פּראָפעסאָר יאַמאַשיטאַ קומט צו אַמעריקע אין 1902

סאַם הילל, אַ Seattle קאָמערסאַנט, געבראכט פּראַפעסער יאָושיאַקי יאַמאַשיטאַ צו די פאַרייניקטע שטאַטן אין 1902. פּראָפעסאָר יאַמאַשיטאַ בדעה צו העלפן פאַרשפּרייטן דר. דזשיגאָראָ קאַנאָ ס לעפיערעך נייַ מאַרשאַל קונסט פון דזשודאָ. אַקאַמפּאַניינג פּראַפעסער יאַמאַשיטאַ איז זיין תּלמיד מיצויאָ מאַעדאַ. מאַעדאַ וואָלט גיין אויף צו לערנען קאַרלאָס גראַסיע אין Brazil. The Gracies modified the techniques into the art of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

פּראָפעסאָר-יאַמאַשיטאַ

Professor Yoshiaki Yamashita from the Washington Times in 1905

Over the next several years, Professor Yamashita gave private demonstrations and taught student throughout the United States. Professor Yamashita was reluctant to give public demonstrations. Already in his mid 40s, the 5’03” און 135 pound Yamashita had to worry about being defeated by a less skilled but younger and stronger opponent. Yamashita did not want to take any action that would bring his art into question.

Professor Yamashita gave a number of private demonstrations that were by invitation only. The success of the Seattle demonstration in 1902 led to Professor Yamashita leaving for Washington, D.C. He taught several prominent residents including President Theodore Roosevelt. Professor Yamashita would eventually promote President Roosevelt to brown belt.

President Roosevelt prevailed upon Professor Yamashita to teach Judo at the U.S. Naval Academy. Yamashita resisted at first but the Sunday, יאַנואַר 5, 1905 אויסגאבע פון ​​די Washington Times carried a story that Professor Yamashita agreed to teach at Annapolis. He originally stated that he could not be induced to teach at the academy but President Roosevelt must have been very persuasive.

At the end of July 1905, Professor Yamashita held a Judo demonstration, which included lectures by several Japanese scholars. The delegation used the demonstration to rally support for the Japanese government during the Russo-Japanese War.

After teaching six more months at the Naval Academy, Professor Yamashita returned to Japan for good in the summer of 1906. A seventh degree black belt at the time of the trip to America, he would eventually become the first tenth degree red belt in the art. Only Dr. Kano ever held a higher rank.

Judo would become the most popular martial art in America until it was eclipsed by Karate in the 1960s. Few other martial arts could boast that a United States President was a practitioner.

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