The Spread of Submission Fighting Techniques
During the 1940s, submission fighting techniques and practices
enjoyed something of a rebirth and spread across the globe.
Indeed, a burgeoning number of men and women around the world
undertook to better understand and to more fully investigate
submission fighting techniques.
Before more completely exploring the spread of submission
fighting since the 1940s, a general understanding of submission
fighting itself is necessary. Submission fighting is a term that
is used to describe various types of martial arts that focus on
grappling to effect the ultimate admission of loss (crying
uncle) or submission of an opponent. Some experts define
submission fighting as being "unarmed close combat" that is used
to defeat or control an unarmed opponent within a sporting
context.
Submission fighting involves the use of various joint locks,
chokes and related manipulations to the opponent's body.
According to submission fighting practitioners and experts, the
basic methods of attack utilized include striking, kicking,
strangling and joint locking.
Defensive maneuvering is an elementary element of submission
fighting. Those who are skilled in the techniques of submission
fighting understand how to turn the basic offensive devices into
defensive maneuvers as is necessary. Examples of contemporary
forms of submission fighting include judo, jiu jitsu, shooto,
and Brazilian jiu jitsu.
As mentioned previously, submission fighting experienced a
rebirth during the 1940s. The increase of interest in learning
submission fighting techniques was the direct result of Japan's
early success during the beginning of World War II. Members of
the Japanese armed forces, together with their counterparts in
Korea, China and other Oriental nations and provinces, received
training in submission fighting techniques as part of their
overall service preparation. The Emperor's soldiers undertook
intensive training directed towards mastering submission
fighting techniques.
Early on during the course of World War II, Allied citizens were
not interested in close-in combat of any sort. However, all of
that changed on December 7, 1941, with the successful Japanese
attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
Overnight, many citizens of the United States -- as well as
other Allied nations -- became intensely interested in learning
submission fighting techniques. Citizens enrolled in whatever
training courses could be found, particularly along the west
coast of the United States. (At that time, the number of
qualified instructors was extremely limited.) These wartime
events affected the foundation of submission fighting training
programs that remain in place in many nations the world over
sixty years later in the 21st century.