On tuesday 9.11 at 18:00 it's time to have Pool 'n' Snooker evening at City Biljard.
You are most welcome to join us!.
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Autumn Hike
Kids take you parents and parents take your kids for a refreshing day outdoors. In other words everyone is welcome! Continue reading
Karate Oulu – Beginners’ Karate Course for Adults
The international beginner's karate course for adults is starting. So far the course participants represent 6 different nationalities. You may enroll for the course Monday 18.10. at latest. Training takes place in Kajaanintulli school in the city centre of Oulu. The course is meant for everyone above the age of 14.
Get the course brochure: Beginner's karate course for adults
Karate Oulu – Beginners’ Karate Course for Juniors (10-14)
The beginner's karate course for juniors (10-14 years) is starting. Last enrollment on Thursday 7.10 at 16.45. Training takes place at Terva-Toppila school's Merituuli-unit, Koskelantie 51-53, Oulu.
Get the course brocure: Beginner's karate course for juniors
What is bushido?
Bushidō (武士道), meaning “Way of the Warrior”, is a name in common usage since the late 19th century which is used to describe a uniquely Japanese code of conduct adhered to by samurai since time immemorial, and loosely analogous to Western concepts of chivalry. This code is said to have emphasized virtues such as loyalty, honor, obedience, duty, filial piety, and self-sacrifice.
Although Chinese-derived Confucian concepts such as loyalty and filial piety were certainly extolled in Japanese texts from the medieval period, the actual term bushidō is extremely rare in ancient texts, and does not even appear in famous texts supposedly describing this code, such as the Hagakure of Yamamoto Tsunetomo. Moreover, although at various points in Japanese history certain feudal lords promulgated prescriptive “House Codes” to guide the actions of their retainers, there never existed a single, unified “samurai code” which all Japanese warriors adhered to or were even aware of.
The first person to popularize the term bushidō was Japanese author Nitobe Inazō, a converted Quaker living in Philadelphia and married to an American wife, in his 1899 book Bushidō: The Soul of Japan, which was originally written and published in English and only later translated into Japanese. In this work, Inazō scoured Japanese tradition in an effort to recover an indigenous code of behavior analogous to the Western ideal of chivalry, which he then embedded with his own Christian ideology. Although Nitobe presented this concept as a timeless Japanese tradition which he had simply been taught as a child, he obscured his own numerous interpolations and extrapolations, and his efforts to unite diverse strands of Shintō and Buddhist teachings into a single unified code. Upon publication Nitobe’s work was a massive success, and has returned to Japanese best-seller lists on numerous occasions (most recently in early 2004 following the release of the American film The Last Samurai), and the term quickly entered into widespread use in both Japanese and Western texts from that time. (Wikipedia, 2010)