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THE KARATE SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS
Ray Dalke Interview
By
Don Warrener
"We got real serious after Frank Smith got his jaw broken by
Enoeda." You
were there? What really happened! "Yeah, you bet I was there.
I was sitting
right there at ringside when Enoeda swept Frank's front leg
and then using
the same foot he roundhouse kicked him right in the face as
he went down.
After Frank went down all I saw was blood. It was a great technique but
it sure gave us a wake up call and after that everything changed.
Frank got serious, very serious after that in fact we all got
serious and realized that this isn't a game anymore and that is how
we played it after that. You know when we went to class we never new
if we were going to live or die it was very serious from there on
in."
These are the exact words of Ray Dalke one of the few
American Karate
Legends. In a
recent interview Dalke told it all, the truth about the karate
school of hard knocks. After forty plus years few people have stuck
it out but he has and in this interview you will learn why the
Japanese Karate Masters lost control of Karate in America and now in
Europe as well. You may
be shocked!
DW - How long have you been training and where did you
start?
RD -Over forty years, three years of judo and dabbled in
other styles as well as a little kenpo with Ed Parker before
training in Shotokan Karate.
I formally
started with Dan Ivan.
Dan Ivan would take us down to Ed Parker's. Dan
was
my first instructor, things back then were pretty
open.
DW- Who did you train with after
Dan?
RD- Nishiyama all these years.
DW -What year did you start training with
him?
RD- Early 1961.
DW- What was your 1st impression when you saw
Nishiyama?
RD- Back then it was a different time and you looked at
people differently.
He
was just something very special and I had heard about karate
and how you
could kill someone with a karate chop or something. He was more of
a
novelty than anything. He was someone you could look at and
realize he
could really do you in bare handed. I was looking for
self-defense with Dan
Ivan and not realizing it was Shotokan or anything cause back
then we didn't
know about styles. Then I saw Nishiyama perform and I was not
quite sure about him, as he could not speak English. It was broken
English and I couldn't understand what he was saying. I thought that zenkutsu
dachi and kiba dachi were all the same so instead of trying to
understand him I just copied him. Then as his English got
better he was better able to explain the dynamics. Then prior to this Nishiyama
and Dan Ivan had split up and Nishiyama Sensei had opened up a dojo
through Oshima. I knew as soon as I started karate that it was
something I would never stop.
DW - How was the training with Nishiyama back
then?
RD - It was savage.
It was really brutal.
Really brutal!
Because
Nishiyama was the main man back then and several top guys
would come and
train with us. Okazaki would come and train, Yaguichi,
Mikami, Enoeda,
Shirai, Kanazawa these were our training/sparring,
partners. Kase was
more
of an instructor but not at first. We got a chance to get
after these guys
and they were not very gentle men. I trained with them all
including Sensei Oshima.
I picked Nishiyama as my sensei. I was looking for some
direction and he seemed to be the right man to guide me. He was
intelligent, a deliberate man with no hesitation. He carried himself
as an athlete and as someone special. We never sparred with the man
he just had our respect and that will never change. Even big Frank
Smith, I don't care what he says, that will just never change. We just trusted his word. It
was a different time back then and there was also a big difference
in terms of the whole of American philosophy. We were going through the
Berlin crisis. We had the Cuban crisis. We were just out of World
War II by about 10 years or so. I just missed everything barely and
we were getting into Vietnam and you know put the Americans in a
corner and boy oh boy watch out. Things were just different back
then--a different society. I don't think the karate has changed it's
still the same. The
people have changed so the message has to be a little different
now.
DW-What is your opinion of kick boxing, UFC or Muay
Thai?
RD - Well I think that they are all good sports if that is
what you want to
do and get hammered around. But I like boxing and collegiate
wrestling not
so much the pro wrestling but some of those guys are serious
and huge.
I
just can't imagine fighting Shaqille O'Neil at 315 pounds 7'2
or something
like that. It is
wonderful to get old because you realize that you
better
pick a fight with someone you can whup like that old lady
over there.
