Koryu JJ is ineffective and gentle???
I have been reading through several of the threads in this forum over the last few nights and some things have caught my eye. I have seen koryu jujutsu
or jujutsu in general being described as peaceful, gentle, and non-violent way to end fights. It has been described as un-armed grappling lacking punches
and kicks. Some members have described koryu jujutsu as having techniques that have no bearing or place in modern day self defense. Just where exactly did all of this come from? I am not sure if my experience with koryu jujutsu has been drastically different then others but I do not see this in the particular school I study or several of the other koryu schools that I have witnessed. So I am pretty sure my experience is not a one-off situation.
I think back on my own training and I am wondering what is peaceful or gentle about slamming someone headfirst onto the ground and stomping on the back of their head or neck? More then just a few kata are designed to end that way. I can think of many more unhappy endings. There are techniques I have been taught/shown that if I were to use them in a self defensesituation on the street I would probably be facing felony charges unless I had a really good reason for breaking someone's neck.
Yesterday I had a nice discussion with an old friend, that does BJJ and some other modern creations, about this site and he was surprised to learn that jujutsu has punches and kicks, he learned the hard way when we went to his backyard. He was also surprised to learn that it can include small bladed weapons. Yes I know that technically we call it kogusoku koshi no mawari but it still involves jujustu like techniques. He was even surprised to learn that his blessed BJJ is not the only system to have a detailed and extensive set of groundfighting techniques or that some koryu jujutsu schools have sparring. he is not the only person that incorrectly thinks this.
As far as koryu jujutsu not being street effective, what idiot came up with that? I have extensive contacts with pals on the police force and they tell me they cannot use much of what is taught at my particular school because it would cross the line of brutality and would have the ACLU all over them. One of my training partners was recently in bootcamp and has virtually no experience beyond koryu had a ball with some self-proclaimed tough guys that had backgrounds in the more modern arts.
Does anyone know where all this comes from? Is it a from a generation of Aikido and George Kirby's Gentle Art books? Are people confusing different systems and creations withwhat really is koryu jujutsu? Before anyone gets their panties or spandex tights in a knot I am not claiming koryu jujutsu as an ultimate art, I just think that SOME people have no clue of just what it can do.