-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.furyu.com/onlinearticles/mudra.html
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.furyu.com/onlinearticles/mudra.html">Mudra in
the Martial Arts</A>
-----



Mudra in the Martial Arts


by Wayne Muromoto

c. 1999. Special to Furyu Online

One of the more curious things that I encountered in my martial arts training
was the use of mudra in combative arts. Mudra (Japanese: in), for those who
aren't familiar with them, are these weird hand gestures that are derived
from esoteric Buddhism (mikkyo), particularly the Tendai and Shingon sects.
These gestures are supposed to generate spiritual focus and power which then
are manifested in some way externally.

Unfortunately for the greater amount of martial artists in the modern budo
(martial ways), mudra are not part of their training. Most "modern" budo are
based in some way on modern concepts of physical education and sports
training, and do not include, unless a particular teacher is himself/herself
an adherent of a Buddhist sect, the use of esoteric Buddhist rituals, such as
mudra, mantra (chanting or words of power), and mandala (inscriptions,
paintings or scrolls that can create spiritual energy). This, by and large,
includes judo, kendo, iaido, kyudo, karatedo, and even aikido as it is
presently formulated.

Ueshiba Morihei, the founder of aikido, was a devotee of a Shinto sect called
Omoto-kyo, which made use of some unusual rituals, including the use of
chinkon and kotodama and several body exercises to generate spiritual power
(including a rowing motion with one's arms to project spiritual energy), but
by and large, in my opinion, most of the esoteric nature of aikido goes back
to Omoto-kyo and esoteric Shinto rituals.

Although esoteric Buddhism and other sects such as Zen share the same goals,
that of the salvation of the soul, their routes to this end differ somewhat.
Mikkyo makes use of rituals and rites that go back to tantric sources, which
some say predates Buddhism itself, and may even be as ancient as prehistoric
magical shamanistic rites of Asia, as found in India, Tibet, China, Mongolia
and Japan. Zen stripped Buddhism of the importance of these arcane rites, and
instead focused on the intellect, on direct experience, in the emptying of
the mind rather than of the filling up of the mind. I know that this is
really a simplistic statement that does neither mikkyo or Zen much justice,
but that's about as basic as I can get with the differences in this short
span of pages. (Lest anyone get all upset in the mistaken notion that I'm
taking sides, I prefer to be open-minded about all sects; my family was
originally Soto Zen but sent me to Hongwanji and Jodo Shinshu temple schools
to learn Japanese--which didn't work. But they also allowed Christian
missionaries to preach to the neighborhood kids in our backyard, I attended a
Baptist summer school once, and my Filipino and Porgtuguese friends even took
me to Catholic church a couple of times. I'm really messed up.)

In any case, I had known of the use of mudra in koryu ("old" martial arts)
since the time I was privy to a discussion with the training master of the
Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto-ryu, Otake Risuke, and the late Donn F. Draeger.
Otake sensei described some of the mudra used in his school, which is one of
the oldest martial ryu still in existence in Kanto (Eastern) Japan.

For us martial artists involved in the koryu, use of mudra sometimes explain
some odd movements in the middle of kata that we cannot logically understand
as being necessary in a particular fighting technique. In the case of the
Katori Shinto-ryu, Otake sensei was replying to a query one of us observers
had of a naginata form in which the naginata wielder pointed an open palm at
a swordsman. We thought that if the distance was shorter, he'd have his hand
cut off, so why introduce a needless opening? Because, Otake sensei said, in
that palm, the naginata person had inscribed with a pass of his fingers a
secret mikkyo sign to ward off evil spirits and then directed that force at
the attacker. Of course, samurai being practical-minded warriors, they did so
at a distance far enough away so that if the magic didn't work, their hand
wouldn't get chopped off in the process.

Otake sensei also described other mikkyo-derived rituals that his system used
before a battle and even apart from martial arts in general, such as rituals
used to heal people with various ailments and so on. Some years later, when I
was training in the Takeuchi-ryu, my own sensei informed me that I had to
place my fingers a certain way when returning the sword to its scabbard. I
thought it was simply an affectation of our particular style, but he then
told me that I was secretly inscribing a mudra with my fingers to finish the
combat, to ward off evil spirits, and to offer prayers to the dead.

"Even if the attacker was your enemy, once he's dead, he becomes a Buddha, so
you should pray for his enlightenment," my sensei said. "That is the
compassion of a warrior. Battle is battle, so you had to slay him, but
afterwards, pray for his spirit. That is the spirit of being a bugeisha."

