Scene and Heard: The Shoryuhai Tournament

By Mia L. Sobin

When I saw the octagonal sign hanging on the entryway that said, “STOP: Please Remove Your Shoes Before Entering,” I had a feeling I wasn’t in Cambridge anymore.

I unzipped and hesitantly slid off my boots (slightly embarrassed about my fuzzy socks), and pushed open the doors to the gym on the fourth floor of the Malkin Athletic Center. Immediately, a cloud of students clad in what looked like floor-length purple skirts that read “NYU” walked by. Later, I learned that the skirta Hakamais just one part of the whole Kendo uniform, designed to look like the apparel of a Samurai warrior. The gym was crowded, but it seemed that I was one of few unaffiliated spectators, and possibly the only person other than Harvard emergency medical technicians who wasn’t in kendo garb.

I was at the Shoryuhai Intercollegiate Kendo Tournament, a Harvard-run Japanese sword fighting tournament and the largest collegiate tournament in the nation. Walking carefully so as not to tread on the bamboo swords or gym bags that were scattered around the bleachers, I climbed to the top row and settled down to watch the match that was about to begin.

Two people wearing hakama skirts and white faceless masks circled each other in the middle of a large circle of spectators, their swords raised. Suddenly, there was shouting and the sound of swords clashing against each other; after nine or 10 seconds, there was excited applause and the circle began to disperse.

I sat, clueless: What on earth had I just witnessed?

A loudspeaker announcement informed me that it was time for lunch, so I wandered onto the gym floor to get a closer look. As far as I could tell, Harvard fighters were gathered in the farthest corner, set up with pizza and Dunkin’ Donuts and chatting about their morning. Walking up to the nearest people that looked like they might be on the Harvard team, I asked them about their experiences with Kendo sword fighting.

Jack F. Weyen ‘16, a member of the team, said the sport is oppositional. “Its all about the mentality of battle,” he said. “You shout to show intent and faith in attack, and then you hit.” According to Weyen, each spot you aim for is one that makes clear your desire to kill your opponentthe throat, wrist, torso, or head.

These battles play out between groups of four or five people from each team, in a match lasting anywhere from 10 seconds to two minutes. They end once an attacker gets two “touches.” The singles tournament is much more difficult than the team matches; although it requires less strategic thinking, players say, students face masters of kendo, “dons,” as well as alums and graduate students. Because many undergraduates are beginners, they rarely make it to the finals.

For Kathy L. Tran ‘16, a tournament manager, animosity on the field is accompanied by the warmth of the close-knit—if somewhat unknown—kendo community. “No one is doing anything alone here,” she said. “Yet despite the closeness of the team, she continued, “Harvard needs to acknowledge kendo more.”

In accordance with the supposed obscurity of the sport, many of the competing students have little or no prior experience with kendo before their freshman year. Some students come to kendo from other sports for a mentally-engaging change in pace. Harrison H. Parker ’16, an ex-fencer, explained that he was looking for a “change of scenery in a combat sport.” For Parker, kendo is a game of both body and mind. “Once you start to understand what’s going on, you have to control the other person,” he said. “Its very psychological.”

At the same time, kendo players prize the physical aspects of the sport, too. “Fencing,” Parker said, “is all about getting the touch. [In] kendo, it’s about war points. Is your opponent going to kill you?”

Parker’s team members agreed, rolling up their sleeves to expose bruises and welts on their arms from recent matches.

As proud as its players were, however, the Harvard Kendo team’s day was already over. No Harvard students had made it to the next round of singles, although Co-Captain Aidan C. de Burgh Daly ’13 had beat NYU during the group matches, pulling through against an opponent many assumed was better than Harvard.

The team dispersed to get lunch, and I wandered back through the gym, intrigued—struck, even?—by a slice of this subculture.

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