I would love to see Sensei Kallenbach's Taiki defense against 3 opponents two of which are attacking him at the same time. One opponent coming in high with a punch or a grab, the other, trying to tackle him from the other side or rear. I bought "Taiki-ken The Essence of Kung-Fu" (That was the title it was released under in the U.S. in '76) back in 1979 when I was 18. Sensei Kallenbach is mentioned in the Preface of that book which I still have That may even be him in some of the photos (I don't know for sure) in the book. No matter what other Martial Art I've studied, I always came back to and had Taiki ken to fall back on. It's a very, very deep art and I've always felt Sawai Sensei, never achieved the recognition he deserved (He probably didn't care). He's right up there with Kano, Funakoshi, Uechi, Miyagi, Oyama, Maeda, & Ueshiba in terms of Martial Contribution to the World, but barely known here in the U.S.
綺麗な姿勢らっしゃいますね。
武術に対して誠実な気風を感じてしまいます。
カレンバッヂ先生は
強くて暖かい人
I would love to see Sensei Kallenbach's Taiki defense against 3 opponents two of which are attacking him at the same time. One opponent coming in high with a punch or a grab, the other, trying to tackle him from the other side or rear. I bought "Taiki-ken The Essence of Kung-Fu" (That was the title it was released under in the U.S. in '76) back in 1979 when I was 18. Sensei Kallenbach is mentioned in the Preface of that book which I still have That may even be him in some of the photos (I don't know for sure) in the book. No matter what other Martial Art I've studied, I always came back to and had Taiki ken to fall back on. It's a very, very deep art and I've always felt Sawai Sensei, never achieved the recognition he deserved (He probably didn't care). He's right up there with Kano, Funakoshi, Uechi, Miyagi, Oyama, Maeda, & Ueshiba in terms of Martial Contribution to the World, but barely known here in the U.S.
meetic pragmatic
This a lot of fantasy...