AIKIJUJUTSU PASCAL SEREI
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HÉy_AnÿÔné_wAñÑå_chÃt_wïth_mE_
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Vous l'appelez jjitsu, aikijitsu, kobujitsu ou comme vous voulez c'est du Budo tel que le pratiquais Minoru Mochizuki et c'est ça que j'aime.
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@jordanhaasmusic I love to read these arguments, they are so helpful. Maybe you could explain to me why my Takeda-Ryu teacher (studied in Japan) calls his Aiki-no-jujutsu and why every Tae Kwon Do school in my area has the word "Karate" on the store front? (Curious 32 year student of Okinawan Martial Arts) jus' saying.
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KOSTAS KARIPIDIS =)
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@jordanhaasmusic Thank you, but my ideas are quite broad, I assure you.
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I believe there is a lot of good resources that explain the use of "ju," in regards to jujutsu, or it's influence it it's meaning. Toby Threadgill has some interesting things to point out about specifically the difference between Jujutsu, Aikijujutsu, and Aikujustu. Also there are articles out there with specifically the way in which Daito Ryu has used these terms for many generations. Perhaps they mightbroaden your idea of what Jujutsu means, or how the term is used.
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you need to get out more douche, jiu is how the skank BJJ spell it
Not to be picky back, but 'ju' literally means soft, as in when used in the style of goju-ryu karate, which means "hard/soft style". In Japanese kanji, characters, unlike letters, are words unto themselves, and the words ju and jutsu joined together translate from Japanese to English as "the gentle art." This is not in dispute -- it has been public record for decades. Western romanization corrupts words into things like "jitsu" but it is not proper spelling.
44excalibur 2 years ago 5
First --> the Serei practiced Yoseikan Aikibudo.
Second --> what is shown here is their own style, Nintai-ryu aikijujutsu. It is not Aikibudo.
crimsoul 2 years ago 4