稲垣師範の経歴
昭和20年(1945年) 終戦前に両親は東京都大田区より岩間町に疎開する
昭和21年(1946年) 茨城県西茨城郡岩間町(現 笠間市)で出生
昭和33年(1958年・12歳) 合気神社附属道場(現 茨城支部道場)に入門
開祖74歳、齋藤先生30歳、磯山博先生21歳
昭和39年(1964年・18歳) 日本大学商学部に入学、合気道部に入部
昭和44年(1969年・23歳) 同大学卒業、齋藤先生の下で茨城支部道場の内弟子修行を2年半する
開祖4月に昇天、齋藤先生41歳(国鉄・勤務)
昭和49年(1974年・28歳) 齋藤先生のお供でサンフランシスコの講習会に行く
昭和51年(1976年・30歳) 再度、齋藤先生のお供でサンフランシスコ・ロスアンゼルス・ハワイに同行
平成 8年(1996年・50歳) 合気道を通してミャンマーの青少年の育成活動を始める
平成14年(2002年・56歳) 特定非営利活動法人「日本ミャンマー合気会」を設立
平成16年(2004年・58歳)ミャンマー政府より国軍記念日晩餐会に招待される
2019年までミャンマー国の指導回数は36回になる
平成20年(2008年・62歳)つくば市にて天皇/皇后陛下並びにスペイン国王・王妃陛下の御前で合気道の
演武をする
令和7年(2025年)まで海外講習会は15カ国(アメリカ・ブラジル・ウルグアイ・アルゼンチン・ニュージーランド・ミャンマー・ロシア・スウェーデン・デンマーク・イギリス・ドイツ・ポーランド・ブルガリア・イタリア・スペイン)になる。


Inagaki Shihan Interview,
Aikido Tankyu
.jpg)
Issue 46 (Pages 52 and 53) ISBN78-4-88293-452-3
July 20. 2013
Shihan Profile 29
Ibaraki Branch Dojo Teaching Staff Shihan, Shigemi Inagaki 8th Dan
Training in Iwama
-
Please let us hear about how you encountered aikido.
Inagaki: I enrolled at the dojo attached to the Aiki Shrine (the present day Ibaraki Branch Dojo) in Showa 33 (1958) when I was twelve years old, fifty five years previous from now. It was an era of wanting strength and boys in those times were looking at manga and movies such as ‘Akado Suzonosuke’, ‘Kurama Tengu’ and ‘Sarutobi Sasuke.’
There was a rumour among us children that an aikido instructor could neatly climb across the ceiling like a ninja, so I became very interested and got an introducer, and was allowed to brush my name into the enrolment register. I was waiting in the anteroom before practice began and Osensei sat down in the doorframe between the dojo and the anteroom, having just finished his dinner. I took the chance to ask “Osensei, can you climb across the ceiling?” Osensei’s reply was “That wasn’t me.” When we had the Grand Festival of the Aiki Shrine, I saw a person called Bo Fujita, escaping from ropes tied around his body and limbs like a ninja, climbing and doing a trick, cutting a daikon (white, Oriental radish) with a katana on his stomach.
-
Please tell us your memories of the training, and lasting impressions of the teachers and sempai (seniors) from those times.
Inagaki: Osensei lived in the dojo (24 tatami mats) and the four-tatami living room and bedroom that connected to it by a corridor, along with an uchi deshi (live-in student), Mr Nishiuchi, while Morihiro Saito (deceased) and his wife, who already lived in the present location, took care of Osensei and his wife. Training was in the regular adults’ class between 7 and 8pm.
Isoyama Sensei, my dai-sempai (great senior), enrolled in Showa 24 (1949) at the age of 12, and at the time I enrolled he was serving at the koku-jieitai (air self-defence force) base in Chitose. When he occasionally returned home, his keiko was severe stuff. In summer we would clear away the tatami mats, put them in the corner and train on the bare floorboards. I have severe memories of the skin coming off my knees and them suppurating. Many of the sempai were self-employed farmers and they didn’t have the machinery that we have now, so they were in good condition from growing crops through human toil. In addition to that, Saito Sensei had practiced karate before beginning aikido, so under his influence we built makiwara (rice-straw striking pads) in our homes to forge our fists, hand-blades and so on and we did tanren (forging training) by taking yokomen (side-of-head) strikes with the bokken (wooden training sword) on our bared arms.
