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Yang Ki Yin School of
Jiu Jitsu
Martial Art Training, Self
Defense, Mental Development, Physical Culture
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History
The
emergence of jiu jitsu as a fully developed martial art can be traced to 16th
century Japan.
Various elements of the art were in use much earlier. It flourished during Japan’s feudal era in the days of the samurai
and Shogun. During its golden age from
1700 to 1850, hundreds of jiu jitsu systems thrived there. Yabe Jiu Jitsu, the predecessor of Yang Ki
Yin Jiu Jitsu, was brought to the West by Master Sesu Quan Setsu in 1920. In 1937 custody of this system was passed on
to Milton Gowdey. Gowdey’s training
under the Master, although traditional by the standards of the Far East, was quite exceptional when compared to
modern methods. To quote Professor
Gowdey, “Basic training was to serve the Sensei, or teacher. We students cleaned the dojo, cooked his
rice—never to his satisfaction—washed his body, for at all times he was testing
our humility. My parents allowed me to
stay from Friday after school until Sunday evening. Sleeping on the tatami (a straw mat), I came
to conceive not just by words, but mostly by osmosis, an understanding of The
Way.” Master Gowdey spent most of his
life transforming the linear techniques of Yabe into the curve-lined Yang Ki
Yin system.
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