Kyudo came to the United States from
Japan in the early years of the twentieth century, reaching Los
Angeles as early as 1908 with scattered individuals practicing around
the city and the beginnings of a group called the Rafu (the local
Japanese pronunciation of “L.A.”) Kyudo Kai. As early
as 1916, Mr. Suda Chokei had founded the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai,
and the group practiced together regularly. From 1920 to 1928, Mr.
Miwa Tanechiko taught the Heike style of archery. Students met at
a dojo located on what was then Jackson Street in Little Tokyo,
near the intersection of San Pedro and First Streets. A second dojo
was located in Boyle Heights on St. Louis Street, near Hollenbeck
Park. Vintage photographs and a collection of artifacts from the
first dojo survive to this day.
World War II caused a grave and decades-long disruption in the
practice of kyudo in Los Angeles. Because kyudo was considered a
martial art, bows and arrows used by practitioners were seized as
weapons by the federal government, and those that escaped confiscation
were either burned or buried by their fearful owners. The Jackson
Street martial arts center was closed and eventually demolished,
and for the duration of the war, Japanese-Americans were relocated
to internment camps. After the war, individuals resumed their practice
in isolation without the help and support of an instructor, and
there was no official kyudo dojo in Los Angeles for over thirty
years. .
In 1973, Rev. Koen Mishima, a kyudo practitioner of many years'
standing, arrived in Los Angeles from Japan to minister at the Higashi
Honganji Buddhist Temple. He practiced kyudo in the temple's basement
by himself for a long time; one day, he was photographed as he was
practicing. Iwao Iwata saw that photograph displayed at an exhibition,
and he became Mishima-sensei's first student. Eventually the two
of them were joined by Rev. Hirokazu Kosaka Sensei,
and an American man named Mike Stanley.
In 1975, Mishima-sensei and Kosaka-sensei officially reinstated
the old Los Angeles Kyudo Kai, and weekly taught a growing number
of students in a variety of locations: from 1973–1978, at
the Higashi Honganji Temple; from 1978–1981 in the basement
of Koyasan Temple in Little Tokyo; from 1982–1992, in the
beautiful wood-paneled church hall of the Nichiren Temple in East
Los Angeles, at the corner of Fourth Street and Saratoga; from 1993–1999,
in the Rafu Chuo Gakuen Community Hall on Saratoga. From 2000 to
the present, the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai has met with the Nanka Kyudo
Kai at the Pasadena Japanese Cultural Institute.
The Nanka Kyudo Kai was formed by Rick Beal with permission
from Kosaka-sensei to represent the growth of their group beyond
Los Angeles to include all of Southern California. Nanka
is the word used by the local Japanese Community to mean "Southern
California."
Instructors of the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai (1973–Present)
Rev. Koen Mishima
Rev. Koen Mishima was born and raised in Takayama, Japan. His father
was a Buddhist priest, with his own temple and congregation, and
all three of his sons became Buddhist priests and kyudo practitioners.
When their father died, according to custom, the eldest son inherited
the temple; Mishima-sensei immigrated to Los Angeles in 1973 and
began his ministry with the Higashi Honganji Temple.
In his youth, Mishima-sensei was taught kyudo by two teachers.
One of these followed the Honda and the Ogasawara styles, and the
other taught a style called Muyo Shingetsu Ryu. Mishima-sensei did
not at that time embrace either of these disciplines entirely, but
rather took elements of each and incorporated them into his own
practice, which became a blend of his teachers' styles and which
became the style practiced by the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai from 1975
until 1995.
In 1988, Mishima-sensei immigrated to Australia and lived in Brisbane
for eight years, which provided him the first opportunity in many
years to think deeply about what he was looking for in kyudo. During
this time he built a temple and a kyudo dojo on his own property,
and he practiced with a growing number of students in what he called
the Brisbane Kyudo Kai.
In 1990 on a visit to Japan, he met with his old teacher, Master
Sagino of the Muyo Shingetsu Ryu, and attended a kyudo seminar that
his master was giving. When the master stood in front of and helped
him open the bow, imbuing it with his spirit and experience (as
is the custom that style), Mishima-sensei felt he experienced enlightenment
in his kyudo. Abandoning the Japan Kyudo Federation because of its
focus on sport as opposed to spiritual discipline, he began his
commitment to Master Sagino and his master's school of kyudo.
In 1995 Mishima-sensei returned to Los Angeles for a visit, and
persuaded Kosaka-sensei to change Los Angeles dojo to his new style.
For the next five years, all members of the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai
practiced Muyo Shingetsu Ryu exclusively, and this style is still
practiced by the senior members.
