that person develops the ability to allow the flow
of universal Ki in everyday life.
This
split caused a great divide in the Aikido world since many people
were torn between following Tohei Sensei, who was the most senior
Aikido teacher in the Aikikai, or staying with the Aikikai which
was headed by Ueshiba Sensei's son. This choice caused much bad
feeling in the USA where Tohei Sensei had been the living presense
of Aikido (Ueshiba Sensei visited Hawaii in 1961, but otherwise
did not travel outside of Japan). The vertical nature of society
in Japan lead to the very Japanese solution of a complete break
that was not understood in other countries. Fortunately, to younger
generations this is ancient history and the interaction among many
groups separated by this artificial divide has increased in recent
years (as well it should).
Since the 1970's, Tohei Sensei continued to refine and develop his
methods of teaching Ki and Aikido and the Ki no Kenkyukai has grown
to over 200,000 members with branch dojos spread throughout the
world.
Tohei
Sensei is a very special individual. Almost everyone agrees that,
excepting the founder, Ueshiba Sensei himself, Tohei Sensei's Aikido
was probably the finest to be seen. In addition, he is one of the
most gifted teachers the Aikido world has seen, developing most
of the teaching methods used in many dojos today. Tohei Sensei has
recently celebrated his 80th birthday and his son Shinichi Tohei
has and is recieving intensive training as an Aikido teacher to
take over as KNK president.
Tohei-Sensei's Writings
Tohei-Sensei
has been a prolific author, writing everything from the first Aikido
book in English through to a non-fiction Bestseller in Japan on
Ki in Business. See the Aikido FAQ bibliography for many examples.
One of the areas of his writing that is not very well known outside
the Ki no Kenkyukai is the collection of inspirational poems called
the Shokushu. These are similar to the traditional doka (songs of
the way) written by many masters. (Ueshiba Sensei's doka being an
example.)
The
Shokushu (Ki Sayings)
Examples
of these poems are read before the start of each class to help focus
the mind on the essence of practice.
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