Sensei Kenosuke
Enoeda 9th Dan
1935 - 2002
The
following profile on Sensei Enoeda is a brief
account of how he first became associated with
the KUGB, and his feelings for the country that
was his home for almost 30 years.
Sensei Enoeda was born in Kyushu, an island in
the South of Japan, on July 4th 1935. A strong
and natural athlete, he initially took up
baseball, kendo, and judo, as did many of his
contemporaries - these being the popular sports
in Japan at that time. He proved particularly
adept at Judo, and by the age of 16 he had
reached 2nd Dan. However, as is often the way,
fate guided him to a demonstration by two top
Karate exponents from the famous Takashoku
University. The two Karateka, Senseis Irea and
Okazaki, so impressed him, that there and then,
he decided to channel his energy into Karate.
He enrolled at Takashoku University, joined the
Karate section, and within two years was the
proud holder of Shodan. Another two years found
him Club Captain.
One of his teacher's was the great Master and
founder of modern Shotokan Karate, Funakoshi Gichin, whose instruction and advice
was a
source of inspiration to him.
He graduated with a degree in economics before
joining the JKA instructors class which he
attended for three years, during which time his
main instructor was Sensei Nakayama. He also
trained with many of the top Sensei of other
schools and styles of Karate. It was this
quality of instruction, combined with a
fiercesome determination, which molded Sensei
Enoeda into one of Japan's finest ever
competitors and instructors.
After achieving his aim of becoming JKA
Champion, Sensei began to receive invitations to
instruct in various countries - Indonesia, South
Africa, Hawaii - and eventually joined his
friend, Hirokazu Kanazawa, to instruct in
England.
So it was, that in 1965, Sensei Enoeda found
himself in a place called Liverpool, where he
was to spend some considerable time. He had a
flat in Percy Street, in Liverpool City Centre,
close to the Anglican Cathedral, and his
transport was a bright orange Volkswagen Beetle.
He was instructing full-time at the Liverpool
Red Triangle Dojo, and the quality of
instruction and the spirit he engendered was
soon to bring the club competition success. If
you were there in those early days, you would
have found it difficult not to be inspired by
the intensity of his coaching. No less
inspirational was the intensity of his training
- every morning at 7am in Sefton Park he would
meet with a small group of students and train
with them, showing by example that even
All-Japan champions need to make training part
of the daily lives. These students included Andy
Sherry, Terry O'Neil, Bob Poynton, and Bill
Christall.
Thus, Sensei's 'way' has permeated through to
KUGB club Instructors and to the current
generation of Junior and Senior Squad members,
and goes a long way to explaining the high
standards of Karate within the KUGB.
When he went to Australia for the World JKA
Championships in 1989, he would have the British
Squad out training every morning at 7am. Sensei
would talk about how his life had changed since
he had left Japan to teach in England in 1966.
He confessed that he had worried about the
changes he would have to face - both in culture
and climate - something he had not experienced
so much when, for example, he was teaching in
Hawaii. The climate there is similar to the
Summer months of Japan, and there is a long
established Japanese community.
At first he found English food strange - he
could not believe we make a pudding from rice! -
and the British weather! What did emerge from
the conversation however was that he had grown
to love the British people and their culture,
and that he was so proud to be Chief Instructor
to the KUGB.
He was once asked was he getting used to British
food and he replied "of course! I feel that now
I AM British!".
Sensei married in England in 1969, and lived in
Kingston, Surrey, with his wife Reiko. His two
children, Daisuke and Maya have both graduated
from university and worked in England.
Sensei lived as an English gentleman, whilst
developing the KUGB and on his behalf we will
continue to work to make the KUGB even stronger.
Sensei would have it no other way. He sadly
passed away in 2002.
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