Tō'on-ryū

Keeping Higaonna's Naha-te

Tō'on-ryū is an Okinawan karate tradition founded by Kyoda Juhatsu, a senior student of Higaonna Kanryō of Naha. Its name honours the teacher, reading the characters of Higaonna as "Tō'on". A conservative line of Naha-te, it shares its root with Gōjū-ryū, the better-known school of Higaonna's pupil Miyagi Chōjun, and preserves an older form of the same teaching.

Tō'on-ryū (東恩流) is an Okinawan karate tradition of the Naha-te line, founded by Kyoda Juhatsu. Its name honours his teacher, since the characters of Higaonna (東恩納) can be read together as Tō'on. It is a conservative school that preserves an older form of the teaching it received.

Kyoda Juhatsu

Kyoda Juhatsu (1887 to 1968) was a senior student of Higaonna Kanryō of Naha, and he trained alongside Miyagi Chōjun, who would go on to found Gōjū-ryū. Where Miyagi developed and renamed his line, Kyoda chose to keep close to what he had been taught, and his school later became centred on the mainland in Ōita.

Fidelity to a teacher's method can matter more than a school's fame.

A sister art to Gōjū-ryū

Both Tō'on-ryū and Gōjū-ryū descend from Higaonna Kanryō, which makes them close relatives rather than rival inventions. Because Kyoda preserved the teaching conservatively, Tō'on-ryū offers a valuable window onto an older form of the same Naha-te from which Gōjū-ryū also grew.

What it teaches

The curriculum centres on Sanchin, the breathing and tension kata of Naha-te, together with the other classical Naha forms. It emphasises rootedness, controlled breathing and close-range power. Certain kata are distinctive to the line and help mark it apart from its better-known sister school.

Honesty note

Tō'on-ryū is well documented as a twentieth-century school. It is small in numbers today, but its transmission from Kyoda is clear and continuous.