Danzan Ryu Jujitsu is part of Kajukenbo training this is my first time seeing this martial art and from all the martial knowledge I've accumulated over the years I know Danzan Ryu Jiujitsu is effective. I mean this art uses all the submissions, throws, and takedown that I've seen in MMA and some Traditional martial arts.
@vittoriovedli48195 ай бұрын
Ju Jitsu is obviously effective! It's an ancient martial art.
@Shadowrulzalways3 ай бұрын
Jujutsu period is effective. It’s a battlefield art
@Shadowrulzalways3 ай бұрын
Danzan-ryū Jujutsu uses various koryū styles as a base such as, Yōshin-ryū, Namba-Shoshin Ryū, Iwaga Ryū, Kosogabe Ryū, and of course Kōdōkan Jūdō. Which Jūdō is just modern Jujutsu with a different philosophical motivation. The rest are all koryū styles and make up the majority of Danzan-ryū. Koryū Jujutsu in action looks a lot like catch wrestling.
@outofthebox72 жыл бұрын
The uke is is presented as being the initiator, not just the waiting defender. EXCELLENT.
@nekogammi29433 жыл бұрын
I had this video back in 90s glad to see it still around. Wally jay is there style most famous practitioner
@AlbertRossi92Ай бұрын
Sig Kufferhoff
@niticakiqi40375 ай бұрын
This guy busted out the first Boston crab
@Shadowrulzalways3 ай бұрын
That technique existed in classical Jujutsu long before this style came to be. Jujutsu back then looked a lot like catch wrestling.
@MP-db9sw2 ай бұрын
Tekken fans recognize Giant Swing, too 😃
@SuperColonel913 жыл бұрын
Looks simple and effective
@ken-waidoo61803 ай бұрын
He also was best friends with an aikido master. And learned other arts, while traveling in south east asia.
@bustercrabbe84476 ай бұрын
I so like what I see in these self-defense techniques.
@errolthomas94265 ай бұрын
Were there any Okinawan or Korean Martial Artists who also broke tradition as well by teaching those outside their nationalities?
@TVMADoc6 ай бұрын
My sons have been training in Danzan Ryu under Professor Rebmann (learned from Prof Law who was taught directly by Professor Okazaki) since they were three years old. Danzan Ryu is the real deal, and Professor Okazaki was an amazing founder. In fact, my avatar is a picture of their promotion at their dojo.
@TVMADoc6 ай бұрын
Professor Rebmann trains local law enforcement, so this isn't all 'show' or 'only when wearing a gi'. These techniques work against resisting opponents and people in street clothes, at least when taught correctly.
@hottmancanelas17972 жыл бұрын
Great Martial Art. It’s Japanese *Jujitsu/Judo with Hawaiian influence of Lua *Bone breaking/Joint manipulation Art. The Hand technique’s are influenced by the Filipino Knife hand, as well with stick part of the art from KALI. I trained in this Art for two years & I learned a lot from its vast history.
@jakerau88044 ай бұрын
My sister moved to Hawaii years back any time I visit island they make fun and claim it bullshido I'm from Central California and they didn't like being tossed around
@Shadowrulzalways3 ай бұрын
Yep. Classical Jujutsu mixed with Judo and other grappling techniques.
@surfingonmars8979 Жыл бұрын
YOW…that Soto mono harai is deadly…. Ouch….. those guys are falling on tatami mats, not modern soft foam….. DOUBLE OUCH.
@ken-waidoo61803 ай бұрын
Governor Burns wife had polio, and was pregnant. He massaged her to health, and saved their son. He had hot palms.
@surfingonmars8979 Жыл бұрын
Practiced DZR for many years. A better group of teachers I have never encountered in any field: philosophy, law, the arts. Ohana is the underlying notion. That says it all…
@raulrodriguez41738 ай бұрын
Ilustrativo y gracias por compartir . 😅😊😅😊
@pausetapest.v83029 ай бұрын
Nice documentary but I do have a question what exactly did the Chinese master teach him because this looks More like jiujitsu which I thought was Japanese? However these men are working 😮
@vittoriovedli48195 ай бұрын
It's not just "it looks more like Ju Jitsu". It is, Ju Jitsu! 😉
@vittoriovedli48195 ай бұрын
Here we can see, how Judo technically derives from Ju Jitsu.
@Shadowrulzalways3 ай бұрын
Judo derives from 12 different koryu styles of Jujutsu. Judo is just modern Jujutsu with a different philosophical motivation.
@vittoriovedli48193 ай бұрын
@@Shadowrulzalways sure, I know! Fundamental, are the philosophical principles that inspire Judo.
