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Much
of this below is taken from Ninja Magazine in 1987 By
Ilan Gattegno and updated a little.
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"He
is like the shadow of Soke Hatsumi and many see
him as the one who will eventually take the helm
of Bujinkan" The Bio of Nagato-Shihan as published
in Ninja Magazine in 1987 By Ilan Gattegno.
He is a giant (in many ways), well muscled, the
type of person you would hire as a bouncer if you
owned a night club.
His muscle makes you fear him, but when he's moving,
it seems that he does not use his strength at all.
He moves so gently and smoothly that it becomes
unclear whether he is fighting or dancing.
Shihan Toshiro Nagato does not share the enthusiasm
that others have about his rank. To them he occupies
a lofty perch. but he still considers himself a
beginner, still learning all the time. To him years
of ninjutsu is nothing to write home about. |
The 52-year-old ninjutsu master teacher started his life
as a martial artist When he was eight. Like most Japanese
school children. he took part in the compulsory judo lessons
that are as much a part of the educational system there
as gym is to American children. The young Nagato enjoyed
his judo training and his unusual size and strength helped
him win third place in the Kodokan tournament for junior
high school students.
As far as Nagato was concerned, this was to be the end
of his career as a judoka, but the Kodokan masters thought
differently. They decided to send Toshiro to the U.S.
to teach judo at the University of Ontario in Oregon.
While teaching there he was also studying, all the while
dreaming of something else. He had heard the name of the
Judo master, Hatsumi Masaaki and, while in the states,
had read Andrew Adams' book Ninja. The Invisible Assassins.
Nagato wanted to be a true martial artist, not just a
judoka, and ninjutsu seemed the way to go. He decided
then and there that when he returned to Japan, he would
seek out this art.
Things didn't quite work out the way Nagato had planned
as circumstances led him into the professional kickboxing
ring. He began entering competitions in Tokyo to earn
badly needed money.
Where size had always been his ally, it now became his
adversary. A giant at 90 kg (about 195 pounds), he was
far heavier than any established division in Japan. He
then undertook a strict diet that would eventually drop
him to 72.5 kg- still the heaviest division for competition.
In three major events in Korakuen Halls, he won all his
fights - all by knock-out. These victories made him champion
of the Shin Jin - the newcomers.
Despite his victories, kickboxing was no fun for Nagato.
"Too much beating up, too bad for the health, bad
for my face and also, it was not a martial art."
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Before
he began to explore ninjutsu, Nagato felt that
he had to get out of Japan. Having been in Oregon,
he knew that there were places in the world that
offered less stress than Japan. Kickboxing had
been a way for Nagato to release some of that
stress, but now that he was through with that
sport, he felt he needed a change of atmosphere.
A friend in America, Michael Echanis, a former
Green Beret, invited him over and he accepted.
Echanis, a professional soldier and Vietnam veteran,
wanted to learn the martial arts from Nagato.
Echanis said there was a job waiting for him at
the Special Forces camp in North Carolina.
"They
wanted me to be a Green Beret and when there was
a mission for everybody in South America, they
asked me to join them. I felt wrong about it and
I told them that I wasn't interested. Something
in me said, 'Danger.' Unfortunately, Nagato's
feelings about the mission were well-founded.
While in South America, the plane crashed and
all aboard were lost. "There was a feeling
inside me that told me not to go," said Nagato.
"It convinced me that it was time to go back
and find the true martial arts teacher."
Nagato found Hatsumi in Noda City. Ninjutsu was
completely different from anything he had yet
experienced in the martial arts. "It wasn't
a sport, but I was glad because I didn't want
to fight any more. I didn't go there to fight.
Lately, though, I feel that I miss the fighting
a little bit, but it's nothing. "
Hatsumi immediately saw talent when Nagato came
to him. He saw the man's fighting spirit right
away. There is no wonder in this, however, as
street-fighting was common in the neighborhood
that Nagato grew up in. His background in judo
and kickboxing was a big asset as well. Nagato
rose through the ranks like a rocket. He put a
lot into his training and, before he knew it,
he was a master teacher.
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Nagato
teaches several times a week in his own dojo and at the
hombu dojo.
Nagato earns his living as a hone-tzugi (bone setter),
just like Hatsumi, and lives happily in Saitiama ken with
his wife Mamiko and two sons Yoshiki and Yuhe.
When asked about his rank he replys. "I have to feel
the responsibility, but there's nothing. Maybe some responsibility,
but I still have so much to learn. I must stick to Hatsumi
Sensei and hold onto him to learn all that I can learn.
Okay, so I have a little feeling of what it means to be
a martial artist, not much more."
Nagato does not foresee a big change in ninjutsu in the
future. "We don't consider ninjutsu to be the ultimate
art," says Nagato. "Budo, the martial arts world,
is the essence of everything. It's all still alive and
we want to keep it alive. We look for understanding, for
peaceful life and happiness. Budo is good for the country,
and for the whole universe.
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