What is Ninjutsu?
忍術

The Bujinkan - Japanese: 武神館 is an international martial arts organization based in Japan and headed by Masaaki Hatsumi.
The combat system taught by this organization comprises nine separate ryūha, or schools, which are collectively referred to as Bujinkan Budō Taijutsu.
The Bujinkan is most commonly associated with ninjutsu.
However, Masaaki Hatsumi uses the term Budo (meaning martial way) as he says the ryūha are descended from historical samurai schools that teach samurai martial tactics and ninjutsu schools that teach ninja tactics.
Ninjutsu (忍術) translates as the “art of perseverance.”
While a relatively modern term, it refers to the skills and methods of the Ninja that occupied the Iga and Koga regions during feudal Japan.
We are part of the Bujinkan (武神館) founded by Masaaki Hatsumi.
The Bujinkan studies nine lineages that trace back to feudal Iga.
The training is comprised of philosophy and strategy, hand-to-hand combat, and various
weaponry.
Masaaki Hatsumi was born 2 December 1931 in Noda city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. He grew up with an avid love of the martial arts and in his youth studied many martial art styles.
Hatsumi began practicing when he was seven years old and found his fathers Bokuto ("wooden sword").
From that point on he began studying many popular Japanese martial arts and earned ranking in Karate, Aikido and Judo. After he attained a 4th degree Black Belt in Judo he was asked to teach at a United States Army base.
He was in his early 20s and found that the big Americans seemed to have size and natural ability. Hatsumi found that they were learning in months what took the typical Japanese years. He began to question his training...
What good is a martial art if a bigger or stronger person could easily defeat you?
Hatsumi began searching for a true warrior tradition.
While studying kobudo ("ancient weapons") with a renowned instructor Hatsumi learned about a teacher named Toshitsugu Takamatsu, of Kashiwabara City which is to the west of Japan’s Iga region.
As a last hope of finding a teacher who could impart the essence of a living warrior tradition and not just some recreational sport or lifeless art form, Hatsumi traveled across Honsho island to seek out the teacher he had searched for his whole life.
The train ride took over half a day to get from Hatsumi's home to that of Takamatsu. In 1957, upon meeting Takamatsu, Hatsumi felt a strange aura emanate from him. Takamatsu was well into his 60's when the two met.
Hatsumi was only 26 years old . Full of confidence, Hatsumi had a match with the veteran battler and learned the true meaning of training.
In Hatsumi's own words:
The pain of his technique was different from any pain I had ever suffered before. I had only felt a cold, momentary pain, while with Takamatsu Sensei I was exposed to a hot, burning pain. It was as if something would explode, if my blood would be sucked up and I would die right away.
He didn’t just apply one GYAKU but four or five. I immediately knew this is what I was looking for.
I asked to be his student. At that time, Takamatsu did not accept any new students, and yet, seeing something special in this young man he agreed to teach him.
For Takamatsu, the meeting was more like a reunion than a first meeting. In a poem to Hatsumi,
Takamatsu wrote:
In the days of the Tenei era there was great master of Koppo.
He was calm and peaceful like the flowers of springtime.
Yet he was so brave that not even 10,000 enemies could make him show fear.
He could even strike down a wild animal with but a single blow.
For over fifteen years Hatsumi trained under the supervision of Takamatsu and in 1972, with the death of his teacher, Hatsumi Sensei became the heir to the last and oldest ninja tradition.
Hatsumi is a Nihonga ("Japanese-style") painter and has had exhibitions in Noda, Ginza (Nagai Gallery).
During his many years of training he has also supplied martial arts guidance for numerous film, (Ninja Nights) TV (Jiraiya, Ninja-boy-Fujimaru) and theater events.
In 2020, Hatsumi-soke retired from active teaching.
