Karate can also be described as a martial art,
or fighting method, involving a variety of techniques, including
blocks, strikes, evasions, throws, and joint manipulations. Karate
practice is divided into three aspects: kihon (basics), kata (forms),
and kumite (sparring).
The word karate is a combination of two Japanese
characters: kara, meaning empty, and te, meaning hand, thus, karate
means "empty hand." Adding the suffix "-do"
(pronounced "doe"), meaning "way," i.e., karate-do,
implies karate as a total way of life that goes well beyond the
self-defense applications. In traditional karate-do, we always
keep in mind that the true opponent is oneself.
Karate history can be traced back some 1400 years,
to Daruma, founder of Zen Buddhism in Western India. Daruma is
said to have introduced Buddhism into China, incorporating spiritual
and physical teaching methods that were so demanding that many
of his disciples would drop in exhaustion. In order to give them
greater strength and endurance, he developed a more progressive
training system, which he recorded in a book, Ekkin-Kyo, which
can be considered the first book on karate of all time.
The physical training, heavily imbued with Daruma's
philosophical principles, was taught in the Shaolin Temple in
the year 500 A.D. Shaolin (Shorin) kung-fu, from northern China,
was characterized by very colourful, rapid, and dynamic movements;
the Shokei school of southern China was known for more powerful
and sober techniques. These two kinds of styles found their way
to Okinawa and had their influence on Okinawa's own original fighting
method called Okinawa-te (Okinawan hand) or simply te. A ban on
weapons in Okinawa for two long periods in its history is also
partly responsible for the high degree of development of unarmed
fighting techniques on the island.
In summary, karate in Okinawa developed from the
synthesis of two fighting techniques. The first one, used by the
inhabitants of Okinawa, was very simple but terribly effective
and, above all, very close to reality since it was used throughout
many centuries in real combat. The second one, much more elaborate
and impregnated with philosophical teachings, was a product of
the ancient culture of China. These two origins explain the double
character of Karate--extremely violent and efficient but at the
same time a strict and austere discipline and philosophy with
a nonviolent emphasis.