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Tag: ninjutsu

Shugyou#04 TOGAKURE-RYU SANTO TONKO NO KATA with MATS HJELM

budoshopMay 15, 2013

From Budoshop by budoshop

60 minutes, (h.264 M4V/MP4 300p)
20p manual, 499 Mb for $19.99

Available as download or full DVD!

Shugyou, in-depth training and study material. Including video and manual

Santo Tonko no Kata is 9 techniques from Togakure-ryu Ninpo-taijutsu / Ninjutsu. It consists of…

- Three unarmed techniques against an unarmed opponent
- Three unarmed techniques against a sword attack
- Three hidden weapons against multiple opponents

The manual is in Swedish, the instructions on the DVD are in Swedish! The Manual covers the first 8 basic techniques. The manual is 20 pages with 30 pictures and illustrations. All technique names with Kanji. The DVD is 60 minutes

Recorded in Stockholm October 2004

About the instructor

Mats Hjelm started training in Bujinkan for the first time around 1983, but it wasn’t until 1986 he had the opportunity to start training more seriously under a Shidôshi. He attends around 20 seminars, go to Japan 2-3 times every year. Since he started training he never had a training break. He takes his budo training very seriously! If you want to sponsor a seminar or course, please don’t hesitate to contact him. For more information see his web site www.kesshi.com Note!

About the download

Click here for more information about our download files and how it works!…

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Keiko#20 TOGAKURE-RYU SANTO TONKO NO KATA with HOLGER KUNZMANN

budoshopMay 13, 2013

From Budoshop by budoshop

keiko20
152 minutes, 1.29 Gb for $19.99
(H.264, 480p)
Available as download or DVD

This years theme was Togakure-ryu Ninjutsu/Ninpo-taijutsu and Santo Tonko no Kata

Shortly after returning from training in Japan with Soke and the Shihan, Holger held this seminar in Kaigozan Dojo, Stockholm, Sweden. This movie contains all 9 basic taijutsu techniques from Togakure-ryu Santo Tonko no Kata. They are taught and explained thoroughly as the basic foundation, and with many applications and henka. These nine techniques can be split in to three sections…

- Three unarmed techniques against an unarmed opponent
- Three unarmed techniques against a sword attack
- Three hidden weapons against multiple opponents

The last 30 minutes on this movie Holger went through some sword basics. Basic way of cutting, drawing the sword and more. All these techniques are explained and taught in detail.

Note: The instructions was in English.

Recorded: in Stockholm February 2008

About the Instructor

Holger Kunzmann’s main interest in Bujinkan is the basics. And he has become quite famous for his excellent taijutsu and very good knowledge and skill of the basics in Bujinkan. If you want to sponsor a seminar or course, please don’t hesitate to contact him. For more information see his web site Holger’s web site… http://www.bkd-reutlingen.de

DSC02008 DSC02013 DSC02259 Holger DSC02076

About the download

Click here for more information about our download files and how it works!…

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Path to the Heart of the Flower (III)

Shawn GraySeptember 18, 2012

From The Magick & The Mundane » Bujinkan by Shawn Gray

In Part I and II of this adventure, I wrote about how I made my way to Japan in 1990 to teach English, pursue Karate training, and look for ninja grandmaster Masaaki Hatsumi. I had arrived in Japan in early August, and now, finally, in October, after getting settled into my apartment, teaching schedule, and Karate training, it was time to set off in search of the ninja master.

Getting information about ninja masters wasn’t as easy in 1990 as it is today. There was no Internet, at least not as we know it now. I remember writing letters home that would take a week to ten days to get from Japan to Canada, and a ten-minute phone conversation to connect with family cost me $100. The only information I had to base my search on was contained in two books on the ninja that I had brought with me to Japan. Both of these books were authored by the same American student of the grandmaster, and both of them pointed to the Iga region as the home of the ninja clans. Eager to meet Hatsumi Sensei for myself, I made plans to visit the area, the city of Iga–Ueno, located in present-day Mie Prefecture.

To plan the trip from Hiroshima to Iga–Ueno, which took around 6 hours at the time (I assume travel times have shortened in the time since), I went to the tourist information centre in Peace Park in central Hiroshima, about 200 metres from where the atomic bomb was dropped in 1945. (I had lived across the street from this location the first month I was in Japan, before relocating to the suburbs, and had been able to see ground zero out my kitchen window.) While the lovely ladies at the desk looked up train connection options, I watched televised footage of the carnage that was going on in Kuwait at the time. Saddam had torched the Kuwaiti oilfields, prompting George Bush Sr. to order the invasion that would drive him back to Baghdad.

Train information and tickets in hand, I was finally ready to make the trip. It was only a weekend trip, two days and one night, so I packed light, but made sure to take my two ninja books with me for reference. I got as early a start as possible, and made it to Iga–Ueno station early on the Saturday afternoon, images of the mystical ninja floating in my teenage head. Exiting the station, the reputation of the city as the home of the legendary shadow warriors was immediately apparent.

Iga-Ueno Station - October 1990

Iga-Ueno Station – October 1990

I couldn’t bring myself to pose behind the mask. I was looking for the real deal, not a propped up wooden cut-out for tourist photos.

