In karate history, there are three "standard" lies that are told to keep the students comfortably ignorant. We should never take them at face value.
- Standard Lie #1: When asked the origins of the art, the first standard response is, “It came from ancient China.” We also see this claim in this form: "It came from the Shaolin (Shorin) Temple."
This springs from intense national rivalries, to put it mildly. Koreans deny that Taekwondo began in Shotokan dojos in Japan. They have been to a lot of trouble to conceal this. Japanese didn’t like the fact that (hard style) karate was invented by Okinawans. Okinawans, in turn, deny that much of their art is derived from jujutsu from Japan. Everybody points to ancient China instead.
- Standard Lie #2:When a traditional sensei invents a new technique (such as the sudden appearance of nunchaku katas in the 1920’s) he will declaim authorship with this statement: “I learned it from my grandfather.”
- Standard Lie #3: Masters who change existing katas generally don’t admit it. Confronted by the fact that their katas don’t match the katas of other schools they reply, “I teach the original version. Those other guys are wrong.”
Consider the phrase "Shorin Ryu." "Shorin" is the Japanese corruption of "Shaolin," for the Shaolin Temple, seat of legendary Chinese martial arts. There must be a hundred Shorin Ryu styles, many of them very different from one another. They use the "Shorin" label because it implies Standard Lie #1 (it came from China) and also Standard Lie #3 (this is the original version) in one word. The label "Shorin" is so overused that it actually tells you nothing about the content of the school.
When I studied taekwondo in the 1970s, we practiced pinan (heian) kata that were almost identical to those of shotokan, including the signature H-shaped floor pattern. Then one day it was forbidden to mention them. We had to learn the new palgue forms instead. It was clear to us that the palgue forms were a hash of techniques from the taikyoku and heian kata, with some pieces of jion and kanku dai thrown in for flavoring. The H-shaped pattern was still there underfoot. When we asked about this similarity, we were curtly told, “These are the original forms! They came from ancient China, and were kept secret for generations!” We got all three lies in one breath!
”It came from China.” “I learned it from my grandfather.” “I teach the original version.” We should recognize these statements the same way we recognize “The check is in the mail.”