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- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Path: sparky!uunet!interlan.InterLan.COM!eclipse.InterLan.COM!urbin
- From: urbin@interlan.interlan.com (Mark Urbin)
- Subject: Re: Kenpo
- Message-ID: <urbin.152.725059097@interlan.interlan.com>
- Lines: 48
- Sender: news@Interlan.com
- Organization: Racal-Datacom
- References: <BzDDE4.B1K@world.std.com> <12234@cayman.COM>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 21:18:17 GMT
-
- In article <12234@cayman.COM> mccoy@cayman.com (Michael McCoy) writes:
- >In <BzDDE4.B1K@world.std.com>, eclipse@world.std.com (Mark Urbin) writes:
- >>Kempo (or kenpo, it's an accent thing. How you pronouce
- >>depends on what part of Japan you are from) is the
- >>Japanese translation of chau fa (sp!). Roughly in English,
- >>it means `Fist Law'. It's a generic term for a striking
- >>based martial art.
- >Hmmm... I was under the impression that Kempo and Kenpo were very
- >distinct styles.
- Shotokan & Goju are very distinct styles, yet both are Karate-do. There
- are a lot of different Kem/npo styles out there.
-
- >I studied Kempo briefly while I was in college (I was on
- >vacation, and couldn't find a Shotokan school near my house) -- I
- >remember being distinctly underwhelmed by the Sanchin stances and
- >emphasis on circular blocks and movements (and lack of sparring).
- Some Kem/npo styles have a heavy Chinese influnce. Kara-ho Kenpo is a
- good example. Some instructors perfer a strong background in basics,
- learned through *much* drilling, rather than reactions learned through
- basics. This is an instructor thing as much as style (ryu) thing.
-
- >A couple of years later, I started studying Kenpo in Newton, Mass. The
- >style there was very linear, with a lot of emphasis on straight punches
- >and blocks and more training in kicking. The instructor emphasized we were
- >studying keNpo, not keMpo -- white belts were required to spell it as part
- >of the first test. So.... are the two styles variations on a theme, or are
- >they really different styles? (Or is kenpo/kempo so generic that it covers
- >almost any style?)
- I'll venture a guess that your instructor wanted to make sure that he
- wasn't confused with an organization that is very popular in the Boston area
- that teaches keMpo. I've seen keNpo & keMpo schools in the Boston area.
- Some teach very different styles and others just changed the name when they
- broke off from the parent organization.
- In closing, kempo/kenpo is pretty generic these days.
-
-
-
- >
- >================================================
- >You are not here to verify,
- >Instruct yourself or inform curiousity
- >Or carry report. You are here to kneel
- >Where prayer has been valid.
- Mark Urbin Racal-Datacom Boxborough, MA urbin@interlan.interlan.com
- These opinions are mine. No one else will admit to them.
- It was a typical net.exercise -- a screaming mob pounding on a greasy spot
- on the pavement, where used to lie the carcass of a dead horse.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-