In 1996 Mishima-sensei moved back to Japan, settling in the city
of Nigata. He was adopted as a son by the temple that he inherited
through his second marriage, and consequently he has changed his
last name to "Hosagawa." He has built a dojo on the temple
grounds, and once again teaches kyudo, always in the Muyo Shingetsu
Ryu form.
Mishima-sensei taught kyudo continuously throughout these years
until he emigrated to Australia in 1988. At that time, Kosaka-sensei
took over the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai.
Mr. Hirokazu Kosaka Sensei
Mr. Hirokazu Kosaka was born in Wakayama, in the south of Japan.
Wakayama is located only a few miles from the town of Tanabe, the
city in which aikido was founded, and where kyudo is still zealously
practiced today. It was in this Mecca of martial arts that the young
Kosaka-sensei grew to understand and appreciate the many different
aspects of the bushido ("The Way of the Warrior").
The form of kyudo practiced by members of the Kosaka Family was
Kishu-Chikurin-Ha of the Heike-Ryu from; the young Hirokazu Kosaka
was, however more fond of the ceremonial from of Ogaswara-ryu, and
so spent much of his time learning this form.
Kosaka-sensei is the fourth generation of his family to come to
America. His great-grandfather came to Seattle in 1890, his grandfather
in 1910, and his mother came to Tacoma in 1921. In 1958, when he
was ten years old, Kosaka-sensei came to study English in Los Angeles
for a year, and then returned again in 1967 to attend the Chouinard
Art Institute. In 1970, he returned to Japan and entered a monastery,
where he became a Buddhist priest; and in 1975 he once again returned
to Los Angeles to minister at the Koyasan Temple in Little Tokyo.
There were only a few young Japanese priests in the area at the
time, and they were all well acquainted with each other. One day,
Kosaka-sensei was invited by Mishima-sensei to practice kyudo, and
this invitation began a long relationship during which they developed
a deep bond of friendship and a common kyudo ideal, and they spent
much time in discussion of how to teach kyudo to westerners.
From the time that Mishima-sensei moved to Australia in 1988, Kosaka-sensei
has been the head of the Los Angeles kyudo Kai. He is also a multi-media
artist, and as the Exhibitions Director of the JACCC-Japanese American
Community Cultural Center he is very involved with the cultural
life of the Little Tokyo community. As a consequence, in recent
years he has had very little time to devote to teaching and managing
the Los Angeles Kyudo Kai, and has given his senior student, Rick
Beal, permission to teach kyudo.
Rick Beal
Rick Beal began training in Japanese Budo at a young age in 1966.
But his real revelation came in the early 80’s with his sword
teacher Hirotaka Okubo (Okubo-sensei). Okubo-sensei had studied
kyudo with Kosaka-sensei and Mishima-sensei in Los Angeles; so Okubo-sensei
incorporated the basic movements of kyudo into his warm up exercises
for the sword classes. When asked why, Okubo-sensei replied, “If
you lay down your sword and practice kyudo for ten years, then pick
up the sword again, your sword will also be ten years better. No
other martial art will do that, only kyudo.”
Prior to meeting Okubo-sensei, Rick had owned and operated a small
karate/kobudo school. Okubo-sensei and insisted that if Rick wanted
to train with him, he must close his school. Rick closed the school
and traveled around the area to find places for each of his senior
students to train. One of those students (one of Rick’s top
students) couldn’t find any other instructor he wanted to
train with, or any other art that he would rather study. So Rick
took him to meet Okubo-sensei in hopes that they could train together.
The student had no interest in the sword, and really didn’t
bond with Okubo-sensei; but upon seeing the kyudo warm up he exclaimed,
“What is that? I want to do that!”
Okubo-sensei wrote a letter of introduction for the young man to
Mishima-sensei and sent him to the Higashi Hongwanji temple to begin
kyudo. Being one of Rick’s previous karate students, he asked
Rick to come along for moral support.
Rick came and the two of them were told to sit down and watch (it
was customary at that time in the class to have prospective students
watch for three classes before they could begin instruction). But
for some reason, Mishima-sensei approached them and asked them to
join the other beginning students that he was teaching to walk.
Although Rick’s friend stood up immediately, Rick explained
that he had no interest in training in kyudo, but he had only come
to offer support to his friend. Mishima-sensei insisted that Rick
should also train, but Rick demurred, saying that he did not want
to waste the-sensei’s time and that he would only be there
for one day and then be gone. Mishima-sensei said, “One day
of practice is one day of practice.” Rick practiced with the
group that day, and has practiced with them ever since.