Gozo Shioda, Vice President of the International
Martial Arts Federation, outstanding martial artist, author, teacher
and Founder of the Yoshinkan school of Aikido, died in Tokyo, Sunday
17th July 1994, after a protracted illness. He was 78 and is
survived by his wife, Nobuko and three sons, Tetsutaro, Takahisa and
Yasuhisa. His autobiography published in 1985 summarized his outlook
in its title, Aikido Jinsei - "Aikido is My Life", as Shioda
dedicated his life to studying, mastering and transmitting the
Aikido he learned from the modern art's founder, Morihei Ueshiba.
Gozo Shioda was born in Shinjuku, Tokyo in 1915.
His father Seiichi Shioda, was a prominent paediatrician and medical
academic who, having a penchant for the martial arts, had
constructed a dojo, known as the Yoshinkan, at his home in Yotsuya,
Tokyo. Various teachers were invited to demonstrate and instruct
there and the young Gozo was soon taken with the prowess of the
newly emerging judo. He enthusiasticly began to practice, showing
the determination and abundance of energy that were to characterize
his entire approach to life. He was naturally talented and made
rapid progress, quickly advancing to third dan, while in his early
teens liked nothing so much as to challenge police judo teachers to
test his technique and push himself to the limit.
A turning point in his life came at the age of
seventeen, when his father sent him to watch a class led by Morihei
Ueshiba, whose dojo, the Kobukan, was located a couple of miles away
at Ushigome. Ueshiba's school was then somewhat exclusive and was
said to offer a powerful martial art to those who could provide
suitable guarantors of good character and stand the disciplined
atmosphere.
On his initial visit, watching Ueshiba throw his
opponents about so easily and without any apparent effort, Shioda
felt sure he was witnessing a fraud, but was invited to try his judo
skills against Ueshiba to see for himself. On launching an attack he
found himself flying through the air, hitting the ground head first,
without understanding what had happened. He was immediately
convinced that this was the real thing and the very next day, the
24th May 1932, joined the Kobukan Dojo and commenced his Aikido
career as an uchi-deshi or "resident disciple". Shioda trained with
Morihei Ueshiba until 1941, when he also graduated from Takushoku
University and at the end of the year married Nobuko. He spent the
war in an administrative support capacity in China, Taiwan, Celebes
and Borneo, eventually returning to Japan in May, 1946. After a
brief period at Iwama, Ueshiba's country residence, dojo and farm,
to revive his strength after wartime privations, he returned to
Tokyo and worked for the Nihon Kokan Steel Company. His involvement
with this company let to an invitation to teach Aikido to its
employees commencing in 1952.
Following the lifting of the ban on the practice
of martial arts which had been imposed by the MacArthur government,
the Nippon Sogo Budo Yaitai, or Life Extension Association,
sponsored the first post-war demonstration of Aikido in 1954. Shioda
participated and was awarded the grand prize for the best
performance, in front of an audience of fifteen thousand spectators.
He also attracted the attention of a number of
prominent businessmen who got together and proposed that he
establish his own dojo. In this way the Yoshinkan, named after his
father's dojo and with its first location in Yoyogi Hachiman, was
born.
Since his early judo experiences Gozo Shioda
maintained frequent contact with police martial arts instructors.
During the 1950's he travelled all over Japan demonstrating the
effectiveness of his Aikido to local police forces. This gradually
lead to a number of police Aikido courses, culminating in the
compulsory Yoshinkan Aikido training of the Tokyo Metropolitan
Women's Police Force and the annual training of an elite group of
Kidotai or "Riot Police" to become Aikido instructors at the
Yoshinkan Headquarters dojo. In 1990 Gozo Shioda launched another
course, this time for Yoshinkan Aikido practitioners from around the
world seeking to become instructors. Shioda's complete mastery of
Aikido was confirmed in 1961 when Morihei Ueshiba awarded him the
degree of ninth dan for his outstanding contribution to the
promotion of Japanese martial arts in general and Aikido in
particular was further acknowledged by the honorary award of tenth
dan by the International Martial Arts Federation in 1984, along with
the title Meijin or Grand Master.
During the many years since it was established,
the Yoshinkan has expanded all over Japan, in the Americas, Europe,
Australia, New Zealand and South East Asia. The reputation of Gozo
Shioda, described by Black Belt magazine as "Aikido's Little Giant",
attracted a long line of distinguished visitors to his dojo, all
eager to observe the diminutive Shioda subdue opponents a third of
his age and in some cases more than twice his weight. Members of the
Japanese and the British Royal families, including the Crown Prince
Hironomiya, observed Shioda demonstrating as did Robert Kennedy in
1962. Towards the end of his life, Gozo Shioda travelled widely
overseas to practically demonstrate his vision of Aikido as a means
to promote meaningful interaction between cultures. In 1990, he
established the International Yoshinkan Aikido Federation to follow
up on this and to co-ordinate the extraordinary growth in interest
worldwide in Yoshinkan Aikido. He was convinced that through the
silent language of Aikido, all differences between peoples, between
cultures, disappear, rendering peace and harmonious co-existence a
reality rather than a pipe dream.
In Yoshinkan Aikido, the emphasis is on the study
of fundamental movements and solid basic techniques as well as
gaining philosophical insights into the conduct of life and human
relationships. Yoshinkan Aikido as a martial art is non-competitive
and non-violent. Cooperation and harmony are more important than
aggression. Timing and control are more important than strength.
With the development of solid basics, Yoshinkan Aikido provides
means of self-defence without undue aggression.