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Masutatsu
Oyama was born in Ryong-Ri Yong-chi-Myo'n Chul Na Do Korea in
1923, and completed middle school in Seoul. In 1938, when he
was 12 years old, he came to Japan to live, where in 1941, he
entered the Tokyo Takushoku University. Oyama had mastered the
Eighteen Techniques of Chinese Kempo while he was still in his
homeland. When he came to Japan, he became a pupil of Gichin
Funakoshi, the man who introduced karate into Japan, and soon
achieved the status of a second-grade (Dan) karate master. He
interrupted his college education when he was drafted into the
military in 1943, but he continued his karate studies with
Sodeiju, then karate instructor at the Goju school. By the
time the war was over, he had become a fourth-grade karate
master.
When World War II was over, he temporarily volunteered
to assist his native land in its recovery, because of the
conflict that soon followed between North and South Korea he
gave up these efforts and concentrated on karate. In 1947,
after he had won the All-Japan Karate Tournament, he resolved
to live his life in the way of karate and determined to follow
the doctrines of its way. After 1948, for a full three years,
he secluded himself from human society, devoting himself
completely to a life according to the precept of Zen. He lived
in temples and in the mountains and subjected himself to the
disciplines of the martial arts both night and day. Through
such rigorous training as seated meditation under waterfalls,
struggles with wild animals, and smashing trees and stones
with his bare hands, Oyama refined not only his doctrine of
karate, but also his own mind and body.
When he had completed
this course of rigid discipline, his self-confidence returned
to him. In 1951, he returned to civilization from his mountain
retreat to teach the true meaning of karate to the world. His
amazing techniques, manifested most dramatically in his
ability to rip the horns from bulls, caused a sensation in the
karate world. The renown of Oyama karate flashed abroad with
such speed that a training hall soon became necessary for the
many students clamoring to be trained in the Oyama way.
Oyama's 1952 karate tour of thirty-two of the United States
met with great success.
In 1956, he toured Southeast Asia, and
in 1962, starting in Europe, he went around the entire world
establishing training halls for the Oyama karate method. Now
Oyama karate halls number 17 in the United States and 76 in 16
other countries of the world. The number of students already
exceeds 100,000. In 1958, for the sake of these students,
Oyama published his first karate guidebook, What is Karate? In
Japan, the first Oyama training hall, the Kyokushin Kaikan,
opened in 1955, and in 1964 a new five-story hall, with
present Prime Minister Eisaku Sato as honorary chairman, began
carrying on the master's training program
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