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FAQ - About Aikido 

Sensei  Ron Boyd
   
859 623-0218         ronboyd@adelphia.net

Hits since May 24, 06
 

8BPS

 

 

 Ron Boyd
  
 859 623-0218 
 
ronboyd@adelphia.net


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Sound added 12/10/07

 Aikido development and history

In Kentucky Ron Boyd has been a leader in Aikido for over 25 years.


 
The following information can be found on the AIKIDO FAQ web site.  Click here to link to this very informative site.  For fun you might search Ron Boyd and see what they have to say about our sensei.
                                                                                
     http://www.aikidofaq.com/history/index.html

Sensei Boyd was inducted into the United States Martial Arts Hall of Fame July 2006.  Click here for details.

Aikido's founder, Morihei Ueshiba, was born in Japan on December 14, 1883. As a boy, he often saw local thugs beat up his father for political reasons. He set out to make himself strong so that he could take revenge. He devoted himself to hard physical conditioning and eventually to the practice of martial arts, receiving certificates of mastery in several styles of jujitsu, fencing, and spear fighting.
     In spite of his impressive physical and martial capabilities, however, he felt very dissatisfied. He began delving into religions in hopes of finding a deeper significance to life, all the while continuing to pursue his studies of budo, or martial arts. By combining his martial training with his religious and political ideologies, he created the modern martial art of Aikido. Ueshiba decided on the name "Aikido" in 1942 (before that he called his martial art "aikibudo" and "aikinomichi").

  Aikido is rooted in several styles of jujitsu (from which modern judo is also derived). particularly daitoryu-(aiki)jujitsu, as well as sword and spear fighting arts.

   Aikido takes the joint locks and throws from jujitsu and combines them with the body movements of sword and spear fighting.  Many Aikido techniques are the result of Master Ueshiba's own innovation.

On the religious side, Ueshiba was a devotee of one of Japan's so-called "new religions," Omotokyo. Omotokyo was (and is) part neo-shintoism, and part socio-political idealism.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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