Japan university awards first-ever ninja studies degree

Agence France-Presse

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Japan university awards first-ever ninja studies degree

AFP

Since 2018, Mie University has offered a graduate course devoted to the ninja – not to be one, but to learn about them

TOKYO, Japan – Japan has produced its first ninja studies graduate after Genichi Mitsuhashi spent two years honing his martial arts skills and absorbing the finer traditions of the feudal martial arts agents.

The 45-year-old completed the master’s course at Mie University in central Japan, the region considered the home of the ninja.

In addition to researching historical documents, Mitsuhashi told Agence France-Presse (AFP) he took the practical aspect of being a ninja to heart.

“I read that ninjas worked as farmers in the morning and trained in martial arts in the afternoon,” he said.

So Mitsuhashi grew vegetables and worked on his martial arts techniques, in addition to copious ninja study in the classroom.

“With this combination, I thought I could learn about the real ninja,” he said.

Better known as black-clad assassins famous for secrecy and stealth, ninjas also had “comprehensive survival skills,” he added.

Mitsuhashi, who has also learned kung fu and a Japanese martial art known as Shorinji Kempo, teaches ninja skills at his own dojo and runs a local inn while pursuing his PhD.

The Mie University set up the world’s first research center devoted to the ninja in 2017 and opened a graduate course a year later.

It is located in Iga – 350 kilometers southwest of Tokyo – a mountain-shrouded city once home to many ninja.

Yuji Yamada, a professor of Japanese history at the university in charge of the ninja center, was surprised at Mitsuhashi’s devotion to the task.

“We provide historical classes and courses on ninja skills. But I didn’t expect him to engage to this extent” like a real living ninja, Yamada said.

To enroll, students have to take an exam on Japanese history and a reading test on historical ninja documents.

“About 3 students enroll every year. I think there’s demand,” the professor said.

“We get many inquiries from overseas but I have to say one thing: This is a course to learn about the ninja, not to become one.” – Rappler.com

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