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Throughout history there are many examples showing a strong relation between religion and the warriors chaste. Practices related to religion like prayer and meditation had a large importance in the soldiers’ life, aiming at increasing their courage during the battles.
It was not rare, in the East as much as in the West, for a warrior at some point in life to be ordained a monk. The existence of real warrior monks is already known, the Templars in the West and the Yamabushi in the East, for example.
In the feudal Japan, starting from the 13th century, there was a holy alliance between the samurai chaste and a particular kind of Buddhism, called Zen. How it was possible that such a peaceful religion as Buddhism became the ideological and moral substrate of the warriors can be understood only emphasizing the peculiar characteristics of this “way” towards illumination.

 

 
 
 

The monks tried to erase the conceptual logical thought to develop an intuitive knowledge, flowing from the heart. Fully living every moment without worrying about the past and future, set your spirit here and now without projects or goals, was the necessary condition to reach the satori state (illumination) and therefore become Buddha.
The search for Mushin (absence of mind) allows the intuition to be developed at the maximum level and makes it become one with moment of the action.
Intuition and action flow at the same instant. This causes the overcoming of the dual idea of life and death, and therefore the total lack of fear when facing death.
We can understand how this philosophy could be successful in the Japanese warrior class.
Being totally clear minded when in a battle, the lack of fear of death, a total correspondence between intuition and action, together with very high technical skills, made the samurai a very intimidating warrior. The samurai was possibly the best warrior prototype there has ever been in history, as some historians suggest.
The sharing of the same intentions by Zen monks and Bushi made the two ways almost identical, and we can state that Zen and Budo were one.
 

 
     
  By: Maestro Lorenzo Tussardi
6° dan karate Shotokan Ryu

  
 
 
 
 


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