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Takashi Kushida was born in Japan on May 2, 1935. He began his study of Aikido under Sensei Gozo Shioda, an early student of Aikido founder Morihei Ueshiba, at the age of 18. After less than a year of regular training, he was chosen to become an uchi-deshi - a full-time apprentice student - and spent the next ten years living and training in the Yoshinkan Dojo (training hall) in Tokyo. Following this period of intense training and instruction, Kushida was made Senior Assistant Instructor at the Yoshinkan. Between 1963 and 1973 he served as Aikido teacher to the Japanese Air Force, the Tokyo Riot Control Police, and National Railway Police. He also accompanied Shioda Sensei to demonstrations in New Zealand and Hawaii as well as teaching at various universities, private companies, and at the Yoshinkan. In 1973, Kushida Sensei traveled to the United States at the invitation of a small group of American Aikido enthusiasts in the Detroit, Mich. area. Originally scheduled to visit only a few months, the response to his teaching and the growing level of interest in Aikido convinced him to send for his family and stay in the U.S. to teach. In 1981, he was asked to give a demonstration for the President's Council on Physical Fitness in Washington, D.C. In 1991, Kushida Sensei established his own school of Aikido, adopting the name "Aikido Yoshokai." The Yoshokai school stresses the philosophical and scientific principles behind Aikido-in particular, Kushida Sensei's emphasis on harmony and conflict resolution as the ultimate goal of Aikido practice. In the past 30 years Kushida Sensei has introduced thousands of men and women across America to Aikido. The non-profit Aikido Yoshokai Association of North American (AYANA) currently sanctions over 50 American instructors throughout the U.S. Today, Kushida Sensei teaches classes at the Genyokan Dojo, AYANA's headquarters facility, located near his home in Ann Arbor, Mich. At the Genyokan, Kushida Sensei also conducts formal classes in Genbu Sotojutsu, a 200-year-old sword method once taught only to members of the Kushida family in Japan. As an eighth-degree black belt - a recognized expert - and sixth generation master of Genbu Sotojutsu, Kushida Sensei has devoted his entire adult life to the study of Budo - the way of the samurai. Outside of Japan, it is rare for students to receive the level of Budo instruction he has brought to America. |
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