There
wouldn't be any amount of money that would get me to fight
those guys.
I
don't want to take anything away from those guys but to
defend myself
against them is a different thing and I wouldn't hesitate a
second, because
if I new it was going to happen I would be way ahead of
them. I think
that
is what karate has taught me, the final thing is to be really
deliberate and
believe me I won't hesitate even a
second.
DW - Today people refer to karate as a sport. Do you agree
with that?
RD - No not real karate. If it was just kick/punch then you
would have to
stop training at 35 or 40 years of age. No real karate is
self-defense.
They have these new rules out well let me tell you I would
hate to be
ipponed by Frank Smith once and then have to go another 3 or
4 minutes with
him. I tell yeh that someone is going to get seriously hurt.
Well that is sport but you know competition has become so subjective
and you got these referees saying whether it was good enough or
not. When we fought in
the sixties it was contact but I don't want to exaggerate but it
really was a rough go.
We had legs broken, teeth knocked out, fingers broken, ribs
broken but this was not real contact. I look at these guys who do
this tough man contest and UFC. These guys are really tough and they
are the guys I keep my eyes on in a bar
and if they get really rowdy I am going to go home and have a
beer if not it
just might be "bang" and we will get something really going
on. But that
is
not what I think decent people should be doing and saying. I
don't want to fight
and roll around on the ground, but that is what these type of
guys are
doing if they aren't fighting in the ring they are fighting
in bars and they are looking for someone to give them a go but this
is what I have trained my whole life to avoid and I can't do this by
just being a fighter. I am a karate-ka who practices the whole art
including the philosophy.
DW - You have been training now for 40 years do you think
that the western
world karate has caught up to the Japanese
karate?
RD - Oh yeah. We
caught up to them in 1967 and 1969 big time.
Nishiyama's
students caught them and when they brought in this guy to
fight ten of us
and he couldn't get through us and that was the JKA grand
champion. The
idea
was that they would bring in one guy to beat ten Americans
(the Los Angeles
team) and that wasn't going to happen and I really felt sorry
for the
Japanese champion cause he really got beat, beat badly. It was the
late
60s or early 70s right around in there. Physically, technically we
are as
good as they are but culturally and socially we are not
there. We are
not
even close to them and their history and their Musashi's and
their great
heritage and all these types of things we are just not even
close to them.
DW - How important do you think the bunkai of the kata
is?
RD - Well there is so many different interpretations of
bunkai, oh my God
that is one of the things I learned when I went to the JKA
Instructors
school. It is
like every instructor has a different interpretation to
the
technique...let me put it this way Sensei Nishiyama rarely
ever taught
bunkai in fact I can't remember when he did teach it.
DW - The guys who have been training for as long as you have
mention that the Japanese don't like to give up the control thing.
How do you guys feel about that?
RD - Well that caused a lot of pain in the USA in the past
and Europe is now
experiencing that.
You know there is a top and we don't want to be the
top
but with all the years we have done this we don't want to be
at the back of
the bus we are somewhere in the middle. The problem is that the
Japanese, I
think, never expected us to stick around as long as some of
us have. You
know forty years or so.
I think they figured we would stick around for five, eight or
ten years and then quit.
This has forced some of us to form our own small groups where
we are prepared to share the top with each other. On the other hand,
I look at Sensei Nishiyama and he sees me in class and I am 62 years
old and he says I am looking pretty good and he never said that
before and that is what I have always striven for, to get that nod
of approval. I don't
give
that nod very often to my students but I do give it when they
deserve it and I
am prepared to share the top with them if they deserve
it.
If some guy has done karate for 25 years he is no amateur and
he
deserves recognition. Lesley Safar was Okazaki's top student
and he left and said you know Sensei you just don't want to
share. And you know it
always comes
back to another thing called money and that is a pretty
important
thing especially when you are a professional and you have a
wife and family.
