Sunday, July 13, 2008

The Evolution of British Jiu Jitsu

After the closure of the Toronto School of Defendo, it was necessary to re-evaluate the system. A conscientious review examined the very roots of principle based self-defense used in Great Britain at the early turn of the century before it had been introduced to North America encompassing all Jiu-Jitsu principles and variants through to the Modern Day Defendo system. We have taken into account that the world of combat has changed profoundly since World War I. Consequently, it has become necessary to make certain additions to the original system to enable it to stay up to date, without losing the style and distinctives of original Defendo. It has been our goal to preserve the foundation intact while encompassing additions that avoid our system becoming “just another mixed martial art”
To the end we have added the following:
Effective punches from Western Boxing-arguably the strongest fist techniques
Low line kicks to the legs from Muay Thai
Ground fighting from Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Defendo variants
Miscellaneous techniques from older Jiu Jitsu as taught in Britain by Japanese experts including Yukio Tani and others
British techniques from Cumberland Wrestling and the street fighting techniques of Victorian London
The “Billy” self-defense weapon
An Expanded pressure-point system
An Expanded grip and leverage system
Cane Techniques of defense
British Jiu Jitsu is an appropriate name for the evolved system in which has roots going back further that the Brazilian art of Gracie Jiu Jitsu.

Mike Mandel

Mike Mandel is the only known Defendo Instructor Trainer in the world who learned directly from Bill Underwood.
"I met Bill in the early 1970’s when I was a young man studying karate and kung fu. I stepped on the mat with Bill and he systematically took me apart. He was in his seventies at the time. I fell in love with this incredible system that doesn’t depend on strength or size. We’ve run Defendo past numerous highly skilled people, including martial artists, and American Marine and a former SAS soldier. Everyone loves the system” - Mike Mandel, Eye Spy Volume III, Issue Nineteen, 2003
In the early 1980’s Bill Underwood re-connected with his former student and paid instructor to ask Mike to once again instruct students at the Toronto School of Defendo. After Bill’s death in 1986, it is Mike Mandel alone who preserved the entire system.
In 2002, there was a fear that this incredible self-defense system would not be taught again. Mike, with access to all of Underwood’s rare published works and original training material - and foremost - his incredible memory and actual experiences with Bill Underwood, easily reconstructed the entire system.
Mandel went on to teach Robbie Cressman and Britain’s Clive Elliott in much of the system, thus becoming the primary modern source for Bill Underwood’s techniques. Mandel and Cressman founded Defendo International and the Toronto School of Defendo in 2003 and toured England teaching Underwood’s methods. After a parting of ways with Cressman and the demise of Defendo International, Mike continued to impart all of his knowledge to Defendo International’s “Pat Underwood Award of Excellence” 2003 and 2004 winner Adam Sutherland, who became his new protégé. It can be easily demonstrated that all of Bill Underwood’s Defendo being taught worldwide today can be traced back directly through Mike Mandel.
Read about Mike Mandel in print:
Martial Arts Illustrated July 2003 Vol. 16 No. 2
Martial Arts Illustrated December 2003 Vol. 16 No. 7
Martial Arts Illustrated February 2004 Vol. 16 No. 9
Martial Arts Illustrated June 2004 Vol. 17 No. 1
Eye Spy Volume III Issue Nineteen 2003
Internet Publication The Martialist http://www.themartialist.com/0703/defendo.htm

Bill Underwood

During Tani’s tenure on the music hall circuit, a friendship was formed that would forever influence how self-defense would be taught. A young boy named Bill Underwood who worked as a Cue boy at the Liverpool Vaudeville Music Hall befriended these skilled martial artists and exchanged goods such as cigarettes and tea for backstage Jiu Jitsu lessons and demonstrations. Bill easily understood the principles of the Japanese system and learned the necessity of leverage and balance to displace bigger, stronger opponents. As he only had limited exposure to the Japanese system, Bill moved away from the Japanese roots and began to experiment with his own concepts and created a unique system specializing in creating excruciating pain to facilitate compliance.
In 1911, Bill emigrated to Canada and began the long Military history of his system:
During World War I Bill served with the Royal Montreal Regiment and his unarmed combat techniques saved his life on numerous occasions behind enemy lines
In 1940, Bill was commissioned to give instruction at several military bases and his system which began in 1907 was officially named Combato
Research has shown Bill taught Combato to the American Rangers and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
In 1945 at the request of several law enforcement agencies, Bill’s focus moved away from Military training and began to specialize in the training of Police forces. Bill, recognizing Combato was not suited for the defensive tactics needed by civilians, began to remove the lethal techniques and focused on control and compliance. The system was renamed Defendo, a name chosen by Bill’s daughter Pat Underwood.
The Defendo system continued to be taught to law enforcement and at the Toronto School of Defendo while at the same time, Bill became a known celebrity with several media appearances including The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, Mike Douglas and That’s Incredible. A short documentary film about Bill’s life entitled “Don’t Mess With Bill” was nominated for an Oscar in 1980 at the Academy Awards.
Bill passed on in 1986 at the age of 90; however his legacy lives on

