Kanku Dai Kata Tutorial
Kankū-dai (観空大)
The original name for this kata was Kusanku.
The name Kūsankū was the name of a Chinese diplomat from Fukien, who traveled to Okinawa in the eighteenth century.
Many people beleive the kata Kusanku has strong roots with White Crane Kung Fu.
Kanku dai is a very long kata and is generally first practiced at brown belt in most Shotokan Dojo.
This kata is known for it’s distinct opening move. My Sensei used to say to meditate as the sun rises, following the sun rise by lifting the arms (eyes almost completely closed), using the opening move of the kata.
Many karateka get very confused when first practicing Kanku dai, as it contains lots of moves from the 5 Heian kata.
Many karate historians believe the karate moves contained in the heian kata, come from Kanku Dai (to view the sky). They say that master Itosu thought Kusanku was too long and contained too many karate moves for new karateka to learn. So he took Kusanku and divided it up into the five heian kata, although this is just one theory, it does make sense.
Although this kata is classed as a basic to intemediary kata, it should be practiced long and hard as it contains all the basic fundamentals of Shotokan karate. If Kanku dai is mastrered, the black belt kata and karate in general will be strong.
A great training exercise is to go through Kanku Dai once slowly, then once fast, then repeat ten times. Kanku dai is a long shotokan kata and it is very taxing physically and mentally. But this kata contains all of Shotokan karate’s basic fundamentals.
Mastering this kata will propel your karate to new levels of excellence. There are slight variations from dojo to dojo and that is understandable, but the essence of Kusanku remains the same which ever version you practice.
Kankū Dai is not merely another kata in the Shotokan curriculum, it’s a profound cornerstone of the foundations that a karateka must build in shotokan karate.
Much of Shotokan’s core philosophy and technique is believed to have sprung from kanku dai.
Many revered karate sensei consider Kankū Dai to be a complete fighting system in and of itself, containing all the essential elements for a robust and enduring Shotokan foundation.
This perspective is supported by a significant historical theory that suggests the five Heian kata, which form the building blocks of a beginner’s training, were derived from this single, comprehensive form.
Originally known as Kushanku, the kata was a masterpiece of strategic depth and technical breadth, influencing generations of martial artists.
To master Kankū Dai is to unlock the very DNA of Shotokan, gaining an intuitive understanding of its powerful stances, intricate transitions, and versatile striking applications.
For any serious practitioner, it represents the heart of their journey, a single, complex tapestry woven with all the threads of their art.