 Bruce
Lee™ is best remembered by those who knew
him, not as a martial artist or movie star, but
as a teacher and friend.
When
Bruce first arrived in Seattle, he began to
develop a reputation for teaching gung fu.
Soon Bruce had many people wanting to study under
him. One of those people was a thirty-six
year old Japanese-American named Taky
Kimura. Kimura had spent five years in a
United States internment camp during World War II
and suffered difficulty in getting a decent job
afterward, under the shadow of post-war
anti-Japanese sentiment. Demoralized,
Kimura was seeking something to give him back his
self-confidence. He found that in the young
Bruce Lee™, who became his mentor,
spiritual guide, and best friend.
"All
the time we were growing up my mother and dad
always said: "Look, we're nothing but
second-class citizens so don't ever put yourself
in the mainstream of life because you are going
to get hurt,'" says Kimura. "We
argued with them because the educational system
told us that we were equal under the
constitution. But then (when the war came
along) all of a sudden things changed and we were
put in the internment camps, even though we were
citizens. The Selective Service put us in
the 4Y category, which was an alien
classification, and they told us that there were
rumors that they were going to take us and ship
us off to some island as soon as they could get
rid of us. Anyhow, they put us in camps.
"I
came out and I was just a broken man because of
this humiliation that occurred within
myself. And then in 1959 I had the
wonderful honor of being in the right place at
the right time to meet Bruce.
"He
was eighteen, a typical teenager with all this
boundless energy, telling dirty jokes and all
that and I was thirty-six and just mentally
devastated. I couldn't relate to that, but
he understood.
"Bruce
came along and helped me out. He used to
say, 'Jesus Christ Kimura! Look at these
clothes you're wearing! You look like an
old man!' And I would say, 'I'm clean
aren't I?' But you know, he told me to wear
different clothes and all this kind of stuff and
it was all a part of making me realize that I am
a human being, no better or worse than anyone
else. He told that repeatedly to me and (by
teaching you the fundamentals of physicalness
within yourself) obviously you start feeling
better about yourself, when you know that you can
do something. I think that that is one of
the great things. Unfortunately, we all
have to go through this process to understand
what our capabilities are. But if you don't
progress any further than that then you're not
going to get anywhere."
Of
all the people associated with Bruce Lee™,
Taky Kimura is the finest. That, possibly, is why
Bruce Lee™ referred to Kimura as his
senior-most student and made it clear to other
students that Kimura was always to be respected
by them. Was Kimura the best martial
artist? No, but he was the best friend of Bruce
Lee™ and a man of sterling
character. Perhaps it was Kimura's moral
core, not his martial art
skill, that Lee recognized, and which he felt was
so important to his art. Since 1964, Kimura
has been the instructor of the Jun Fan Gung Fu
Institute™ of Seattle. Kimura has never
accepted compensation for his work in Bruce
Lee's™ name, and has quietly been the
caretaker of Bruce Lee's™ grave for almost
30 years. He is a man who is universally
respected in the Bruce Lee™ community, and
a shining example of the positive impact that
Bruce Lee's™ philosophy has had on people.
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