THE HISTORY OF JUDO AND OLYMPIC SPORT JUDO
KANO Jigoro
(1860-1938)
Jigoro Kano's
Childhood
Jigoro
Kano was born on 28 October 1860, in what is currently the
East Nada district of the city of Kobe. These were the last
days of the Tokugawa military government, and it was a
period of many distrust and anti-government activities. In
comparison, it was also the year that Lincoln became
President of the United States. Kano's birthplace was well
known for sake brewing, and the Kano family was affluent as
sake brewers. His mother died when he was ten years old. In
the new age, his father became an officer of the Meiji
government, and for that reason they moved to Tokyo when he
was 11. In his schooling, Kano showed a particular affinity
toward languages. At the age of 15, he entered a foreign
language school, and in 1877, he entered Toyo Teikoku
(Imperial) University, which is currently Tokyo University.
Today, Tokyo University is the premier university in Japan,
and his entrance to this university was a tribute to his
academic abilities and commitment to education. Although he
was the founder of Judo, Kano's superior academic record is
also notable, and his language abilities were exceptional.
In fact, it is a widely known fact that many of Kano's
original notes written during his study of Jujitsu and
during its transformation to Judo were written in English
instead of his native Japanese. While one of the reasons for
this practice was not only to keep his ideas to himself
during these years of intense rivalries among Jujitsu
schools, it also served the purpose of allowing for the
blending of old with new, of forcing new ways of thinking,
and of forging new methods and techniques of training.
As the Founder of Kodokan Judo
As started earlier,
after coming to Tokyo, Kano developed an interest in
Jujitsu, and studied it earnestly along with his academic
subjects. When he entered Tokyo Teikoku University, his
earnestness toward study became particularly strong. In 1879
while he was in school, Kano participated in a Jujitsu
demonstration with his instructors in honor of General
Grant, former President of the United States. At the
university, Kano studied subjects such as political science,
economics, moral education, and aesthetics, and during this
time, he began to hold especially strongly the value of
education - learning from others, and then teaching others.
In 1882, he established Kodokan and worked to spread Judo as
its master. This was because he found in judo something very
spectacular, and decided to dedicate his life to the spread
of Judo as its teacher. Turning His Passion to the Spread of
Physical Education Jigoro Kano considered education to be
base on three components - the education of knowledge, the
education of morality, and physical education. The education
of knowledge involves the improvement of one's knowledge;
the education of morality involves the fostering of one's
moral awareness; and physical education involves the
training of one's body. Despite the fact that, within
Kodokan Judo, physical education is an important factor,
Kano also placed a lot of effort into the training of
physical education instructors at the Secondary Teacher's
School.
When Kano became the principal of the Secondary Teacher's
School, he established a physical education department
there, and started using a variety of sports as subject
matters. A grand sports festival was held, and within the
school, a number of sports sections including new sports
from abroad were born, including tennis, baseball, football,
and boating. Because of these activities that spread sports
and physical education both inside and outside the school,
Kano gradually became famous in the public's eye.
He was an Exceptional
Educator as Well
Eighteen eighty-two
was an exceptional year for Jigoro Kano. He became a teacher
at Gakushuuin (the then private school for nobility). It was
also the year that he established the Kodokan, the Kano Juku
(Preparatory School), and the Koubunkan. Kano Juku was a
preparatory school that built children's characters as they
boarded (i.e., lived there). Koubunkan was an English
language school. Kano used his own income to manage all of
these, and what was not enough he made up for through work
in translation. From early in the morning until late at
night, Kano turned all his energy into these educational
activities. This was really the year that saw him embark as
an educator.On top of all this, he became the head
instructor of the Gakushuuin four years later. In 1891 he
became the principal of the Fifth Intermediate and High
School at Kumamoto, and in 1893 he assume the position of
the principal of the Secondary Teacher's School of Tokyo (a
school for teachers, which later became Tokyo Kyoiku
University, currently Tsukuba University). He was only 34
years old. Tsukuba University also enjoys an excellent
reputation in Japan today as a university for teachers. In
1899, he founded the Koubungakuin, a school for Chinese
foreign students. Among his students was Lu-hsun (Rojin),
who later became a great man of literature. If you examine
his career, it is easy to understand what an exceptional and
brilliant educator Kano was. For 26 years after that, he
served as the principal of the Secondary Teacher's School,
leaving a legacy of achievement for the development of
education. It is, in fact, these roots that allowed Judo to
have the close ties with education that it should have
today.
Activities
as Japan's First International Olympic Committee (IOC)
Member
In 1909, Japan
received an invitation for participation on the IOC from
Baron de Pierre Coubertin, the father of the modern day
Olympics. Jigoro Kano was chosen as Japan's representative.
Thirteen years had passed since the holding of the First
Modern Olympics in Athens, Greece, in 1896. However these
was still no participation from an Asian country. Jigoro
Kano was the first Asian member of the IOC. Still, there was
no general sports organization in Japan that could send
athletes to the Olympics, and of course, there were no
athletes who could compete at such high levels. Thus, in
1911 the Japan
Amateur Athletic Association was founded and Jigoro Kano was
installed as the first president. At this meeting, it was
decided that Japan would participate in its first Olympics
at the 5th Olympic Games to be held in Stockholm, Sweden,
the next year, 1912. This served as the basis for the wide
spread and development of all varieties of sports. Even
afterthat time, Jigoro Kano continued his work as an IOC
member, and because of that work, he traveled abroad seven
times for the Olympics and IOC meetings in the last 10 years
of his life. He turned all his energies into the
internationalization of sports in Japan. In 1938, it became
time to reap the fruits of his labors, as it was formally
decided to hold the 12th Olympic Games in 1940 in Tokyo.
However, on 4 May of that year, Kano died of sickness aboard
a ship during his return to Japan with that happy knowledge
buried in his heart. He was 79 years old. Ironically, the
12th Olympic Games, which were Kano's wish, were canceled
due to World War II. Afterwards, it was not until the 18th
Tokyo Olympic Games held in 1964 that Japan was able to host
its first Olympics.
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