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Please note that all Zen Judo Family members will need to renew Club membership at the beginning of September. The cost of renewal for 2008/09 will be £12 (includes mat insurance) for all grades (yellow belt and above), white belts will need to pay mat insurance of £3 (the remainder of the membership will be due on grading to Yellow belt). All members will need to supply there membership cards with the membership fee. BZJFA members will have separate arrangments which will be notified to you by Shihan Gordon Lawson (British Zen Judo Family Association).
The next ZJF gradings to Green, Blue and Brown belt, will be held at Petersfield on Sunday 16th November (for those eligible).
(webmaster) admin at zenjudo dot co dot uk
Martial Arts Courses
Courses for 2008
BZJFA Radcliffe on Trent (Nottingham) Christmas Budo Course 2008 Saturday 29th and Sunday 30th November
Countdown To The Course
The cut off date to book your place will be the 20th November
Please remember last year I had to disappoint some students as we were fully booked
For more information on the BZJFA courses click on the logo above.
Courses for 2009
**** UPDATED ****
Universal Budo Association (UBA) Friday 17th to Sunday 19th April Venue Ladram Bay, Otterton, Devon. (UK) Caravans will be available for four nights from Wednesday 15th to Sunday 19th April. For more details contact Sensei John Goldman 7th Dan President UBA email johngoldman@devonjudocentres.co.uk
ZJF/BZJFA Spring Martial Arts Course 2009 Saturday 2nd and Sunday 3rd May (May Bank Holiday Weekend),
Venue - Bognor Regis Zen Judo Club, Bognor Regis, West Sussex.
Do not undermine your worth by comparing yourself with others.
It is because we are different that each of us is special.
Do not set your goals by what other people deem important.
Only you know what is best for you.
Do not take for granted the things closest to your heart.
Cling to them as you would your life, for without them, life is meaningless.
Do not let your life slip through your fingers by living in the past nor for the future.
By living your life one day at a time, you live all the days of your life.
Do not give up when you have something to give.
Nothing is really over until the moment you stop trying.
It is fragile thread that binds us to each other.
Do not be afraid to encounter risks.
It is by taking chances that we learn how to be brave.
Do not shut love out of your life by saying it is impossible to find.
The quickest way to receive love is to give love.
The fastest way to lose love is to hold it to tightly.
Do not dismiss your dreams.
To be without dreams is to be without hope.
To be without hope is to be without purpose.
Do not run through life so fast that you forget not only where you have been but also where you are going.
Life is not a race but a journey to be savoured each step of the way.
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Judo Tournament
After watching a Judo tournament, Kano reportedly gathered the participants together and told them:
You fought like young bulls locking horns; there was nothing refined or dignified about any of the techniques I witnessed today. I never taught anyone to do Kodokan Judo like that. If all you can think about is winning through brute strength, that will be the end of Kodokan Judo.
ZJF Promotions - Petersfield and Bognor Zen Judo Clubs
Promotions for Petersfield and Bognor Zen Judo Clubs
The following successfully graded at Petersfield on Sunday 16th November 2008.
Martin Robertson 3rd Dan Black Belt (Bognor Regis Zen Judo Club)
Sharna Robertson 2nd Dan Black Belt (Bognor Regis Zen Judo Club)
William Johnson 2nd Dan Black Belt (Petersfield Zen Judo Club)
Sarah Gorvin 3rd Kyu Green Belt (Petersfield Zen Judo Club)
(from left to right)
Martin Robertson 3rd Dan, Sharna Robertson 2nd Dan, William Johnson 2nd Dan
With Shihan Phil Watts 6th Dan ZJF who presented them with there grades and certificates.
Sarah with her grader Sensei Tracy Collins 4th Dan and uke Chris who stepped in to help at short notice.
Congratulations to everyone.
Posted by sensei on Monday, November 17, 2008 @ 17:29:17 UTC (21 reads) (comments? | Score: 0)
UKCC - Latest From John Goldman 7th Nov. 2008
UKCC Coaching Standards Group Report
Good morning to you all,
Despite being told by sports coach UK that their meeting with the Chairman of the Coaching Standards Group was imminent, I have had no further communication.
Please see the attached letter that I have sent to Martin Crick at sports coach UK.
Good wishes,
John Goldman
SAVE INDEPENDENT JUDO
A campaign to maintain the rights of independent judo groups
In October you wrote to tell me that the Coaching Standards Group had met on September 12 to discuss principles of access to UKCC and that you were expecting to meet with the chairman of the group very shortly to hear his report.
There are two main issues that I had asked be looked at;
(1) Access to UKCC judo courses for non BJA members
(2) The mapping over of (assimilation process) non-BJA judo coach awards to UKCC.
For nine months non-BJA judo people have been denied equal access rights to the national UKCC award. The BJA stipulate that non-BJA people have to either join the BJA or be tested by the BJA to gain a certificate of grade equivalence.
You say the BJA argue that they have imposed these restrictions largely on health and safety grounds.
Not only is this is discriminatory, it is sheer nonsense and does not hold water.
The BJA is a mess. Earlier this year, as part of their "technical renaissance", the BJA revised their grading syllabus.
Prior to the new syllabus being introduced this spring, technical requirements for BJA senior grades were abysmal. The technical requirements for senior BJA Blue and Brown belts (now the entry levels for UKCC Levels 1 and 2 respectively) were less than those required for a Junior Orange Belt in the vast majority of non-BJA organisations. This means existing BJA Blue and Brown Belts, with very limited knowledge, are openly accepted as candidates to UKCC courses just because they belong to the BJA. In contrast, those outside the BJA, regardless of whether they are a Blue or Brown Belt or a Black Belt, as in my case a 7th Dan with forty five years experience in judo, has to take a test to gain a Blue or Brown before they can apply to take part in a course. Its all double standards isn’t it.
