"If you don't know history, then you don't know anything. You are a leaf that doesn't know he is part of a tree." -Crichton
In jiu jitsu circles, it is common knowledge that Mitsuyo Maeda came to Brazil, taught jiu jitsu to Carlos Gracie Sr, and Carlos taught his brothers, creating the jiu jitsu boom we are in now, nearly a century later. I illustrated this in my last blog post, as you may have read. What I left out was the fact that there was at least one other student of Maeda in Brazil, and nobody knows, or will say if he preceded Grandmaster Carlos. His name was Luis Franca.
Little is known (or spoken) about Luis Franca. He probably learned jiu jitsu before some, or possibly all of the original five sons of Gastao Gracie Sr, because he was a direct student of Maeda. He was the professor of Grandmaster Oswaldo Fadda, also a red belt. One may ask, is this non-Gracie line legitimate? I would ask multiple Mundial world champions, Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza or Rodolfo Viera. They are from that line and, yes, they are legitimate.
The Franca-Fadda line is said to have accepted The Gracie Challenge and had success in the mid-20th century in Brazil with their emphasis on leg lock techniques. The Gracies at the time considered leg locks "low-class" and didn't train them much, or at all. Now, the best in the world are experts in chokes, armbars, shoulder locks and, yes, leg locks. In jiu jitsu, you don't have to do all the moves but you must know how to defend them all, which means you must train all positions and all techniques.
If anybody knows more about Luis Franca, Brazilian student of Mitsuyo Maeda; please pass the information and source so history can credit this pioneer. What the Gracies have done is done. Nobody can quantify what they have meant to martial arts. To credit another forefather will take nothing away from their contributions. The metaphor I used in my last post was that Carlos Sr. was George Washington and Helio Gracie was Thomas Jefferson. Should we omit John Adams from the story? I don't believe so.
-Gracie Lemon
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Friday, November 27, 2015
The Gracie Family History
“To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child.” -Cicero
Most fight fans are aware of the accomplishments of one member of the Gracie family from his successes in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). If the title of this blog has led you here, then you already know about Royce Gracie, son of Helio Gracie. If you don't, he is the 180 pound man who successfully beat three-to-four martial artist/fighters in a single night during no holds barred matches in the early 1990's... on three different occasions. He is the most well-known Gracie for these achievements, but he is not the most significant.
Most fight fans are aware of the accomplishments of one member of the Gracie family from his successes in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). If the title of this blog has led you here, then you already know about Royce Gracie, son of Helio Gracie. If you don't, he is the 180 pound man who successfully beat three-to-four martial artist/fighters in a single night during no holds barred matches in the early 1990's... on three different occasions. He is the most well-known Gracie for these achievements, but he is not the most significant.
In the early 20th century, a Japanese martial artist named
Mitsuyo Maeda came to Brazil and changed the world of martial arts forever.
Maeda or Conde Koma, as he became known for knocking out or putting to sleep
opponents around the world in challenge matches, met a man named Gastao Gracie.
Gracie had five sons, the oldest of which was a troubled youth. His name was Carlos.
Gastao introduced Carlos to Maeda in hopes of helping his son get his life on
track and keep him out of trouble. Carlos Gracie became the first Brazilian,
and the first Gracie to learn jiu jitsu from the Japanese Maeda.
His four brothers also learned from their big brother.
Gastao Jr, Osvaldo, George and Helio (in order, oldest to youngest) became
adept at their craft like Carlos. George, who was known as the Red Cat, was the first
Gracie family champion. He did challenge matches that later became known as The
Gracie Challenge. Basically, anybody could challenge one of the Gracies to test
their art against Gracie Brazilian Jiu jitsu. The Gracies were very successful
and the Red Cat was the first. He died young and the torch was passed to his
feeble-statured little brother, Helio Gracie... Royce’s dad.
Helio may have left the biggest footprint of all the
Gracies. Many in martial arts circles consider him the founder of Brazilian jiu
jitsu, but I do not. I consider him more of a forefather... a Jefferson to
Carlos's Washington. While Helio didn't found the art, his legacy is undeniable.
He faced Masahiko Kimura (the namesake of the shoulder lock which was used to
defeat Gracie) in front of a crowd of 20,000-plus at MaracanĂ£ Stadium after the
tiny Helio was stacking Japanese champions like cord wood. Japan sent their
best and Kimura was 80-100 pounds heavier with equal skill and heart. Helio's
fighting exploits were undeniable during the middle part of the century but his
true legacy may be what he left behind. He and Carlos's offspring have
continued the tradition their fathers' had begun.
Carlson Gracie Sr. became the family champion after his
uncle Helio aged out of the role. His legacy was adding wrestling and other
effective skills to the grappling playbook. This “going out of the Gracie Clan”
was frowned upon by his traditionalist uncle and others in the family. But his
branch of the tree produced legendary fighters such as Vitor Belfort et al.
Carlos Gracie Jr, also a son of the founder, has led more
people to jiu jitsu than any other single person through the world’s largest
chain of Brazilian jiu jitsu schools, Gracie Barra (pronounced Baja). There are
schools all over Europe, North and South America, and Asia. The author of this
blog is a student of one of them and I consider him my master.
Rorion, the oldest son of Helio, trademarked the name Gracie
Jiu jitsu and established the Gracie Jiu jitsu Academy in Torrance, California.
He was also a cofounder of the UFC where his little brother dominated in the
early years.
Rickson, the second son of Helio, is widely considered the greatest
Gracie. He competed in many fights and was never defeated. You are hard-pressed
to find anybody who claims to have even beaten him during sparring. In fact, to
the contrary: many current and former champions who have had the opportunity to
train with him have said that they were unable to submit him, even at 50-plus
years of age. He had the technique, smarts, warrior spirit, and unwavering
commitment to his craft… a true living legend.
Rickson’s older cousin Rolls is the one that some would say
was the greatest, besides Rickson. Rolls Gracie died young in a hang-gliding accident
but promoted six to black belt before he died. These are very prestigious
people in the world of BJJ. One of these is Romero Cavalcanti (more commonly
known as Jacare) who is the founder of Alliance BJJ, the second-largest chain
of schools behind Gracie Barra, and producers of the likes of Fabio Gurgel and the
great Marcelo Garcia. Another is Maurcio Motta Gomes who married Reila Gracie Carlos’s
Sr’s (the founder) daughter and produced who I think is the greatest, most
skilled champion, Roger Gracie Gomes (more commonly known as Roger Gracie).
Roger has never been submitted in competition. He has beaten
every man he has ever faced in a BJJ competition. The few losses he has were by points to the
best out there such as Pe de Pano, Ronaldo Souza and Alexander Ribiero. He has
beaten them all multiple times.
As you can see, the Gracie family story doesn’t begin and
end with Royce and the UFC, though his contributions were significant. He
showed Americans the effectiveness of the greatest martial art and the rest is
history.
The Helio branch led by Rorion tries to push Helio as the
founder of BJJ, and many buy into the spin. What Helio has done is history and
he is a legend and a forefather, but he learned BJJ from his big brother,
Carlos Sr. That is an indisputable fact. Helio was the last to die of the five
original brothers so he was the Grandmaster for a decade and a half after
Carlos died. This enabled Rorion and the Helio branch of the Gracie family tree
to push the “founder” narrative. All BJJ students and practitioners should know
that Helio was a great champion and promoter, but Carlos Gracie Sr. was the
founder of Brazilian Jiu jitsu. Know your history!
-Gracie Lemon
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