The
Birth of Kyokushin-kan
In
the decade following Mas Oyama's death, the 12 million member
International Karate Organization that he built has fragmented
several times into several smaller organizations. In 2002, Hatsuo
Royama, one of Mas Oyama's early students from the Oyama Dojo era,
along with many of his friends and followers, split from the then
largest group of Sosai's followers, the KyokushinKAIKAN, and
created a new organization called Kyokushin-kan.
Hatsuo
Royama had struggled for nearly a decade to support the young
leader of the Kyokushinkaikan - his junior by 15 years - but in
the end he was finally forced to accept the fact that that
organization was no longer being led in a direction that would
have met with the approval of his teacher, Mas Oyama. The late
karate legend, Mas Oyama, said time and time again that the most
important element of Kyokushin karate was the BUDO SPIRIT which
encompasses elements of proper behavior, courtesy, the spirit of
Osu, and good will towards man, in addition of course to fighting
prowess. In 2002, Hatsuo Royama realized that this all-important
element of Mas Oyama's organization had been replaced by Mas
Oyama's initial successor with a hunger for money and that the
"budo spirit" had been largely replaced by the
"business spirit" in the inner chambers of the Kyokushin
leadership. Human relationships, friendships, and sempai-kohai
(senior-junior) relationships, which Mas Oyama held as
all-important, were being butchered in the name of money and a
lust for power.
Additionally,
Royama had been forced to face the conclusion that Kyokushin's
fighting prowess was suffering under the new leadership as well.
During Mas Oyama's lifetime there was no question in the hearts
and minds of the Japanese public that Kyokushin was the world's
strongest karate. Royama and others knew that the reason that it
remained so was because of the emphasis that Mas Oyama placed on
the real-world application of karate techniques. Mas Oyama created
a full-contact style of tournament competition in order to
popularize budo karate, but never went so far as to equate that
tournament-style fighting with what he believed to the essence of
budo karate.
Kyokushin
tournament-style fighting IS a great venue for developing the
win-at-all-costs fighting spirit of the karateka, yet it remains
far removed from real life-and-death combat for self-defense.
Punches to the head, for example, were removed from Kyokushin
competition in the name of the popularization of karate that Mas
Oyama achieved. The reason Kyokushin fighters become the strongest
under Mas Oyama's teaching was that they trained for real-life
application and then fought in the less-dangerous by comparison
tournament-style environment. By 2002, however, Shihan Royama and
others had realized that the new leadership of Mas Oyama's
organization had abandoned Mas Oyama's emphasis on real-world
application and instead lowered its standards to hold
tournament-style fighting as all-important. After all, it was
tournament-style fighting that generated money and fame.
As
a result, Hatsuo Royama and other older, wiser instructors of
Kyokushin karate - such as Shihan Tsuyoshi Hiroshige who holds the
record for training more Japanese and world champions than any
other instructor - realized that under Kyokushin's current
leadership, Kyokushin was losing its edge. After ten years of
decline following Mas Oyama's death, Kyokushin was no longer the
world's strongest karate.
Shihan
Royama and Shihan Hiroshige and many followers, therefore, broke
with the largest remnant of Mas Oyama's organization, the
KyokushinKAIKAN, and founded the rival Kyokushin-kan with the
intention of returning Kyokushin Karate to the high level of
esteem that it commanded during Mas Oyama's lifetime. They
resolved to do this by ensuring that the budo spirit of proper
behavior, courtesy, the spirit of Osu, the spirit of friendship,
the sempai-kohai system, and good will towards man would remain of
primary importance, while at the same time refreshing Mas Oyama's
early emphasis of real-world karate application before it became
tainted by the monetary lure of tournament fighting for financial
gain.
One
of Hatsuo Royama's first steps upon forming Kyokushin-kan was the
re-establishment of Mas Oyama's Kyokushin Shogakukai foundation as
prescribed in Mas Oyama's will at the time of his death. Mas Oyama
had originally founded this nonprofit foundation in Japan many
years earlier with the mission of strengthening the bodies, minds
and souls of Japanese young people while at the same time
fostering ideals that would increase the possibilities for world
peace. The purpose of establishing this organization as a
government recognized nonprofit foundation was to ensure that
money and the hunger for money would never belittle the ultimate
truth and lofty ideals of the Kyokushin Way. At the time of his
death, Mas Oyama willed that his followers should re-establish the
foundation that he'd created, and the failure on the side of the
KyokushinKAIKAN's young leadership to achieve that goal had become
yet another reason why Royama and others felt compelled to break
away and follow a path that their teacher, Mas Oyama, would have
celebrated. This point is supported by the fact that of the
surviving board members of Mas Oyama's Kyokushin Shogakukai
Foundation - a board composed of trusted advisors of Mas Oyama
during his lifetime -- most of them have assumed their positions
on the board and are supporting Royama's Kyokushin-kan.
In
the 3 years since Kyokushin-kan was founded, over 6000 Japanese
karateka have flocked to support its cause in 50 branches composed
of many dojos spread across Japan. Additionally, 25 overseas
branches have formally been established, including Russia, South
Africa, Korea, Kazakhstan, the United States and others. Also, for
these three years Kyokushin-kan has sponsored annual all-Japan and
all-Japan weight category tournaments held in Saitama, north of
Tokyo, and all Kyokushin-kan members eagerly celebrated
Kyokushin-kan's 1st World Open Karate Tournament held in Moscow in
September, 2005.