The use of mudra and other aspects of mikkyo are found in many instances in
many koryu, because mikkyo and Shinto were the religions of the samurai who
founded those ryu that were created before the 1600s. Subsequent ryu
developed after the imposition of the Tokugawa government were heavily
influenced by Neo-Confucianism, and then later by Zen Buddhism. Although Zen
was popularized among the warrior class in the Kamakura period, the 1300s, it
did not greatly affect martial arts until the latter part of the Edo Period,
with the writings of the Zen priests Takuan and Hakuin. And even at that, Edo
Period (1600-1868) martial arts were equally influenced by Neo-Confucianism
and even, in the latter part, mystical Shinto.

When Japan modernized, the modern derivatives of martial arts, the -do forms,
needed spiritual underpinnings that were not as particularized or esoteric as
mikkyo, so Zen became widely adopted because many of its practices and
philosophies, such as zazen, could be taken out of context and used as part
of a training regime without having the practitioner necessarily needing to
become a devout Zen Buddhist. Budo, with Zen underpinnings, could therefore
become a national and international pastime without regards to religious
affiliation.

The same, in some way, holds true of the koryu; you do not necessarily have
to be a card-carrying member of a particular religious organization. But it
does require a certain suspension of beliefs, or at the very least, an
acceptance of different ways to understand the spiritual universe for
non-Buddhists. Can you be a devout Christian and still do koryu that are
influenced by mikkyo? I have friends that do so, and they don't have much
conflict with that, but they are what I would call "general" Christians who
belong to mainstream sects, such as Protestantism. They can accept the
possibility that the rituals they perform in practice may not be part of the
Christian orthodox beliefs, but neither is it the tool of the Devil. Mikkyo
may, in their minds, be another expression of a universal belief in a
spiritual world. (Even Jesuit priests, when I was living in Kyoto, visited
Daitokuji, a Zen Buddhist temple, to learn zazen as perhaps another way to
reach an understanding of God.) If, however, you are a fundamentalist and
cannot accept a different cultural or religious interpretation of God, then
you may have a difficult time correlating your beliefs with the use of mudra
and other mikkyo practices and beliefs in koryu, and perhaps these martial
arts are not for you.

If any of you have seen those Star Wars movies, you will understand what
kinds of power the samurai thought a knowledge of mikkyo may endow them with.
In the recent movie, "The Phantom Menace," Jedi Knights are supposed to be
able to sense other people's thoughts, peer into the future, have a sixth
sense of their surroundings, influence people by the use of their words, or
gesture and send out an invisible force that can send objects flying through
the air. These are similar to attributes that a skilled bugeisha would have,
once he achieves a kind of martial enlightenment and develops his "ki"
energy. Such power comes naturally out of martial training, if done properly,
but only after devout and arduous commitment. I can't say I've seen a real
manifestation of such powers in myself except in my dreams, although I have
heard some of the oddest stories from several usually reputable sources of
some very, very unexplainable powers wielded by martial arts masters in Asia.
Quite naturally, these masters are not the ones you will read about in the
latest issue of "Killer Kuh-rottee-Kick-Boxing-Kung-Fu and Pro Wrestling'
Magazine." They by and large eschew such tacky publicity and continue to
remain somewhat in the shadows. And forget those bizarrre books written by
New Agey aikido-ninja-karate types who claim that they can see "colors" and
sense people's thoughts after one or two years of practice and no study of
mikkyo thought. That's called living one's delusions. Real super-sensory
powers from koryu training are more subtle than that and they obviously take
much, much longer to develop.

Mikkyo uses mudra most often in combination with various rituals, chants and
so on. One common mudra is that of the "knife hand," or shuto. The first two
fingers are extended while the thumb and other fingers are clenched. If you
look closely, you may see this movement subtlely hidden in some koryu kata,
especially by old schools such as the Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto-ryu, or in
statues of divine Buddhist beings. This represents the sword of
enlightenment, which cuts away all delusions. Sometimes the tips of the
extended fingers are grasped in the fist of the other hand. There is a
symbolic meaning for this, derived from mikkyo.



Another common mudra is the kuji no in, or the nine hand signs used in
conjunction with nine words of power that generates spiritual strength for
the user. The two hands weave a series of nine gestures, at the same time you
utter nine words derived from Sanskrit (bonji).

Other than seeing a mikkyo priest or a koryu practitioner perform a mudra,
you may even see it in a cheesy Japanese ninja movie or the like, because in
popular culture, ninja were like magicians in the eyes of common people.

There are tales, even in modern historical times, of some adepts who could
shout (kiai) and knock down birds in flight. Then the mystical kiaijutsu
master could shout again and awaken the birds from their stupor. Ueshiba, it
is said, could dumbfound his attackers, literally disappearing from their
view, by the use of his ki energy. Tai chi chuan masters are supposed to be
able to repel attackers with their spiritual chi energy. Mudra, like these
fantastic powers, are found in many koryu as part of their esoteric nature.