Whereas the new BJA syllabus is far more comprehensive than the previous BJA syllabus, it includes techniques that are unheard of in Japan and the rest of the judo world! The BJA have taken it upon themselves to invent names for a number of movements used in contest. Not only do these have no or little meaning to non-BJA people but those within the BJA are having to decipher what they are and subsequently learn how to do them.
Another change to the BJA promotion system, is the exclusion of contest from the syllabus. The BJA, have dropped the contest requirements from their Kyu grade (under Black Belt) promotion syllabus.
Since the BJA had, for many years, been critical of non-BJA organisations who put a lesser emphasis on contest and the winning of medals than the BJA did, the rational behind the omission of contest is incomprehensible.
The fact is that the vast majority of non-BJA organisations have always included, and continue to include, competitive elements in their Kyu grade syllabus as part of their all round balanced development programmes.
Having taken contest out of the syllabus, the BJA introduced Kata. A good and sound move. Kata is acknowledged world wide as the heart of judo, fundamental to judo practice and development. Kata is an aspect of judo that the vast majority of non-BJA organisation have always practised and continue to practise as an essential part of judo practice and development.
Now, just six months on, the BJA have dropped Kata as a compulsory component of grading examination! Kata is only required for promotions to 3rd Dan and above! It beggars belief and reason.
Does the Coaching Standards Group monitor what the BJA does?
The UKCC is a national award. Our demands our simple.
Non-BJA judo people wishing to gain a judo UKCC must be given right of access to the award without restrictions, and on equal terms as those who are members of the BJA.
Existing qualified non-BJA coaches must be afforded the same rights, and on equal terms as BJA coaches, in the mapping over of their existing qualifications to the UKCC award.
We were told by the previous Minister for Sport that details of access to UKCC for non-BJA judo people would be included in the final submissions for endorsement of the judo UKCC to sports coach UK.
Those details, pre-requisites, that have belatedly been included, are unacceptable.
When can we expect to hear of the Coaching Standards Group report on principles of access to UKCC?
Good wishes,
John Goldman
Campaign Leader
Copies:
Rt Hon Gerry Sutcliffe
Tom Hibbert MBE
Angela Browning MP
Roger Knapman MEP
Andy Davies
Paul Clifton
Gordon Lawson
Jim Lawson
Others
Posted by sensei on Sunday, November 09, 2008 @ 18:22:27 UTC (56 reads) (Read More... | 6229 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
St. Dominics Judo Club - Dan Grade Promotions
Congratulations to Chris and Andy Lambourn of the St. Dominic Judo Club, Woodley, Reading (UK). On 22nd October they made the long trip up to the Radcliffe Judo Club in Nottingham, to be graded by Shihan Gordon Lawson. Both Instructors gained 3rd Dan Black Belts in the British Zen Judo Family Association (BZJFA).
Check out the revised Club details on the Clubs Page.
Posted by sensei on Saturday, November 01, 2008 @ 19:14:07 UTC (100 reads) (comments? | Score: 0)
New Website - Sensei Keith Harby
What is Self Defence?
Self-defence is the act of defending ones person against attack by the use of physical force.
"In order for a person to defend themselves properly against a variety of attacks, it is necessary to analyze the various types of attacks, and the techniques available to defend against them. Also important, is to know the strengths and weaknesses of these different techniques, as well as your own limitations.
Self-defence, just like the martial arts, should be learned in a progressive manner. The very simplest techniques are learned first, then later once more proficiency is gained, more advanced techniques are taught. The defenses against the most simple of attacks are learned first and then the more difficult attacks later on. One does not learn to run before they walk, neither should one learn attacks against knife attacks before the student has gained proficiency in defending against unarmed attacks. You will find that in many instances the very same principles apply against a grabbing attack can be used in defending against a punch. In other words, the techniques and principles learned at the very beginning stages make up the building blocks that apply to more difficult attacks."
Posted by sensei on Thursday, October 30, 2008 @ 11:49:18 UTC (100 reads) (comments? | Score: 0)
Visit to Kenshindoryu Judo / Jujitsu Club
I have just returned from one of my wife's "getting away from it all" long weekends. This traditionally involves a stay in a freezing cold caravan and walking around various gardens and shops. This time it just happened to be in close proximity to Sensei Jim Darts Kenshindoryu Club in Northampton.
So early Saturday morning we traveled down to his club in Roade, about 20 minutes south of Northampton and junction 15A on the M1. The morning started with Jujitsu for which I donned the traditional white belt as I get to go on a Jujitsu mat about once a year, I lasted longer that usual and about half way through the session managed to put my jaw in the way of Sensei's knee (ouch!!!). The remainder of the lesson in ground fighting passed off without further mishap.
After a quick break we went back on for a Judo session, for which I dug out my black belt. Jim's club teaches Combat Judo which is based on the Zen Judo Syllabus, with some changes to the order of the throws and for higher grades, atemi (strikes) and other techniques are added. As it was half term for the local schools in the UK, the class was smaller than normal, so the opportunity was taken to run the new green belts through some of there new throws and sutemi waza.
The session finished with some light randori. After putting the mats away we retired to the local village Pub for food, drink and conversation.
I would like to thank Jim and his Club for an enjoyable morning and making Yvonne and myself welcome.
John
(webmaster)
Posted by sensei on Tuesday, October 28, 2008 @ 16:26:22 UTC (121 reads) (comments? | Score: 0)