Sensei
Benjamin G. Palacio
Perpetual Judo Scholarship Award
Presented Every Semester to a CCSF Judo Student
The Sensei Benjamin G. Palacio Perpetual Judo
Scholarship is established in honor of Sensei Benjamin G. Palacio
for his lifetime of dedication and teaching of Kodokan Judo.
This scholarship is established in his memory in gratitude
for his fine art of teaching Judo as sport, art and way of
life.
At the End of Semester Awards Dinner, a $100
scholarship award will be presented to the CCSF Judo Student
who best reflects the philosophy and spirit of Sensei Benjamin
G. Palacio.
Donations to the Benjamin
G. Palacio Scholarship can be sent to the United States Judo
Federation, Attn: Benjamin G. Palacio Scholarship.
Sensei Palacio was a very special person because he was such
a great teacher. He knew how to teach students and he possessed
an open mind and an engaging personality. He is remembered
through this Perpetual Judo Scholarship because he was a positive
influence in the lives of his Judo students. He taught and
trained his Judo students to see how Judo was beneficial to
one's life. He believed that Judo is essential to the development
of the mind, body and spirit and groomed many Judo champions.
Sensei Palacio was a great man, a generous Judo
teacher and a great judoka. He lived and radiated the Judo
spirit. He mastered the art of teaching many different types
of students Judo.
SENSEI'S JUDO BACKGROUND
Sensei Palacio had great respect for his own
judo instructors. They were Sensei Higami, Sensei George Hamamoto
and Sensei Okazaki, Sensei Sakabe, Sensei Yamada and Sensei
Mits Kimura. He began his study of judo in 1948 on the Big
Island of Hawaii. He continued to study and practiced jujitsu
at Hibiscus Dojo in Honolulu with Sensei George Hamamoto. He
also studied judo and shiatsu massage with Sensei Okazaki in
Honolulu. .
KOYUKAN JUDO DOJO
In 1959, he established the Koyukan Judo Dojo
in San Francisco. He named his dojo "Koyukan" - which
means "mixture of people coming together". And for
the next forty years, Koyukan was that kind of gathering place
for his Judo students of all cultures and backgrounds.
He taught Judo to junior and senior students,
Monday through Saturday, and attended Judo tournaments on Sundays.
He worked full time at the San Francisco Hilton and together
with his wife, Yukino, raised six children.
He led each of his Judo classes with firm discipline,
precision, ease and gentleness. He personalized his teaching
techniques and adjusted them to the individual student. Sensei
Palacio studied Judo as intensely as he taught his students
thoroughly about Judo as art and sport. He taught them the
principle of maximum efficient use of mind and body.
He encourage and demanded dignity of his Judo
students on and off the mat. He had compassion and charisma
and a natural talent for story telling when he instructed his
students in Judo.
He taught training drills at every level of practice.
He simplified each throw by diagramming basic steps and taught
his students each part of the throw over and over as a drill
until they could connect all steps into a graceful physical
throw with intent and purpose. He knew how to completely warm
up a Judo class. And, he took his time through each level of
practice. He taught by example and by taking the time to relate
to his student.
Sensei Palacio always encouraged discipline of
mind and body and taught his students to sit and mediate on
the mat for a set period of time during practice. Students
were drawn to his irresistible humanity. He, in turn, paid
attention to each of his students and was acutely aware of
a student's strengths and weaknesses. He treated his students
with dignity and respect and they flourished under his directed
attention. He was a strict teacher but he was never mean. He
was a stricter Judo instructor when he was younger; and he
was gentler as he aged. He taught his students the art of knowing
oneself. He often challenged his students beyond the obvious
when he saw their true potential.
Sensei Palacio knew how to teach and he taught
his students how to be neat, how to fold a judo-gi, how to
sit and stand straight and how to walk tall in and out of the
dojo. Sensei Palacio taught each of his six children judo from
an early age and taught each child how to teach Judo, thereby
instilling Judo deeply in each child's character. And, each
one of his children earned a black belt.
Judo students responded to Sensei Palacio because
they were drawn to his life force, his strong and good spirit,
his integrity and character. He was an egalitarian man. He
motivated his Judo students to prepare for local, regional
and national competitions because he knew that contests in
Judo have as their rational that the lessons taught in matches
will find applications not only in future training but in the
world at large.
Sensei Palacio was an exceptional Judo teacher
because he was open to learning new things from his students
and through his students became a wise and experienced teacher.
He also taught Judo at the Daly City Recreation Center, South
San Francisco Recreation Department and the Burlingame Recreation
Department to many youngsters, in addition to his own Koyukan
Judo Dojo. In 1997, he joined the Makimoto Judo Club/Vacaville
Police Athletic Club. In addition, the United States Judo Federation
National Promotion Committee subsequently promoted him to Rokudan.
(6th Degree Black Belt)
MECHANICAL TIMERS AND SCOREBOARDS
He invented the electric timers and scoreboards
for Judo competition with the help of his Koyukan Judo Dojo
parents. The scoreboards and timers allowed judokas and their
supporters to view the scoreboards from both sides of the mat
efficiently and fairly.
WOMEN'S JUDO
Sensei Palacio was one of the first to teach
women's Judo and was considered maverick for teaching women
Judo as sport, art and way of life. He was ahead of his time
and in line with the gentleness and discipline of Judo when
he also taught his women judo students traditional kata and
randori as well as self-defense movements.
He adopted the Kodokan's then-newly developed
system for physical culture and mental training as well as
winning contests. He taught his women students the taisabaki
and seriokyu zenyo kokumin as part of daily judo practice.
He also taught his women Judo students the history of Judo,
jujitsu and aikido.
SENSEI PALACIO'S PHILOSOPHY
Sensei Palacio believed that one should pay close
attention to the relationship between the self and others as
well as be aware of one's own strengths and weaknesses while
critically assessing one's surroundings. He was very conscious
of the people around him and was aware of a greater consciousness.
He believed that Judo taught one how to use maximum efficient
use of power.
He believed in both kata and randori as forms
that contribute to the intellectual training of young minds.
Sensei Palacio believed in "in yielding is strength" He
believed in taking the lead-the strategy of making a move that
will entice the other player to move a certain way.
Sensei Palacio taught that Judo gives each student
the same potential for success and often guided as student
out of lethargy and disappointment to a state of vigorous activity.
Sensei Palacio radiated with the Judo spirit
and on February 27, 1999, when he passed on to eternal life,
he left a lifetime legacy of his Judo spirit with all his students
and friends. |