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The W.F.K.P. Kyu and Dan Rank



 

Certification

 

The W.F.K.P. Kyu and Dan Rank Certification System There are 10 Kyu and 10 Dan in W.F.K.P karate. To obtain certification for each rank, you must fulfill the certification requirements and complete
the testing procedure. Testing or grading is carried out by a panel of instructors authorized as W.F.K.P technical examiners.

Typically, Dan grading sessions take place 4 times per year, and Kyu grading takes place twice. In order to be eligible for testing, you must first have gained the appropriate amount of continuous experience at your current rank. Then, depending on the level of Dan you are being graded for, you may have to take the test outside your own country or region (at the higher Dan ranks, only Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ is authorized to evaluate, grade and issue certification).
 

 


 These details are summarized in the following chart.

 Kyu and Dan Grading Prerequisites
 Rank Min. Experience Testing Location
 10th to
 1st Kyu
 Branch dojo or group
 1st Dan
 1 yr
 Cannot apply same day as attaining 1st Dan HQ or Branch dojo or group, with permission of Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ
 2nd Dan
 1 yr at 1st Dan rank National HQ or Regional HQ, with permission of Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ
 3rd Dan
 2 yrs at 2nd Dan rank
 4th Dan
 3 yrs at 3rd Dan rank Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ or Regional HQ, with permission of Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ
 5th Dan
 4 yrs at 4th Dan rank
 6th Dan
 6 yrs at 5th Dan rank Rosario W.F.K.P - HQ
 7th Dan
 7 yrs at 6th Dan rank
 8th Dan
 7 yrs at 7th Dan rank Upon recommendation by Instructor Committee
 9th Dan
 8 yrs at 8th Dan rank Upon recommendation by Instructor Committee
 10th Dan
 9 yrs at 9th Dan rank


 

To progress to the next Kyu or Dan, W.F.K.P students must demonstrate exceptional skill and near flawless execution of a prescribed set of techniques and kata. Our specially-trained instructors and examiners carefully study and evaluate each student based on the criteria shown
by clicking on any rank on the chart above.
 

 

 W.F.K.P. - TRADITIONAL TITLES

 


                                                                                                                            
     RENSHI - Requested Dan: Godan          
  KYOSHI - Requested Dan: Rokudan              HANSHI - Requested Dan: Rokudan 

                               

 

I CONTACT ACTIVE FOR THE EUROPE - ITALY  - wfkp_reception_office - TELEPHONE - 39 3312882463

 

 

GRAND MASTER FUNAKOSHI GICHIN

 

 

 

Supreme Master Funakoshi Gichin (1868-1957)The Father of Modern Karate

Funakoshi Gichin was born on Nov 10, 1868 in Yamakawa, Shuri, Okinawa Prefecture. He was of samurai lineage, from a family which in former times had been vassals of Ryukyu Dynasty nobles.

By age 11 he had already made a name for himself in Ryukyu-style martial arts. Beginning his training under Master Azato Anko, it wasn’t long before he equaled his master in ability, and shared with him the distinction of being the “most accomplished” martial artist in the field. He also learned karate-jutsu (written with characters that mean “Chinese-hand martial art”) from Master Itosu Anko. Both his teachers were impressed by his nobility of character.

As over the years he pursued his training and continuously developed
his remarkable skills, Master Funakoshi became chairman of the Okinawa Martial Arts Society, as well as an instructor at the Okinawa Teacher’s School. Then in 1922, when he was 54 years old, he intro-
duced Okinawan karate-jutsu at the first Ministry of Education (now Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture)-sponsored Physical Education Exhibition. This introduction, the first ever public display of karate-jutsu in Japan, was a stunning success. And the previously unknown martial artist Funakoshi Gichin rose to instant fame throughout the Japanese world of martial arts.

Immediately the founder of modern judo, Kano Jigoro, invited Master Funakoshi and his pupil Gima Shinkin to the Kodokan judo dojo to give a demonstration of kata. The highly-attended event filled the Kodokan dojo to capacity. It was so well-received that Master Funakoshi found himself pressed on all sides to stay in Tokyo.

Excited by the opportunity to further promote the martial art that he had done so much to introduce to Japan, Master Funakoshi subsequently began teaching it at Tokyo’s Meiseijuku, a dormitory for Okinawan students there. In 1922, he published a book entitled “Ryukyu Kempo Karate.” It was the first formal exposition in Japan on the art of karate-jutsu. Not only were its contents fresh and novel, it was also beautifully written, and immediately created an unprecedented karate boom.

As the popularity of karate-jutsu began to spread, Master Funakoshi produced the first ever “Dan Ranking Certification” in April, 1924.

Around the same time, with the encouragement of his teacher of Buddhism, Abbot Furukawa Gyodo of Enkakuji Temple in Kamakura, Master Funakoshi started practicing Zen. He contemplated the well-known Buddhist teaching that says “form is emptiness and emptiness
is form.” He began to see the relevance of that teaching to his martial
art, and ultimately changed the characters for karate from kara + te (“Chinese” + “hand”) to kara + te (“empty” + “hand”).

Then, in order to popularize the “local” Okinawan martial art in the
rest of Japan, Master Funakoshi synthesized a complete system of
techniques and theory, and changed the Chinese and Okinawan
names of the kata into standard Japanese. In 1929, after much
thought and reflection, he also changed the name of karate-jutsu (“Chinese-hand martial art”) to karate-do (“the way of karate,” or “the
way of the empty hand”). He then defined the Twenty Precepts of
Karate, and established a grand karate philosophy.

At last the way of karate had come into its own, and was gaining popularity all across Japan. The number of people wishing to begin training was growing daily—so much so that it became difficult to find a place for them to practice. So in 1939 Master Funakoshi established the “Shotokan” dojo, which he built at his own expense. (“Shoto” was the literary first name he used when doing calligraphy and writing poetry. “Shoto” means “Pine Waves,” and refers to the sound of wind blowing through the pines, which resembles the sound of ocean waves.)

By this time, Master Funakoshi had long been teaching karate to high-school and university students. As a result, karate clubs had sprung up
at higher education institutions all over Japan—which is another reason why karate has become as respected as it is today.

In the air raids of World War II, the Shotokan dojo was destroyed, and
the growth of karate came to a halt. But after the war, followers of Funakoshi’s way re-grouped, and in 1949 they formed the Japan Karate Association, with Funakoshi Gichin as Supreme Master.