@bongdonkey Жыл бұрын
Thanks for videos man. Are you Hawaiian? You pronounced Hawaii like a local. lol! Saluto
@rashidmartialarts9513 Жыл бұрын
The video was produced by a Hawaiian, Bernie Lau. That's not me lol. You can look him up on KZbin
@bongdonkey Жыл бұрын
@@rashidmartialarts9513 lol! Thanks man
@margaretpetersen927510 ай бұрын
❤
@josezelaya81123 жыл бұрын
👍
@a-boss22362 жыл бұрын
대한민국과 관련된 무술 같다
@hottmancanelas17972 жыл бұрын
Their all connected some how🤓
@jujitsuman99342 жыл бұрын
Okazaki was Japanese and studied many forms of Ju-Jitsu while living and traveling through Japan. He also studied Judo under Kano.
@debraco77483 жыл бұрын
That's some interesting "history", and i use that term loosely. Okazaki was preceded in the teaching of round eyes by yamashita, ito, ono, maeda, tani, uyenshi, tomita and miyake, just to name a few. All were technically superior to okazaki.
@rashidmartialarts95133 жыл бұрын
Just curious, how were they superior to okazaki ?
@debraco77483 жыл бұрын
@@rashidmartialarts9513 just curious? The judoka mentioned were hand picked by Kano to teach the president of the United States. The handa jiujitsu guys(tani, miyake, uyenishi) fought thousands of high profile challenge matches across the globe. And how about addressing the blatant bullshit of the breaking the sacred rule of teaching round eyes. If there’s anything you should be curious about, it’s that. Another thing about superiority, look what they produced, in one of history’s little ironies, the handa guys produced the budokwai, one of the premiere judo academies in the world, while Okazaki produced a culture of odd ducks whose entire system is based on larping.
@jarrekhurdle10412 жыл бұрын
@@debraco7748 That's strange to hear because many prominent martial artist had tremendous respect for Okazaki. He was one of the first jujitsuka to beat a boxer in the ring. He was a big proponent of cross training and many of his students also trained with James Mitose. Okazaki started the Kodenkan because he didn't like how closed minded the Kodokan was about some of its training methodologies. Okazaki took what worked and said the art should be constantly evolving. DZR incorporates catch wrestling, boxing, and Filipino martial arts in addition to the judo and jujitsu curriculum. Very similar to how Gene Labelle and Erik Paulson train. I mean Kano's guys in America were beat by catch wrestlers and Glima practitioners all the time. Okazaki's school was known for accepting challenge matches regularly and if they were defeated they would incorporate the techniques instead of make excuses. Okazaki also implemented healing arts in his system. DZR was the style Wally Jay was a black belt in when he taught Bruce Lee the basics of Grappling. Sacramento's Judo team still learns DZR as the self defense component of their sport as do many other Judoka on the West coast in particular thanks to the National Judo coach at the time Willy Cahill because he was a black belt in DZR just like the coach of the Junior National Team Denise Gonzales. DZR also has a demonstration component because back then just like now, a lot of martial artists got involved with pro wrestling which is why some of the DZR techniques are flashy and impractical, but people like to see them performed and it was just another way to make a living. Have you ever tried DZR from a respected instructor? I bet you would like it more than you think.
@debraco77482 жыл бұрын
@@jarrekhurdle1041 This is all nonsense from an obvious larper in a danzan ryu daze. 1) "He was one of the first jujitsuka to beat a boxer in the ring." Not even close, nowhere even near close, idiocy spouted to hear your brain rattle. The sheer stupidity is hazardous to the health of anyone unfortunate enough to read it. I'm aware of okazaki losing to a ymca level boxer, but don't recall him winning one. Anything is possible, i've been researching this kind of thing for over 40 years so maybe this illustrious win of okazaki's has slipped my mind. Regardless, your statement is still pure bullshit. Just one example, Kan Inoue defeated Gentleman Jim Corbett in 1900. You might want to look corbett up, he was kind of important in relation to the history of boxing. There were hundreds of matches prior to okazaki, who, as i mentioned, LOST. Almost all your other "facts" are equally retarded and don't even warrant serious discussion. You're in a cult, kid. And the messiah not only had feet of clay, his entire body consisted of it. Edit to add: I just recalled the boxer that KTFO'd Okazaki was kid morris, the match was held in hilo.
@debraco77484 ай бұрын
@@jarrekhurdle1041 It's not strange if you have any knowledge of the history related to the martial arts. Okazaki had only 1 verifiable match against a boxer and got beat like a rug, he never came back for another try. The boxer that beat him was a club level fighter fighting under the name kid morris. LOL at kano's guys being beat lots of times, tomita lost to bull tipton who was much bigger and younger, ono lost a NHB match to probably the greatest legitimate wrestler the states had ever produced up to that time, charley olsen, who had killed at least two opponents. George Bothner beat Higashi, but higashi wasn't a kodakan guy, bothner also defeated Taro miyake of the handa jiujitsu dojo but this was a work with miyake doing the honors for an over the hill bothner. If you doubt anything i say, it's verifiable by using the library of congress chronicling america website