British Jiu Jitsu History: Introduction of Jiu Jitsu into England

Although the principles of Jiu Jitsu can be traced back in Japan to the HoJo regime (12th to the 14th centuries), the introduction into the U.K. didn’t take place until the 1890’s. E.W. Barton-Wright who had been living and working in Japan for nine years planned to establish his own Jiu Jitsu club upon return to the U.K. Barton-Wright had studied Tenjin Shin’yo Ryu Jiu Jitsu with Master Yukio Tani and being very entrepreneurial in nature, saw the opportunity to bring something special to the British people along with earning income. He brought back with him the 18 year old Master Instructor Tani who along with his skills, was a natural showman. The original plan was to open a permanent club and to call the art Bartitsu after himself. The original school failed due mainly to the British people not being aware of what Jiu Jitsu was and had never previously seen it. Barton-Wright staged many publicity events by touring the country showing the art of Jiu Jitsu and placed challenges to all comers to defeat the Japanese martial artist. Many other Japanese experts joined the musical hall circuit including Japanese wrestler Taro Miyake, Akhitaro Ohno, and Gunji Koizumi, "The Father of British Judo." Koizumi eventually founded the London Budokwai in 1918 teaching Jiu Jitsu, Kendo and other Japanese arts. Yukio Tani became an instructor at the school one year later and retired from the music hall tours. The Budokwai was directly affiliated to the Kodokwan of Tokyo, which was the prominent school of authority on the art in Japan. All certificates issued by the Budokwai were fully recognized by the Kodokwan.

Will the British Jiu Jitsu system take me years to master?

British Jiu Jitsu is essentially a simple system due to its interlocking nature and easily manipulates the body while causing extreme pain with little effort and it does not take years to master. A person with no previous experience could easily learn the foundation of the system in as little as 2-3 months enabling them to use these principles effectively should a violent situation occur. As a person progresses through the levels, a student continues to build off the basic principles and incorporate advanced techniques including chokes, neurological attacks, throws, braces, locks and many others, even within their first year of training. British Jiu Jitsu is so impressive that an experienced martial artist from any other system can easily add our principles to their current system and we guarantee they will be exposed to techniques that they have never seen before.

What separates British Jiu Jitsu from other self-defense systems?

Most students of martial arts and self-defense systems rely on techniques learned over an extensive amount of time that are static in nature. They learn if a person attacks one way, here is the counter-act to that movement. Teaching someone a technique in itself will be of use to people in defending themselves, provided they are attacked in the very same way they knowingly learned to apply this technique. The truth is we don’t live in a perfect world and if a violent situation arises, unfortunately we will never know what to expect, as the variables are numerous. British Jiu-Jitsu is a principle reality-based system and it is dynamic in nature. It is based on sound principles of leverage and autonomics. The techniques taught are used to demonstrate an application of the principles that take advantage of weaknesses in the human body including the central nervous system. These principles allow a person to be flexible while providing a physical and a psychological tactical advantage while having the confidence to diffuse a potentially harmful situation regardless of age, sex, strength, or body composition

BRITISH JIU JITSU

British Jiu Jitsu is not a Martial Art. It’s a system of self-protection that originated in a military close quarter fighting system designed to rapidly turn the attacker into the victim by using his weight, strength and momentum against him. British Jiu Jitsu is considered a Reality-Based Self-Defense system, as it is neither a Martial Art nor a Sport such as Mixed Martial Arts. We are big fans of watching MMA however the reality is that most violent encounters are finished in three seconds. A person must be able to shut their opponent down quickly while adapting to a high stress environment as their life is possibly threatened. British Jiu Jitsu training will easily allow a person to take complete control of their would-be attacker and facilitate rapid compliance by creating excruciating pain.