O '
SENSEI
Morihei
Ueshiba
( 1883-1969 )

Morihei
Ueshiba was
certainly one of history's greatest martial artist. Even as an old
man of eighty, he could disarm any foe,
down any number of attackers, and pin an opponent with a single
finger. Although invincible as a warrior, he
was above all a man of peace who detested
fighting, war, and any kind of violence.
His
way was Aikido, which can be
translated as " The Art of Peace.
" Morihei Ueshiba is referred to by the
practitioners of Aikido as O Sensei, " The Great Teacher ".
The Art of Peace is an ideal, but it developed in real life on many
fronts. Morihei in his youth served as
an infantryman in the Russo-Japanese War, later battled
pirates and bandits during an adventure in Mongolia, and then, after mastering a number of martial arts,
served as an instructor at japan's elite military acadamies.
Throughout his life, however,
Morihei was sorely troubled by the contention and
strife that plagued his world : his father's
battles with corrupt politicans and their hired goons, the
devastation of war, and the brutality of his country's military
leaders.
Morihei was on a spiritual quest and was transformed by
three visions.
The first occurred in 1925, when
Morihei was forty-two years old.
After defeating a high-ranking swordsman by avoiding all his
cuts and thrusts ( Morihei was unarmed
), Morihei went into his garden.
" Suddenly the earth
trembled. Golden vapor welled up from the ground
and engulfed me. I felt transformed into a
golden image, and my body seemed as light as a feather. All at once
I understood the nature of creation : the Way
of a Warrior is to manifest Divine Love, a spirit that embraces and
nurtures all things."
Tears of gratitude and joy
streamed down my cheeks. I saw the entire earth as my home, and the
sun, moon, and stars as my intimate friends. All
attachment to material things vanished."
The second vision took place in December of 1940."
Around two o'clock in the morning as I was performing ritual purification, I suddenly forgot every martial art
technique I ever learned.
All of the techniques handed down from my teachers appeared completely anew. Now they
were vehicles for the cultivation of life, knowledge, virtue, and good sense, not devices to throw and pin
people."
The third
vision was in 1942, during the worst of the fighting of World War II
and in one of the darkest periods of human
history. Morihei had a vision of the Great Spirit of Peace, a path
that could lead to the elimination of all strife and the reconciliation of humankind. "The Way
of the Warrior has been misunderstood as a means to kill and
destroy others. Those who seek ompetition are
making a grave mistake. To smash, injure, or destroy is the worst
sin a human being can commit. The real Way of
a Warrior is to prevent slaughter - it is the Art of Peace, the
power of love.
"
Morihei
secluded himself in the country and devoted
every minute of his life thereafter to refining and spreading
Aikido, the Art of Peace
".
Unlike the authors of old-time warrior classics such as
The Art of
War and
The Book of Five
Rings, which
accept the inevitability of war and emphasize
cunning strategy as a means to victory, Morihei understood that
continued fighting - with others, with
ourselves, and with the environment - will ruin the earth. "The
world will continue to change dramatically,
but fighting and war can destroy us utterly. What we need now are
techniques of harmony, not those of contention.
The Art of Peace is required, not the Art of War." Morihei taught
the Art of Peace as a creative mind-body discipline,
as a practical means of handling aggression,
and as a way of life that fosters fearlessness, wisdom, love, and
friendship. He interpreted the Art of Peace in
the broadest possible sense and believed that its principles of
reconciliation, harmony, cooperation, and
empathy could be applied bravely to all the challenges we face in
life - in personal relationships, as we
interact with society, at work and in business, when dealing with
nature. Everyone can be a warrior for peace.
Although Aikido originated with Morihei in Japan, it was intended to
be a gift for all humankind. Some have chosen,
or will select in the future, Aikido as their
own particular Way, practicing it on the mats and applying it to
their daily lives.
Many more have been and
will be inspired by the universal message of the Art of Peace and
its implications for our world.
The divine
beauty
Of heaven and
earth!
All
creation,
Members
of
One family.
Excerpted from The Art of
Peace translated by John Stevens.
Contributed by William McLuskie
<highlndr@cybernetics.net>
Tue Jan 24 12:16:08 PST 1995.

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