If it is an international organization and I am an 8th dan or
9th dan and that says I have a lot of experience and then I deserve
a piece of the gate as well as them. I underwent their training
and I broke my body and I wouldn't have been the person I am now
without it. But I don't
just credit them for it; I also credit myself for hanging in
there. They will not
share with us, we get crumbs while they get the big portions...but
what was really not fair was when they brought in junior instructors
and put them in front of us and that is when some of us just said
wow! I have been training twice as long as this guy and your putting
him up as my Sensei?
Don't do that and look at us as equal to a junior Japanese,
and that is pretty hard for a guy like me to chew and it
was
really hard for a guy like Frank Smith who is really ego
motivated and it is
just too bloody bad that a guy like that quit karate fifteen
years ago because when he had something to say he kept his mouth
shut. But I didn't, I said what
you guys are doing is wrong. I told Okazaki Sensei that I
don't want to drive the bus but I don't want to sit at the back of
it either. I paid my
dues and spent my time yet you want me to bring in Mr. Yaguichi to
test my green belts. What the hell are you doing? Who pays my rent?
It boils down to business.
DW - What did he say to that?
RD - Ah... "You don't understand the politics." I said Ok; you do it but
I
want a promise from you in writing that when I can't pay my
rent next month
you will pay. He
said, "No, No you are supposed to run your own business."
Well
Then, I can't do it and that is when we had our parting of
the ways with both
Mr. Nishiyama and Okazaki and that is exactly what has
happened with Leon
Sells and Mikami the same way. They won't let him test and
he has been
training damn near as long as me and Mikami kicked him out
because he gave a
couple of black belt tests. Greer Golden, the guy I went
through Instructor
training school with thinks he is Japanese but he is not. He
will learn one of these days.
He is 67 years old and he is my sempai by five years and he
can test up to 3rd kyu brown belt because he wasn't a nice boy. Try that on. It is business but the
Japanese make all the money.
DW - Yeah Italy is starting to have a
problem.
RD - Yeah Spain is having a problem
too.
DW - Well Falsoni in Italy figured it out years ago with
Shirai. Both Falsoni and Spartaco
Bertoletti.
RD - You know that is Ok and in fact I hope that Sensei
Nishiyama is a multi-
millionaire but don't stop me from becoming a millionaire.
Don't stop me
from growing.
DW - After all these years of practice what is the meaning of
practicing
karate do?
RD - Well I think it all changes. I think what you start with
and what you
end up with is two different things. I think that age has
everything to do
with it. You
know in the beginning it takes on a shallow look, you know
its
about kicking, punching and beating someone up. When I trained at Dan
Ivan's
we would train and then go to the bar and then try out some
of these
techniques and sometimes they did work and sometimes they
didn't and you
would get your ass kicked. Then as the years go along
you try to change
yourself and the technical takes over and then you have the
strong years.
When I was in my 20s you just couldn't tire me out and I
would train eight
hours a day and then in my 30s, I felt extremely strong and
they were my
strongest years. Then in my 40s, I pushed away from being the
instructor
and started to relax a bit more and my body became really
flexible and
almost to the point that my body felt like I was doing Tai
Chi.
DW - My last question is "What have you learned through
karate?"
RD - That is a good question. I will tell you what it has
taught me. It
has taught me patience, a virtue of Japanese culture. I remember I
asked
Nishiyama when I could take a test and he would say "A little
more, a little more--You Wait. You know 25 years later a little wait
but it really has taught me patience and it's like a snake just
waiting and then when you go...go all the way. Nothing ends in the
first round and it has been a wonderful thing for me
it
has allowed me to talk to people that I wouldn't have talked
to. It
really
has given me a way to my life and it has given me a direction
to my life. It has taught me that you got to just hang in there
because there was a lot of tough times and a lot of kicks in the
groin and there are times that you just got to stand up for yourself
and you don't have a lot of friends and sometimes those friends are
so far behind you, you can't see them but you just got to hang in
there and keep going!
DW Thank you so much!
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