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      • If Kano is in favour of a strong nation, he is 1,000 miles away from outrageous nationalism and will fight this tendency all his life, a tendency which leads to withdrawal into oneself rather than openness to others. He is the very antithesis of nationalist developments which unfortunately stained the 20th century with blood.
      www.ijf.org/history/jigoro-kano-who-was-he-really/4668
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  2. Kanō Jigorō. Kanō Jigorō (嘉納 治五郎, 10 December 1860[note 1] – 4 May 1938[4]) was a Japanese judoka, educator, politician, and the founder of judo. Judo was one of the first Japanese martial arts to gain widespread international recognition, and the first to become an official Olympic sport.

  3. Jigoro Kano was born on October 28, 1860, in Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. His father, Jirosaku Kireshiba, was the 4th son of a Shinto priest, and his mother, Sadako, was the daughter of a well-to-do sake brewer.

  4. Sep 13, 2010 · Although Kano was a confirmed patriot he was never a nationalist of the same ilk as Mitsuru Toyama or Morihei Uchida. In contrast, he took the internatioanI view and was a liberal, cut from the same cloth as Prince Saionji.

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  5. Jigoro Kano was born on October 28, 1860, in what is currently the East Nada district of the city of Kobe. These were the last days of the Tokugawa military government, and it was a period of distrust and anti-government activities.

  6. www.ijf.org › history › jigoro-kano-who-was-heHistory / IJF.org

    He is the very antithesis of nationalist developments which unfortunately stained the 20th century with blood. One of the key elements of Kano's approach is that it is only by moving towards a goal, that people can improve and progress.

  7. www.ijf.org › history › jigoro-kano-who-was-heHistory / IJF.org - Judo

    Among these Japanese thinkers, of course, Jigoro Kano was one of the defenders of an approach that combined tradition and modernity. Eishoji temple This paradigm shift was at the origin of philosophical battles which led part of the population and the leaders to develop nationalist ideas.

  8. In preparation for Japan's first participation in the Olympics, Japan's first national athletic association (Dai Nippon Athletic Association [Japanese Society of Physical Education]) was assembled in 1911, and the 50-year-old Jigoro was appointed as its head.