Ninjutsu

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This article is about the Japanese espionage martial arts and techniques known as ninjutsu. Ninjutsu is frequently depicted fancifully in fiction; for these depictions, see the article on ninja.

Ninjutsu (忍術) is a collection of techniques originally practiced for espionage purposes. It includes methods of gathering information, non-detection, avoidance, and misdirection techniques. Ninjutsu can also involve training in disguise, escape, concealment, archery, medicine, and explosives.

Practitioners of ninjutsu have been seen as assassins for hire, and have been associated in the public imagination with other activities which are considered criminal by modern standards. Even though it was influenced by Chinese spying techniques and the strategic principles of Sun Tzu, ninjutsu is believed by its adherents to be of Japanese origin. One version is that the basis of ninjutsu was taught to a Japanese household who fled to the mountains after losing a battle. There they mixed with a varied lot of people including the descendants of refugees who had fled China. Later, the skills were developed over 300 years to create ninjutsu.

Although the popular view is that ninjutsu is the art of secrecy or stealth, actual practitioners consider it to mean the art of enduring - enduring all of life's hardships. The character nin carries both these meanings, and others.

In the modern world the word ninjutsu usually refers to a certain system (Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu) of self defense, and its offshoots. It is true that ninjutsu has a long and myth-filled history, but today almost anyone is allowed to practice modern ninjutsu. As one makes progress in ninjutsu the system gets more sophisticated, and one might realize that the system contains more than fighting skills. To avoid misunderstandings, "ninjutsu" should just refer to a specific branch of Japanese martial arts, unless it is being used in a historical sense.

Contents

18 Ninjutsu Skills (Ninja Juhakkei)

The 18 disciplines were first stated in the scrolls of Togakure-ryū, and they became definitive for all Ninjutsu schools, providing a complete training of the warrior in various fighting arts and complementary disciplines.

However, Ninja Juhakkei was often studied along with Bugei Juhappan (the 18 Samurai fighting art skills). Though some of them are the same, the techniques of each discipline were used with different approaches by both Samurai and Ninja.

The 18 disciplines are:

  1. Seishin-teki kyōyō (spiritual refinement)
  2. Taijutsu (unarmed combat)
  3. Ninja ken (sword fighting)
  4. Bōjutsu (stick and staff fighting)
  5. Shurikenjutsu (throwing blades)
  6. Sōjutsu (spear fighting)
  7. Naginatajutsu (naginata fighting)
  8. Kusarigamajutsu (chain and sickle weapon)
  9. Kayakujutsu (fire and explosives)
  10. Hensōjutsu (disguise and impersonation)
  11. Shinobi-iri (stealth and infiltration methods)
  12. Bajutsu (horsemanship)
  13. Sui-ren (training in water)
  14. Bōryaku (military strategy)
  15. Chōhō (espionage)
  16. Intonjutsu (escaping and concealment)
  17. Tenmon (meteorology)
  18. Chi-mon (geography)

Schools of ninjutsu

The Bujinkan Dōjō headed by Masaaki Hatsumi is one of three organizations generally accepted as teaching ninjutsu by the Bujinkan´s members. Hatsumi's Bujinkan Dōjō consists of nine separate schools of allegedly traditional Japanese martial arts, several of which contain ninjutsu teachings. Hatsumi learned a variety of martial arts, including ninjutsu, from Toshitsugu Takamatsu.

There are two other organizations teaching ninjutsu. These are the Genbukan headed by Shoto Tanemura, who was a student of Toshitsugu Takamatsu, and the Jinenkan headed by Fumio Manaka, a former student of Hatsumi.

Other extant traditional martial arts such as the Tenshin Shoden Katori Shintō-ryū contain some aspects of ninjutsu in their curriculum, but are not ninjutsu schools per se.

The espionage techniques and the like of ninjutsu are rarely focused on these days, since they are strongly bound with the circumstances and culture of feudal Japan.

Other schools

Several other schools of ninjutsu exist, some of which can be traced back to legitimate Japanese origins.

Verified origins

Israel was one of the first places where Bujinkan ninjutsu was practiced outside Japan, with Doron Navon pioneering it there in 1974. The AKBAN organization uses the Bujinkan curriculum the way it was used when Doron Navon, the first foreign Bujinkan shihan, practiced under Hatsumi sensei.

Stephen K. Hayes studied under Masaaki Hatsumi but teaches an americanized system, To-Shin Do, in his Quest Centers.

Glenn Morris studied under Masaaki Hatsumi but founded the Hoshin Roshi Ryu.

Chadwick Minge trained under Shoto Tanemura and founded the "Yamato Dojo" ("Studio City Martial Arts") based in California.

Brian McCarthy trained under Masaaki Hatsumi but founded the Bujinkan Brian Dōjō, based in Ireland.

Unverified origins

There are several persons and organizations that claim to teach "ninjutsu" whose validity and/or lineage have come under question. While such arts may still be effective, the lack of Japanese lineage authenticity make these arts arguably not ninjutsu.

  • Ashida Kim is an American martial artist that has made unverifiable claims of cross training into ninjutsu.
  • Frank Dux, whose master cannot be found and interviewed. His claims of origins that have been debunked.
  • The Temple of the Full Autumn Moon, which teaches Saito Ninjitsu (and defines ninjitsu as something very to similar, but not identical to, ninjutsu), follows the Wu Shan Fa or "Five Mountain Principle" (a Chinese name).

References

External links

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