"In Okinawa, a miraculous and mysterious martial art has come down to us from the past. It is said that one who masters it's techniques can defend himself readily without resort to weapons and can perform remarkable feats - the breaking of several thick boards with his fist or ceiling panels of a room with a kick. With his Shuto ("sword hand") he can kill a bull with a single stroke. He can pierce the flank of a horse with his open hand. He can cross a room grasping the beams of a ceiling with his fingers. He can crush a green bamboo stalk with his bare hands, shear a hemp rope with a twist, or gouge soft rock with his hands.
Some consider these aspects of this miraculous and mysterious martial art to be the essence of Karate-Do. But such feats are a small part of karate, playing a role analogous to the straw cutting test of Kendo (Japanes fencing), and it is erroneous to think that there is no more to Karate-Do than this. In fact, true Karate-Do places weight on spiritual rather than physical matters, as we shall discuss. True Karate-Do is this, that in daily life, one's mind and body be trained and developed in a spirit of humility and that in critical times one be devoted utterly to the cause of justice."
Gichin Funakoshi
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