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Hanchi Steve Arneil. 10th Dan
After completing his engineering education, Hanshi Arneil went back home
to Northern Rhodesia. Still fascinated with the Orient, he decided
to go there and experience it for himself, and his Chinese friend gave
him the names of people to train with in China. Fresh out of
college and without any money, Arneil got a job as an engineer on a ship
and worked his way from Dar es Salaam, Tanganyika (now Tanzania), to
Kowloon, Hong Kong. From there, he went into China and travelled
northward to the province of Manchuria, where he came to a monastery at
which he studied Shorin (Shaolin) Kempo. The rigorous training,
strict discipline, daily work in the monastery's fields and daily
meditation was just what Arneil was looking for – he was in "seventh
heaven."
Unfortunately, China was beginning to experiencing Mao Zedong's Cultural
Revolution, and life for a Westerner in China began to get difficult.
People outside of the monastery even started hitting Arneil on the head
with their copies of Mao's "Little Red Book". His friends at the
monastery suggested that he leave China for his own safety, and they
brought him back to Kowloon to train with another kempo teacher.
The training was very different than at the monastery, and Arneil didn't
like it. Around that time, Hanshi Arneil heard of a karate master in
Japan named Mas Oyama, and he was determined to go there and seek him
out. He didn't have enough money to get to Japan, so he first had
to work on boats to the Philippines. When Arneil finally saved
enough money, he returned to Hong Kong and from there went to Yokohama,
Japan in 1961.
For about six weeks, Hanshi Arneil sat and watched, until one day Mas Oyama returned. Using Draeger as a translator, Mas Oyama told Arneil that he needed to come back and watch for a few more weeks in order to really make up his mind about joining the dojo. And so he waited and watched some more. After two weeks, Mas Oyama gave Arneil his first karate Gi (uniform) and said that he would have to start from the beginning. He trained very hard, and even though he wasn't Japanese, he was treated the same as the other kohai (juniors). They started training at 6:00 PM and couldn't finish until Mas Oyama was finished, usually four or five hours later. Along with the other kohai, Arneil had to wash the dirty karate uniforms for the entire school and clean the dojo and its toilets – including emptying the toilet buckets.
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Over the next few years, Hanshi Arneil intensified his training efforts
and progressed rapidly. During this time, Mas Oyama became like a
father to him. In fact, Mas Oyama actually adopted him so that he
could marry a Japanese woman. With the financial support of his
wife, who worked in a bank, Arneil was able to stay in Japan and train.
To earn money, he also acted in some movies under the name "Steve
Mansion". One day, Mas Oyama told Hanshi Arneil that he wanted him to
perform the 100 man kumite (fight). Others had tried to do it, but
no one (other than Mas Oyama) was able to complete all 100 fights.
At first, Arneil thought that Mas Oyama was crazy for asking him, since
he didn't think he could do it. Mas Oyama kept pestering him until
he finally agreed, and afterwards he trained fanatically for the event –
18 hours a day, every day, doing Kata, Makiwara (punching post) training
and bag work. Arneil asked when he would do the fights, and Mas
Oyama said that he would let him know when he was ready. Arneil
kept on training, thinking that Mas Oyama had only done this in order to
get him to train harder. One Sunday morning, he went to the dojo
to train. When he walked in, everyone was there waiting for him.
This was the day. Sosai Oyama said everyone must fight Steve hard
as if they were to try to help him and fight weak, no matter how tired
Steve Arneil became, Oyama would discount that fight, so all the members
were sure to fight to their best abilities. At first, Arneil tried to keep track of how many
fights he had completed, but stopped doing so after the first 20 in
order to concentrate on fighting, until he came up against one of the
strongest fighters in the Dojo, Tadashi Nakamura, now head of the World
Seido Karate Organisation, he gave Steve Arneil no quarter and fought
him hard to the end, Tadashi Nakamura would be his final fight. He completed all 100 fights in
about 2 hours and 45 minutes – "you can save time if you knock them
out." Before leaving Japan in 1965, Hanshi Arneil had achieved the rank of Sandan (3rd Dan). He moved to Great Britain and began to teach Kyokushin Karate there. That same year, he and Shihan Bob Boulton founded the British Karate Kyokushinkai (BKK) organization. Between 1968 and 1976, Hanshi Arneil was the team manager and coach for the All Styles English and British Karate team, which became the first non-Japanese team to win the World Karate Championship in 1975-76. In 1975, the French Karate Federation also awarded him the title of the "World's Best Coach."
In 1991, Hanshi Arneil and the BKK resigned from the International
Karate Organization (IKO), and he founded the International Federation
of Karate (IFK). The IFK currently has a membership of over
120,000 in 19 countries. After the death of Mas Oyama in 1994 and
the subsequent splintering of the IKO, Hanshi Arneil was asked by Mas
Oyama's widow to lead the IKO(2). Not wishing to become involved
in the tangled politics of the various Japanese organizations, he
politely declined the offer, in order to devote his time and efforts
toward running the IFK and teaching Kyokushin Karate. ![]() One of Hanshi Arneil's goals in the IFK is consistency –
Every Kyokushin Karateka in any country
at any dojo should perform the
techniques and kata' the same. Toward that end, he has developed a
systematic grading syllabus for the IFK and has published a book on
Kyokushin Kata. Mas Oyama had told him that the only way you can
unify an organization is by doing the same thing, and the only way you
can do the same thing is by Kata.
Mas Oyama, prior to his death, personally awarded Hanshi Arneil with the rank of Shichidan (7th Dan). The entire British karate community later awarded him with the rank of Hachidan (8th Dan) for his dedication and services to karate in Great Britain. On May 26, 2001, the Board of Country Representatives of the IFK awarded Hanshi Arneil with the rank of Kudan (9th Dan) in recognition of his work in promoting Kyokushin Karate throughout the world during the past 40 years, and in particular during the past 10 years under the banner of the IFK. In 2011 Hanchi Steve Arneil was awarded 10th Dan by the IFK Committee Members.
While studying Kyokushin Karate in the early 1960's, Hanshi Arneil took
meticulous notes of what Mas Oyama taught him. Because of this,
for the past four decades he has taught Kyokushin Karate true to the
spirit of Sosai Mas Oyama. Despite his busy schedule as head of
the IFK, Hanshi Arneil still teaches Kyokushin Karate – to beginners as
well as black belts – on a regular basis. |
| Sosai Mas Oyama - Hanchi Steve Arneil - Andy Hug - Akiyoshi Matsui - Dolph Lundgren - Yoshiji Soeno - David Pickthall | ||