That is why, too, I wince when I see karate students at a tournament who
scream out a nonsensical "ki-yah!" or some sort of odd shout that they made
up on their own. A kiai is different from a kakegoe. A kakegoe is a simple
shout. A kiai is a shout, to be sure, but its older meaning is to "meet"
(-ai) "each other's spiritual energy" (ki-). Each ryu, therefore, had special
kiai that signified their own style's use of spiritual energy as expressed in
a vocal explosion, or kiai. There were only specific sounds, such as "ei,"
"toh," "yah," or so on, that had certain martial meanings in esoteric mikkyo,
which were used in koryu. Kiai, therefore, were like secret mantras to the
koryu; special words of power that should not be used lightly. When you did a
kiai, you were directly attacking your opponent's spirit with words of power
that would literally shock them into defeat. The kiai "yah," for example,
pronounced in a certain way, represented the force of a released arrow (in
Japanese: ya). Your voice was supposed to penetrate the person's spirit like
an arrow. The other kiai had other meanings and were used for specific
movements.

I earlier noted that most modern budo are bereft of mudra and other
esoterica. But I am actually not so sure that they are totally without any
mikkyo influence. Look at the karate kata Kusanku (Kosokun). The opening
movement has sometimes been described to me as a stylized example of how to
break a grip and strike an opponent's kidney area when he tries to bear-hug
you. But in esoteric Shinto, a similar movement, with a hand clap, welcomes
the Sun Goddess. By doing that movement in the direction of the rising sun,
you absorb the sun's positive spiritual energy. Is it possible that there are
other mudra and esoteric movements hidden in other karate kata? Okinawan
karate, after all, was related to ancient Okinawan dance and court rituals,
which themselves incorporated some aspects of Okinawan folk beliefs. I'm not
sure and not even positive that this one example or any other has any real
significance. I leave that up to you, the reader, to figure out.

However, I digress. Besides the basic examples I have described above, I
hesitate to actually describe the specific way some mudra are performed,
because I don't think it's proper for anyone who doesn't know what he's doing
to fool around with them. You should learn them from a proper instructor, a
Buddhist minister, or the like, and not from some silly web site like this
one. And the efficacy is also dependant on whether or not you truly believe
it works.

And let's put it this way, if mudra do really work, it would be like giving a
loaded hand gun to a baby. After all, it wasn't called mikkyo ("secret
teachings") for nothing. Some of the methods were considered too dangerous
for any old fool to learn. And if they don't really work because they are
only superstitious traditions, then at the very least, some idiot is going to
steal those techniques and start making up his/her own mish mash of esoteric
mudra for their karate-gung-fu-jujutsu classes that would embarrass me and
the other more straight-laced martial arts students.

There is a danger here for anyone who is used to taking techniques and then
making up their own "instant" koryu. Although my teacher was quite open about
imparting some of the esoteric methods in my ryu to me, I had a discussion
with a Shingon priest about the abuse of religion and religious ritual in
today's society. He noted that if by chance such rituals truly do have
spiritual signficance, then someone who abuses them will cause very negative
energies to accumulate around him/her. The negative energies may not manifest
themselves in the form of those horror movies, in which a monster appears
from out of the netherworlds. But at the very least, a person's deceptive
actions will eventually come home to roost and affect him in proportion to
the wrong that he has committed. Woe be it to anyone who end up near that
person, because they, too, will suffer from the fallout. Shingon also holds
that unless you are properly trained, the powers that you attempt to channel
may go out of control and consume you, which is why it stresses long years of
priestly training before one can perform such rites.

This danger extends not only to the abuse of mudra and other religious
practices, but also to other aspects of the koryu, including the "stealing"
of ryu techniques without permission, such as kyusho (weak points on the
body), and then declaring it's your own style. --Or making false claims about
your ryu in order to make more money or generate more publicity. Karma has a
way of creeping up on you, whether you're Buddhist or not. In Christianity,
we'd call it divine retribution.

In any case, even if you practice only a modern budo, you should bear in mind
that many of the rituals and practices arose out of older, more esoteric
forms and movements. That being the case, modern budo is therefore more than
just punching and kicking, or seeing who can beat up who. Even with a more
practical, scientific foundation, budo's highest goals were to develop a more
humane individual, not necessarily a better fighter. Its origins lay partly
in a very religious, spiritual world view, in which even the direction you
walked, the steps you took, the way you held your fingers and hand, could
create a ripple in the fabric of the spiritual universe. That's quite a
responsibility, don't you think?



Back to Online Index Page 4



------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1999 by Wayne Muromoto and Tengu Press. All Rights Reserved.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to