TheStudent
Yellow Belt
Can someone explain this to me?
1. Stephen K. Hayes, the #1 individual who brought the Bujinkan to US attention, starts his own variant, which is supposed to be a distilled version focusing on specifically what works in modern situations, against modern attacks.
2. Richard Van Donk, the most publicly visible bujinkan representative, starts his own variant, which is supposedly a combination of Bujinkan and techniques and skills from multiple other grandmasters. This is designed to meet today's needs and be effective against modern attacks.
With this situation, Hayes seems to recieve very negative reactions from most bujinkan members, while Van Donk is accepted as being 100% bujinkan, even if some seem to question his methods.
To me, they seem the same, as far as going and starting their own system. so why are the reactions so different?
Thanks,
TheStudent
1. Stephen K. Hayes, the #1 individual who brought the Bujinkan to US attention, starts his own variant, which is supposed to be a distilled version focusing on specifically what works in modern situations, against modern attacks.
2. Richard Van Donk, the most publicly visible bujinkan representative, starts his own variant, which is supposedly a combination of Bujinkan and techniques and skills from multiple other grandmasters. This is designed to meet today's needs and be effective against modern attacks.
With this situation, Hayes seems to recieve very negative reactions from most bujinkan members, while Van Donk is accepted as being 100% bujinkan, even if some seem to question his methods.
To me, they seem the same, as far as going and starting their own system. so why are the reactions so different?
Thanks,
TheStudent