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Kendo etiquette and manners

Kendo etiquette and manners

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There is no kendo without etiquette and manners "Kendo Etiquette and Manners"

The author is Takenori Baba, who wrote "Kendo Etiquette and Manners" (published by our company) in 1990. Thirty years later, he laments the current situation in which kendo etiquette and manners have become even more meaningless, and sincerely argues that kendo is about developing people, and that etiquette and manners are at the core of this. Why are etiquette and manners necessary? He says that they contain consideration and humility, and that if performed with that spirit, they will not become a formality. Please pick up a copy and read it.

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Takenori Baba

Born on January 20, 1934, in Goto, Nagasaki Prefecture, Takeo began kendo training at the age of five. In 1954, he began working as an elementary school teacher in Fukue City (now Goto City). He began teaching youth, and the young wrestlers he coached at that time quickly became the Nagasaki Sumo Club at their current high school. During his time as a teacher, he won the Prefectural Teachers' Sumo Tournament. He also devoted himself to sumo training, training youth athletes for the National Athletic Meet. He then transferred from elementary school teaching to the Education Division of the Nagasaki Prefectural Police Headquarters. From 1963 to 1986, he attended the Prefectural Police Academy as a first-year student. In 1967, he enrolled in the second batch of the Judo and Kendo Instructor Training Course. He then spent a year at university, taking the kendo and other training exams. He passed the certification exam (kendo). He has participated in various tournaments, including the National Teachers' Kendo Tournament, the National Athletic Meet, and the Prefectural Selection Tournament. He is a federation advisor. He holds a second-degree black belt in judo and a seventh-degree black belt in kendo. After retiring, he returned to his hometown of Goto and devoted himself to teaching young people at Seiyukan, the same place his father Takeo had been.

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