




Aikido and Rank Comparisons
2004 editorial by Guy Hagen
I had a recent discussion with an ASU black
belt, who was turned down to fill in an opening for an Aikido Instructor
at a large multi-style martial art school. The main reason, we felt, is
that this person's rank - a nidan (2nd Degree), probably didn't sound
as important as the ranks of the other instructors... who were all 6th
degree black belts or higher in their respective martial arts.
This has bugged me a little, becauseit speaks
to a hidden bias or assumption that we face every day, as aikidoists,
and especially ASU aikidoists. And that is the assumption that the "black
belt" is a uniform standard of quality and merit, as are the higher
ranks.
However, this isn't even remotely accurate;
I believe ranks are incomparable for at least the following reasons: (1)
imcompatible traditions and history, (2) incompatibility due to scale,
(3) Western mentality, and (4) merit-based assumptions.
Tradition and History
First, rank is not equivalent across styles
and arts because few arts even share much historical background. How can
a quality standard be equal, when some arts emphasize athletic prowess,
and other emphasize internal subtlety? I have friends from perfectly valid
Korean schools where one could reasonably expect to earn one's black belt
in two years. Yet the average period in Aikido is five to six years! Ignoring
other variables such as the caliber of instructors and individual students
with high potential, this simply means to me that the art that requires
more time (or has otherwise more difficult requirements) creates a higher
caliber of black belt.
All "belt ranking" systems originate
from the Japanese game of Go sometime around WWII; what I was told was
that Karate Soke Funikoshi and Judo Soke Kano were involved in a process
to open their arts up for the benefit of the public. Go has 30 kyu ("white
belt") ranks... some martial arts have 5 or 6, some considerably
more (my first aikido style had 9). Some Chinese schools offer black belt
ranks, and belt ranks are historically not even a part of Chinese systems!
How can there be consistency when there are different levels of requirements
between organizations? Many styles have a "panel" approach for
advanced rank that helps maintain internal consistency in the quality
of the ranks awarded. In fact, I understand that advanced ranks in Iaido
in Japan require a panel of top instructors from different styles
to critique the candidate, and this was implemented to ensure quality
and consistency. We have no system for doing this across the dozens of
styles of Aikido, much less with other martial arts. So, it's valuable
to learn the lineage and history of the martial arts that interest you,
and how they connect to and interact with other styles and organizations.
Scale
Martial art organizations, of course, differ
greatly in size - the number of their members. This may be because some
arts are difficult, dangerous, or unpopular for any number of reasons.
It may be because the organization or art is relatively recent, because
a talented or ambitious instructor wanted to create something in their
own style or because they just no longer fit in or got along with former
colleagues for political or other reasons. Many such reasons are valid;
historically, the most respected martial arts founders started out this
way. Sometimes, however, I suspect such a system or organization is founded
for less than valid reasons such as self-promotion; but that is beyond
this article.
What this means is that some styles and
organizations are relatively small, with only a few practitioners - maybe
a few dozen, maybe a couple thousand. The simple fact is that every art
or style is going to have a "rank pyramid"... with only one
or two at the very highest ranks, a handful at the next rank, and more
and more as the level of rank decreases (depending on the usage, the highest
rank is either 8th or 10th degree, which may be reserved for the founder).
By simple extension, the competition" is just not going to be as
fierce to become a fifth-degree black belt in a family art that has only
40 practitioners, as it the competition will be in Aikido, which has tens
of thousands of practitioners (my passbook lists my 1995 Hombu membership
number at 125,588, if that's any evidence). Pay attention to what an organization
is comparing itself against, and how far and wide it is recognized.
Western Mentality
Western culture has had some good influences
on the martial arts; I believe it has helped martial arts to be more open,
critical, and dialog-based in instruction, and helped remove prejudice
and secrecy from many systems. But our culture has had some very negative
influences as well, I believe.
I think our schools and sporting systems
have taught most Americans that all effort must be rewarded regularly,
with concrete external proof. In elementary school, you got a "gold
star". In college, you got grades and a degree, which was "proof
of mastery". Unfortunately, this translates into expectations that
conflict with martial ways as paths of internal development, that never
end and only "reward" in subtle ways that may be difficult to
explain.
This has created a situation where many
Dojos (especially commercially-oriented ones) pander to a short-attention-span
mentality to increase their student base and revenue. Arts that focus
on competition (and hence, trophies), will always be popular. And it must
be recognized that often, Dojos like these are wildly successful and well-attended
compared to traditional Dojo. But these schools sell lots of ranks, with
lots of visible color distinctions, and hold the black belt as the standard
of mastery - once you've gotten your black belt, you've reached the top.
Most of you know, however, that "shodan" (black belt")
means "first step" in Japanese... meaning, now that you have
internalized the fundamentals, you can start paying attention to the real
important stuff. So, pay attention to what a school is really "selling"...
how often do they mention "black belt" in their sales pitch?
Merit
Finally, there is the assumption that black
belt rank promotions are, of course, always based upon technical proficiency
and skill in performance. While hopefully most rank is measured to the
greater extent based upon the ability to demonstrate and perform the art,
it is a long-standing Japanese tradition to also promote for "social"
reasons. Like good coaches, sometimes an individual demonstrates a teaching
ability that transcends their physical ability. Or, an individual has
made a contribution to the art that deserves deserves or demands recognition.
Frankly, no large martial art organization can survive without people
like these; and as you know, a little recognition can go a long ways,
especially in a martial art that downplays advancement or ritual acknowledgement
of rank or skill.
Significance
So why did I bother writing this? I would
like our students to be discerning and informed when discussing rank.
I would like potential students to be prepared when asking themselve if
they should try Aikido, or this other martial art under Grandmaster Whomever.
And I would like our students to be comfortable when students from other
Dojos ask them "what color their belt is."
Rank is a complex subject, and when it gets
down to it, the only way to measure somebody's actual skill level is to
have an open mind, and train with that person without ego getting in the
way. |