Takayoshi Nagamine

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Takayoshi Nagamine
Born(1945-08-12)August 12, 1945
Shoshin Nagamine
RankHanshisei, 10th Dan Nidai-Sōke[1]
Websitematsubayashi-ryu.com

Takayoshi Nagamine (長嶺 高兆, Nagamine Takayoshi, August 12, 1945 – April 25, 2012) was a prominent

Naha City Councilman and a Criminal Investigator for the United States Marine Corps.[2]

Early life

Takayoshi was born in

Karate-do under his father's tutelage at the age of six years.[4]

Career

At the direction of his father, and in order to help the development of

Karate-do world-wide, Takayoshi went to the United States at the age of 20, in the late 1960s and where he remainder for over 10 years[4], and opened a dojo in Cincinnati, Ohio. Takayoshi Nagamine's original students to achieve black belt in the United States included Jim Driggs, Rick Kemper, Al Rozier, Bill George, Dave Williams, Bill Weiss and Steve Rafferty. Nagamine also taught clinics and seminars in the Ohio region and around the United States until he returned to Okinawa in 1979[5]
and later would travel around the world teaching seminars in various countries to promote Matsubayashi-ryu.

Takayoshi returned to

Matsubayashi-ryu organisation and in a speech passed the leadership on to his son, Takayoshi Nagamine.[7]

In 1992 Takayoshi called together senior instructors in Okinawa and the United States and formed what is now known as the World Matsubayashi-ryu (Shorin-ryu) Karate-do Association (WMKA).

Matsubayashi-ryu. Takayoshi coordinated and participated in the development, establishment and teaching at dojos throughout the world including, but not limited to Australia, United States, Germany, Norway, Ireland and Canada)[6]

Soke Nagamine was a great ambassador for Matsubayashi-ryu world-wide and spent much of his life around the world teaching seminars and clinics. He would regularly host international seminars, with the most recent being held in Naha City, Okinawa in November 2010 to celebrate the 75th Anniversary Festival of Matsubayashi-ryu and to commemorate the 13th Anniversary Tribute to Osensei Shoshin Nagamine’s passing. The event was attended by over 330 members of the WMKA.[8]

In an interview in 2011[4], Nagamine said "We have this five fundamentals philosophy. This philosophy was from my father and his teacher, and it’s very, very old – up to 700 years. Basically, the five philosophies are contributing to our understanding, to our essence of the mind'. These philosophies included:

  1. You have to live in accordance with the principles of nature. You have to respect your parents and respect your philosophy.
  2. We are studying movement. Once you study movement, you have to know how to function with your body to be able to use these moves. To become functional, you have to be conscious of every move you make.
  3. You have to learn very well from your experiences and from other people’s experiences – experiences that will teach you something valuable. Not only in education, but also in experience.
  4. You have to strive for a sense of history and culture.
  5. 5. Master your fighting techniques not from your imagination or reasoning, but through actual combat. Know what you can do, and what you can learn from the art of Karate. Don’t obtain any techniques by your imagination. You have to prove what you can by doing – action, not imagination.

After the passing of Nagamine, the WMKA Board of Directors elected three new members to path the way of the future for the international organisation

Shoshin Nagamine
, these three include Yoshitaka Taira (President/Kaicho); Toshmitsu Arakaki (Fukukaicho/Vice-president), and Iwao Tome (Rijicho/Chairman), however, the role of Chairman is rotational and has since changed, and as of 2024 the current chairman is Tetsuo Makishi, son of Yauharu Makishi (a direct student of Shoshin Nagamine)

In addition to the World Matsubayashi-ryu Karatedo Association, there are many other organisations and groups around the world that continue to grow and teach Matsubayashi-ryu.

References

  1. ^ World Matsubayashi-ryu (Shorin-ryu) Karate-do Association (www.matsubayashi-ry.com)
  2. ^ Quast, Andreas. "Karate as an Intangible Cultural Property". Ryukyu Bugei 琉球武芸. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  3. ^ a b c Blitz Magazine, Karate in the blood, Blitz Publications, December 2012 edition
  4. ^
  5. ^ a b c d "Home -". matsubayashi-ryu.com.
  6. .
  7. ^ a b "Official Karate Fall 2012 by OfficialKarateMag - Issuu". issuu.com. 2012-11-21. Retrieved 2024-04-24.