From the station, I made my way to the ryokan inn where I would be spending the night, checked-in, and then excitedly made my way to the ninja museum, where I was sure to find the next clue in my search for Hatsumi Sensei. The ninja exhibit was fascinating, complete with purple-clad kunoichi female ninja agents, a creaking nightingale floor, hidden compartments, and trap doors. But I was really after information about the living master himself.

Proceeding into the museum proper, I slowly made my way past the many exotic artefacts, pausing to inspect them, unable to decipher the Japanese descriptions. Approaching one glass display case, I stopped in my tracks – I had seen something that I recognized. Underneath the glass was a partially unfurled makimono scroll. I had seen this very scroll before – there was a photo of it in one of the books I had brought with me! I excitedly ripped open my pack and quickly leafed through the book until I found the corresponding image. There was no mistake – the photo in the book was of exactly the same object I was looking at, as if I had taken it myself only moments before. This was a valuable clue in my search – it provided a link between what I had read about the ninja warriors and the exact place where I was physically standing in that moment. Surely a meeting with Hatsumi Sensei himself was only moments away!

I flagged down one of the few staff floating about the place, and in my awkward Japanese asked about Hatsumi Sensei. Her response was a blank expression. Hatsumi Sensei? Bujinkan? Another blank look. When I persisted, she wandered off to find a more senior person who might know more, and soon returned with an elderly gentleman. Between my dreadful Japanese and his attempts at English, he made it known in no uncertain terms that he knew nothing of the whereabouts of Hatsumi Sensei or of anything regarding the Bujinkan organization. I couldn’t believe my ears. I had come all this way to find him. And the photo in my book was proof that I was on the right track! How could the staff not know anything? I tried again to get more information from them, but they simply shrugged, and as the afternoon waned, I left the museum, crestfallen.

On the way back to the ryokan, I tried to make sense of what had happened. I was obviously at the right place – the photo in my book was proof of that. There could really be only one explanation. The staff had lied. There must have been some invisible, unspoken test that I had unknowingly failed and, having been deemed unfit for acceptance into ninja training, I had been sent away empty-handed. From what I had read of the elusive ninja in the books by the American student (who, by his own account, had managed to gain acceptance into the clan himself), it was likely that they were watching me right now, monitoring my movements. Maybe the ryokan staff themselves were also in the employ of the clan. Perhaps if I conducted myself well, someone would appear and tell me that I had passed the test after all. These were the thoughts of a 19-yr old from a small Canadian country town, brought up on fantastical ninja books and then transported into the mystical homeland of the ninja warriors, only to be denied in the end.

No ninja appeared at the ryokan that night. Or the next morning. There was little else to do but have a look around Iga–Ueno, including the castle. Photos were not allowed inside, but I did take a picture of an old palanquin from the doorway. This would have been carried on the shoulders of two retainers, the person of importance, such as a regional feudal daimyo lord, seated in the red box-like structure in the middle. I also got a shot out across one of the tiled roofs – tiled roofs are very exotic – and one of the castle moat, which conveys the mystique that I had come to associate with the image of the ninja through the books I had read.
Iga-Ueno Station - October 1990 Iga Ueno Castle - Palanquin Iga Castle - Roof Iga Castle - Moat
The day was passing and it was time to return to Hiroshima. No ninja having appeared, it was with a heavy sigh that I boarded the train and watched the misty mountains of Iga pass slowly out of sight.

I may have waited just a bit too long for the ninja to appear – I missed my connecting train in Kyoto. It was already late at night by this time. It was dark and the temples were closed. The only thing I found open was a portable ramen noodle stand close to the station. I had a bowl of hot noodles to console myself and, as I had little extra money, curled up to sleep on the concrete sidewalk in front of Kyoto station, using my pack as a pillow. It seemed an appropriate finalè to the ill-fated trip. I caught the first train back to Hiroshima the following morning and just managed to make it to my first English class on time. It would be another four-and-a-half years before I finally caught up with the legendary ninja master…


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I made a HUGE Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu Poster

adminJuly 18, 2012

From 8þ Kabutoshimen by admin

CHECK IT OUT, YOU MIGHT LIKE IT?
You can buy the poster at BUDOSHOP.SE

Happy Training!

/Mats

The post I made a HUGE Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu Poster appeared first on 8þ Kabutoshimen.…

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New videos worth mentioning on the intertubes

adminNovember 10, 2011

From 8þ Kabutoshimen by admin

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KZm5bHKnl8

1980 – US Embassy demo in Tokyo

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSlU7XmyPTM

2008 – Bujinkan Kashiwa Demonstration

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nhv4x5xdHSQ

1989 – München Taikai

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=chmbgrhkGB0

1991 – Daikomyousai Japan

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQkIIDNCyyQ

Why we don’t break boards

The post New videos worth mentioning on the intertubes appeared first on 8þ Kabutoshimen.…

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Recent Posts

  • History of Ninjutsu: Ninja History
  • Complete GIKAN-RYU KOPPO TAIJUTSU With TORYU
  • Nagase and Furuta 先生方 Japan Report Four 令和6年
  • Ninja and Sake
  • The Last Ninja: Fujita Seiko ninjutsu history
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