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Arts, various methods of unarmed combat, originally used in warfare in
the Far East
The
martial arts are popular in many parts of the world today as means of self-defense,
competitive sports, and exercises for physical fitness. Among the better
known forms are karate, kung fu, jujitsu, judo, aikido, tai chi chuan,
tae kwon do, sumo wrestling, and kendo.
In
some forms of the martial arts, practitioners customarily wear colored
belts to denote rank. A white belt indicates a novice; a black belt signifies
proficiency at various levels. The levels of black belt are designated
by dan (Japanese for “degree”). For example, first dan, or first degree
black belt, signifies a beginner black belt; fifth dan, or fifth degree
black belt, usually signifies a master.
Tactics
basic to the martial arts include hand, arm, and foot blows; knee kicks;
throws and trips; gripping or immobilizing; and blocks or parries using
wrist, forearm, or elbow.
karate,
a Japanese art of self-defense in which sharp blows and kicks are administered
to pressure-sensitive points on the body of an opponent.
Kung
fu (Chinese boxing) is, with karate, the most popularly known of all the
martial arts. It employs kicks, strikes, throws, body turns, dodges, holds,
crouches and starts, leaps and falls, handsprings and somersaults. These
movements include more techniques involving the open hand, such as claws
and rips, than those used in karate.
Jujitsu
or jiujitsu (from Japanese Ju, for “gentle”), uses holds, chokes, throws,
trips, joint locks, kicks, and atemi (strikes to vital body areas). The
techniques are gentle only in the sense that they are directed toward deflecting
or controlling an attack; however, they can maim or kill.
Judo
is a popular wrestling form developed from jujitsu in 1882 by Jigoro Kano,
a Japanese educator. Like jujitsu, it attempts to turn an attacker's force
to one's own advantage. Techniques include throwing and grappling. Judo
was first included in the Olympic Games in 1964.
Aikido
was, like judo, derived from jujitsu within the last century. In aikido,
an attack is avoided with flowing, circular movements. The opponent can
then be brought to the ground with painful, immobilizing joint locks. Aikido
is, with tai chi chuan, the gentlest martial art and is not practiced as
a competitive sport.
Tai
chi chuan, more popularly referred to as tai chi, is an ancient Chinese
exercise and fighting system, still practiced in China and elsewhere in
the world, mainly for its health benefits. It employs slow, graceful movements
that are stylized renditions of original arm and foot blows.
Tae
kwon do is a type of fighting system that originated in Korea and that
employs kicking, punching, and various evasive techniques. Most famous
for its kicks, tae kwon do incorporates jumping and kicking into characteristic
maneuvers called “flying kicks.” Tae kwon do spread worldwide from Korea
in the 1960s and the first World Tae Kwon Do Championship took place in
Seoul, South Korea, in 1973.
Sumo
wrestling, a popular Japanese combative sport, pits huge men against one
another in an attempt to force a wrestler out of the ring, or to bring
his body, below the knees, to the mat. The rules of sumo wrestling prohibit
kicking, gouging, hair pulling, and the like, but allow such actions as
pushing, pulling, slapping, throwing, and grappling. Traditionally, sumo
wrestlers are Japanese, although Americans have recently won sumo championships
and proved themselves capable wrestlers.
Kendo,
or Japanese fencing, is a sport derived from ancient sword fighting, now
using bamboo swords.
Worldwide
contemporary interest in the martial arts often focuses on their spiritual
aspects, as means of increasing self-confidence, assertiveness, and concentration.
Personal defense is also increasingly an important issue, particularly
for women and the elderly. Special programs in many of the martial arts
have been designed to train a smaller or more fragile person to handle
a larger, stronger assailant. The martial arts have also recently become
popular not only as competitive sports and as ways of maintaining physical
fitness but as forms of self-expression, similar to dance or gymnastics.
This is, in fact, the main purpose of wu shu (martial arts) as practiced
today in China.
Japanese
: kara, empty + te, hand.
English
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