Headerbackground
item3
item3 About Aikido > Short History item3
item3
Copyright
Any Questions? please email us
emailimage
Shelledging1a1

AIKI KAI (AUSTRALIA)

National Aikido Association of Australia

Established in 1965 under direct authorisation of the Aikido founder - Ueshiba Morihei


45 years of Aikido
Instruction in Australia
1965 - 2010


Membership Form
 

.
2010 - 2011
Membership / studentship
For new members & if
an authorisation is required.

 
PDF


Renew Membership Online


Click here if you want to
renew your membership
and you don't require any special authorisations.
 
Renew Membership
Online

 


Internal
Quick Links

FreeCounter


External
Links

FreeCounter

Seiichi Sugano, 8th Dan Shihan

Sugano Sensei was born in 1939 in Otaru, Hokkaido and entered Hombu Dojo in 1957. He had been studying judo for six years when he read about Aikido in a magazine and went to Hombu Dojo to begin his training. After about a year, he entered the uchi deshi program.

“I wanted to be able to pursue Aikido exclusively,” he remembers. That period was very intense for Sugano; he was completely focused on training and on O Sensei. “To me,” he recalls, “O Sensei was the zenith. My training was geared entirely to striving toward that peak.”

Beginning in the early 1960s, Sugano Sensei began accompanying Yamada Sensei to the American Army bases to teach American soldiers Aikido. “Going to those military bases was a lot of fun because it was like suddenly walking into the U.S. It was hard to believe you were still in Japan,” he recalls. Yamada Sensei also invited the younger Sugano to spend time at his family’s home, which was near the beach.

Despite his proximity to many of the legendary masters of Aikido teaching at Hombu Dojo in the late 1950s and early 1960s, “I wasn’t really conscious of the high-level teachers around me,” Sugano says. But O Sensei made an indelible impression. “The first time I saw him, he appeared to me as a religious master or leader rather than a martial artist. In his movement there was some energy moving but not visible, so you feel there’s nothing there, yet you feel this sort of strong core of steel. Yes, I thought of him very much more like a religious leader. He expressed himself with the physical form, but it was a quite a different thing when he was throwing each of us.”

Although Sugano Sensei points out that none of O Sensei’s students adopted the exact religion (Omoto Kyo, a sort of mystical Shinto) O Sensei so strongly believed in, it was through his spiritual and religious beliefs that O Sensei transmitted Aikido. His approach changed Aikido from a traditional martial art to something new, according to Sugano Sensei. “I think Aikido is so unique because O Sensei broke with so-called traditional martial arts concepts. As I studied Aikido, I tried to always get back to that point. It's not just how you do techniques. Generally in the martial arts, there is a system of fighting technique, but he broke with that concept, and that to me is the most important part.

“Partly I think he made me more aware that Aikido was something I had to continue to search for. He didn’t provide any system; he had some system so that you’re always following up, but he wasn’t providing it. The individual person had to search for himself. “Maybe what one person wants, another doesn’t. For me that could be the influence I got from him. Even where we’re teaching technically no one is just like him. He was a unique person so no one could really copy him. So, perhaps the biggest influence from him is probably to make each person free to search for something individually.” Sugano’s own path has led him to live and teach in different parts of the world. In 1965, he moved to Australia, staying for thirteen years and establishing a strong base of Aikido throughout Australia. He then he moved to Belgium,and began teaching throughout Europe before going to New York City. He has studied target shooting, fencing, zazen, yoga, and graduated from acupuncture college while living in Australia. More recently, he has begun studying drawing.

In 2003, he lost his left leg below the knee to a bacterial infection. However, he has not let this change his approach to his life, and like his old friend and colleague, Yamada Sensei, Sugano Sensei continues to travel the world, teaching Aikido.

UehibaSuganobanner