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Seikichi Uehara: Sensei Uehara also calls his dojo Seidokan. Both Tomas studied from Uehara and sometime afterwards changed their respective dojo names to Seidokan. Dr. Stephen Chan, the Dean of Oriental and African Studies at London University, has related that he believes Seidokan has strong Okinawan nationalist connotations. I quote Dr. Chan: "The key here, from my own research, is that all three men, [Seiki] Toma, [Shian] Toma, and Uehara, are Okinawan nationalists and the term 'Seidokan', apart from its normal translation, is also a barely coded reference to the House of the Way of Sho (written also as Sei) dynasty." Dr. Chan obtained this rather insightful information while accompanying Shian Toma on a tour of the restored Shuri Castle in Okinawa. While Seiki Toma had the opportunity to study from some well-known teachers, he too produced some well-known students in his own right. Most famous of these were/are: Seikichi Odo, Seifuku Nitta, Masanobu Kikukawa, Takahiro Shinjo, Shian Toma.
Seiki Toma's karate is a dynamic blend of old Okinawa Te, Shorin-Ryu, Tozan-Ryu, Isshin-Ryu, and Motobu-Ryu. Training with him was a truly wonderful experience. His technique were fast and crisp. The flexibility he displayed was that of a person less than half his age and he would maintain a high energy level. All attributes which are quite remarkable for a man who was over eighty.
Courtesy of Sekai Dentokan Bugei Renmei
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