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School identity
How Our Club Got Its NameIn June 1991, the nucleus of our club formed. It was a group of 10 young people, most of whom had just finished school and were beginning institute studies. Thus arose a new aikido club. Due to their youth and zeal, they were prepared to train from morning to evening, sometimes skipping institute lectures to do so. In the early 1990s, there were few aikido clubs in Moscow. As a rule, they were named after the main instructor there, or after the name of the place where they met: for example, the V. Matveev group, the V. Podorolsky group, the V. Baranovsky group, the Michelle Duke Ngeban group, the 2nd Medical Institute group, MGTU, MAI, MSU, etc.
We thought for a long time how to change our name from "Marina" group. We tried to find a name that would reflect the spirit of the club. Finally, what started out as a joke we began to take seriously - using the word "Koinobori", which has as its root the word "koi" ("carp", in Japanese). Such a fortunate coincidence with the root of the last name "Karpova", and the fact that a "koinobori" cloth banner is an integral part of the Boy's Celebration in Japan (most of our group was boys) - all determined the final choice of the name.One of our Japanese friends, Mr. Naomi Nomura (5th Dan aikido), at that time a student at AIKIKAI Hombu Dojo, searched for and sent to us a unique kamon (ancient Japanese coat of arms), which became our symbol. It is an element of Japanese heraldry, the basis of which is an image of a carp fighting a raging current. In the East the carp symbolizes masculine prowess, endurance, and persistence. The annual battle between the carp and the current in its striving to reach the spawning ground (in Chinese legends it even climbs waterfalls and then turns into a Dragon***) symbolizes the growth of energy and health.
In Japan, the carp is a symbol of the samurai strength of spirit, possibly because of the contrast between its bold leaps in the water and its calm after it has been caught and is dying. In the East, it was also revered for its longevity; carp was a symbol of good fortune. Pennants in the form of a carp were hung from ships' masts and from roofs to protect the ship or house from fire.
In Asia, especially in China, to this day the dragon is considered a symbol of supernatural powers, unbounded by moral principles. A coiled dragon sewn on clothing symbolizes the image of the creative rhythms of elemental nature, especially giving rain the power of a storm (an emblem often appearing as a pearl in the mouth or throat of a dragon). From this comes the symbolism evoking a rain of paper dragons which, among bursts of fireworks, are carried in processions during the autumn festival on the second day of the second month of the Chinese calendar. A turquoise dragon with five claws, Lung, was the emblem of the Han dynasty, symbolizing the active principle "yin", the East, the rising sun, fertility, happiness, and the gift of divine wisdom and immortality. A dragon with three claws is the Mikado symbol in Japan and is the main symbol for rain, as in other parts of Southeast Asia, sovereign of the sea and rivers, but is also the divine winged serpent connected with the rainbow. The king-dragon is a notable figure in Japanese folklore. Tango-no-sekku (Boys' Holiday)
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