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    • Niju-Kun

      • The Niju-Kun, or the 20 Precepts of Shotokan Karate, are a set of guiding principles and teachings developed by Gichin Funakoshi, the founder of Shotokan Karate. These precepts are meant to provide not only physical but also mental and philosophical guidance to karate practitioners.
  1. Dec 2, 2023 · Learn the 20 precepts of karate that Gichin Funakoshi, the founder of modern karate, wrote in this book. The principles cover topics such as respect, justice, mentality, technique, and application of karate in daily life.

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    • Never Forget: Karate Begins with Rei and Ends with Rei. Rei means courtesy or respect and is represented in karate by bowing. We bow many times at each karate lesson: at the beginning and at the end of each karate lesson, when receiving personal instructions, when partnering up, when using training equipment, and before and after a sparring session with your partner.
    • There Is No First Attack in Karate (Karate Ni Sente Nashi) Karate is the art of self-defense, first and foremost. We should only use what we learn in karate to defend ourselves and not to provoke conflicts and seek violent encounters.
    • Karate Supports Righteousness. “With great power comes great responsibility”. While you shouldn’t use your karate skills to cause conflicts, if conflicts arise, you should use what you know to the best of your ability to defend, protect and support what you believe is right.
    • First Understand Yourself, Then Understand Others. Gichin Funakoshi probably had borrowed this precept from Sun Tzu’s famous line “Know yourself, know your enemy.
    • Karate-do begins with Rei and ends with Rei. (Rei means courtesy / respect)
    • There is no first strike in karate.
    • Karate is an aid to justice.
    • First know yourself then know others.
    • Karate begins and ends with rei (respect). FYI – Bowing symbolizes this respect.
    • There is no first strike in karate.
    • Karate stands on the side of justice.
    • First know yourself, then know others.
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nijū_kunNijū kun - Wikipedia

    The Shōtōkan nijū kun (Japanese language: 松 濤 館 二 十 訓) are the "twenty instructions" of the Okinawan martial arts master Gichin Funakoshi, whose pen name was Shōtō. All students of Shōtōkan karate are encouraged to live, practice, and teach the principles to others.

  4. The principles allude to notions of respect, humility, compassion, patience, awareness and both an inward and outward calmness. Gichin Funakoshi created both Dojo Kun 道場訓 in which you find five principles and Niju kun in which 20 more principles are described.

  5. Niju kun (20 Guiding Principles) by Master Gichin Funakoshi. The Shōtōkan niju kun were published in a book in 1938 The Twenty Guiding Principles of Karate as: [1] Karate-do begins and ends with bowing. 一、空手道は礼に始まり礼に終る事を忘るな. Hitotsu, karate-do wa rei ni hajimari rei ni owaru koto o wasuru na. There is ...

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