I think people who had trained in other dojos might have felt this training was severe. Two years after entering the dojo, I received shodan (first degree black belt) and the number on my certificate was 723, so I don’t think that there were many people practicing aikido in the world.
-
Please give us your memory of the founder.
Inagaki: After we had finished taiso (physical exercises) that included chinkon-gyo (return to spirit training), Nishi Health System exercises and makko-ho (Japanese yoga), Osensei would make us listen to a long speech before starting keiko. At that time it sounded like gibberish, but now, when I read “Aiki Shinzui” and “Takemusu Aiki”, the fragments of it remain in my ears as my memory resurfaces from those days. Osensei’s teaching method began first with tai-no-henko and when starting from katatedori, we would continuously do kanrenwaza (related techniques) from katatedori, and rather than “ki-no-nagare”(flowing techniques), Osensei would make grabbing strongly the centre of the practice. I think his feeling was to pass on something received from the gods, so when showing the next technique, he would say “mōshi-agemasu” (“I humbly offer”) without using the word to ‘teach.’
In about Showa 41 or 42 (1966 or 1967), I came home from university and there was a Taiwanese magazine company covering Osensei. Saito Sensei and the seniors were not available, so my younger brother (Ryuji Sawa 7th dan) and I were Osensei’s otomo (assistants) up on Mt. Atago, and when taking photographs, we brothers took ukemi (break-falls) for Osensei barefoot on the ice needles of the precincts.
From the autumn of Showa 44 (1969), the year the founder passed away, I was allowed to train as an uchi deshi for up to two and a half years. The main work was cutting the grass in the grounds around the dojo. When Saito Sensei came home from night duty, we would get black all over with sweat and dirt and fought a hard battle with grass-burn and the wasps. The grounds were vast, so no sooner had we finished and cleared one half than the other side was in a bad way again, so it really was endless work.
After the founder passed away, the second Doshu, Kisshomaru Sensei would come on the 14th of each month and ‘tsukinamisai’ (monthly festival) was held. When tsukinamisai had finished, we would gather with Kisshomaru Sensei for‘naorai’ (Shinto partaking of food offerings) and in those days there were not so many people, so we were able to talk with him. Even if he drank a lot of sake, he didn’t lose his posture and when he was merry, we would listen to him singing ‘shinsengumi’ songs. Due to this, I was honoured by his attendance at my wedding reception (Showa 47 – 1972).
Day by Day, Refresh the Mind
-
Please let us hear about the circumstances in which you became an instructor.
Inagaki: I didn’t think I had any trouble in the Ibaraki Branch Dojo when Saito Sensei was unable to attend keiko and I had to teach in his place. At first, I taught at Tsuchiura Nihon University High School’s aikido club, next was my alma mater, Nihon University’s Law, Economics and Commerce Department aikido club, and in present times, I am ongoing with my instruction in Myanmar, which began seventeen years ago (1996). It took a lot of time and money to create the NPO Nihon Myanmar Aikikai, inviting young people from Myanmar to Japan, getting subsidies and backing for dan-registration in relation to the local organisation and occasionally going to instruct. Without the generosity of our president, Koki Onodera, vice-chief director Ohashi, all of our directors, and support from everyone, I don’t think we would have come this far.
-
Please tell us your instructor motto.
Inagaki: It goes without saying, not to get injured or injure others, and in Osensei’s training method, there are kotai [or ‘katai’ solid] (basic), jutai [soft], ryutai [flowing] and kitai [aeriform] techniques. In the tai sabaki (body placement) of kotai, through the method of beginning from a situation in which both parties are still, one moves oneself without wastage and leads the opponent and I think it is very important to train firmly in the this method. I once heard a story from my sempai that after training in basic techniques, Osensei said, “I am who I am now because I practised solid form continuously for 60 years.”
Next, as points for keiko-ho (training method):
1) Connection (musubi) to one’s opponent
2) The study of angles (the angle at which one’s opponent is unbalanced as well as moving oneself into a position in which one is safe)
3) The way of using kokyu-ryoku (abdominal breath power)
4) Zanshin (the ‘remaining spirit’)
These are the four things that I teach one to habitually consider during training. Techniques are also important, but before that it is essential to teach correct etiquette and dojo manners. It is said that Osensei considered it important to foster ‘ki-iku’ (ki training), ‘chi-iku’ (intellectual training), ‘toku-iku’ (moral training), ‘tai-iku’ (physical education) and ‘jo-shiki no kanyo’ (the cultivation of common sense) through aikido. By considering the dojo as a place for character-building, and taking Japanese culture as a backbone, I think the cultivation of Japanese people who possess the magnanimity to understand other cultures, is a crucial role to instil in instructors.
Regarding the instruction in Myanmar, which I mentioned in the previous section, I was troubled by how to convey “the purpose of aikido is...” Accordingly, I summarized this myself in five points, 17 years ago.
-
The cultivation of a robust body and will that will endure hardship
-
The cultivation of good human relations, transcending race, religion, ideology as well as politics
-
The cultivation of a thankful heart for the people around oneself, one’s ancestors, one’s country and the universe
-
The cultivation of a creative mind that senses early ones mission granted from above
-
The cultivation of a heart that fosters world peace and the natural environment
Every morning, I get up, wash my face and clean my teeth and just like this, day after day, I think it is important to maintain an attitude of learning with a fresh mind when training.
The Lantern that Illuminates its Surrounds
-
Please tell us about your own theme and way of thinking regarding training
Inagaki: Fully reading the analects of the founder, Morihei Ueshiba, compiled by the second Doshu Kisshomaru Sensei in “Aikido Shinzui”, gives us knowledge of the mind of the founder, understanding the relationship between technique and the mind, and knowledge of one’s own calling. When you seek the way, the kami will allow you to meet the person you need, and the one who led me was Toshitaka Shimura, 7th dan, of Okutama Aikido-Kai. I am not a follower of Omoto, but to understand Osensei’s spirituality, I recommend taking up lectures in the ‘Omoto Basic Course.’
Next is the study of the union of principles (riai) between the sword, the jo (staff) and taijutsu (unarmed ‘body methods’). I think it is essential to learn low-danger taijutsu by acquiring a connection with one’s opponent and correct hanmi (half-body posture) from weapons. Tachi-dori (sword-taking) and jo-dori (staff-taking) are stipulated in the 3rd degree black-belt test requirements, but to master these high-level techniques, one must progress step-by-step, beginning with practicing the basic suburi (practice cuts). I would like to pass on what was passed down from Osensei to Saito Sensei for the next generation. As austere as it is, “Although the great way of aiki is severe, cherry blossoms bloom in the village of Iwama.”
-
Finally, could you give us a message for everyone who is training?
Inagaki: In seven years time, I too will reach the 74 years of age that Saito Sensei passed away at, and I have come to an age at which I think about what I am supposed to do.
To advance the establishment of heaven on earth that Osensei was aiming for, I think the passing on of his dictations in a way that is easy to understand is imperative, and I have made this a theme in my lifelong learning. My belief is in the ‘mantogyo’(“10,000 Lanterns”) recited by Masahiro Yasuoka. Rather than grieve over the darkness, light a single lantern. Be a light which illuminates the darkness around us. As far as the hand can reach, offer the light everywhere. If every single person becomes a single lantern we will have mantogyo. Let the world become illuminated at once. Shall we not endeavour to do this in order to reform the world?
When you see Osensei on the ‘other side’, in order to be able to puff out your chest and say, “Thanks to you, I was able to have a meaningful life,” let’s live by Onisaburo Deguchi’s words: “Don’t think about the passing hardships, live for the moment.”
Profile
Shigemi Inagaki
Born: 30th January, Showa 21 (1946)
Ibaraki Branch Dojo Shihan, 8th Dan