The hunt for Lu-Lu Ko, Chinese teacher of GoJu Ryu’s founder Master Higaonna Kanryo. 
Translated by Shaun Hogan from:
 
 
 
 
 
日本空手道与福建南拳的历史渊源
http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_69b37d930100jzv7.html
(2010-08-03 10:08:56)
Author:  休闲 XueXian
[Translator’s forward notes:  The hunt for
 Goju Ryu Master Higaonna Kanryo’s Chinese teacher.  Many texts show 
that the original Chinese master of GoJu Ryu’s founder Higaonna was 
named Ru-Ru Ko (ルールーコ)Since this is not a Chinese name, the founder’s 
name becomes difficult to trace.  In 1987, the Fujian Wushu Association 
and the Okinawan Goju Ryu Karate Do Association met to research the 
originator’s name.  They concluded that Higaonna Kanryo’s master was 
named:  Xie Zongxian  his birth name – Xie RuRu       “RuRu” was sort of a nickname. – RuRu Ko is
 an honorific title where “Ko” is the Fujian pronunciation of “Ge”, Big 
Brother.  In other words, “RuRu Ko” works out to “RuRu Big brother.”]
Translation of the Mr. XueXian’s Chinese Blog Post: 
Karate-do uses both hands
 and feet, combining offense and defense, attacking the opponent with 
various techniques such as kicking, hitting, and striking, using fists, 
palms, fingers, elbows, knees, and legs to make various attacks. 
Karate-do is a martial art that embodies the intensity of fighting, and 
does not use any equipment to engage in self-defense while minimizing 
harm to the opponent. It has been popularized all over the world. Where 
does Japanese karate-do originate? This is a topic jointly studied by 
the All Japan Karate Federation and the Fujian Wushu Association.
1. Fujian was the birthplace of Japanese karate.
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According
 to historical records, in the Ming Dynasty, the Ryukyu Islands 
(Okinawa) were still a relatively poor and backward island country. The 
backwardness of Ryukyu (Okinawa) was due to the ineffective, closed 
sailing trade business that blocked exchanges between the Ryukyu Kingdom
 and neighboring countries, resulting in a negative economic situation. 
In the historically verifiable five years of Hongwu (1372), Zhu 
Yuanzhang sent personnel to Ryukyu.  And the King of Ryukyu, Zhongshan 
Haodu sent his brother Tai to pay tribute to the Chinese capital, thus 
starting friendly exchanges between RyuKyu and China. After sending 36 
families from Fujian to Ryukyu, Okinawa’s economic outlook was greatly 
improved. The “Thirty-six Fujian families”  were people who were skilled
 at boat building, sailing, and trade.  They facilitated tribute 
payments to and from China, built commercial industries and agriculture,
 and set up payment and trade systems back and forth with Chinese ports.
 (ref: Minghuiyao Vol. 77). 
They were all residents of Shenzhou Hekou 
(the river mouth) in Fujian (now in the South Park area). The Ming 
Dynasty rulers made these people good at sailing. Transferred to Okinawa
 to serve the people of Ryukyu, on the one hand, to improve their 
sailing skills and trading forays, the 36 Families reversed RyuKyu’s 
economic backwardness.  On the other hand, the 36 Families  “changed the
 culture and customs behind the era, to make the culture and religions 
of both sources flourish together.   (“Zhongshan Shipu” Vol. 3, 44, 
“Ryukyu Historical Materials Series” “). Since then, the 36 Families who
 moved from the Shenzhou HeKou have not only become the main role of 
Ryukyu’s foreign relations activities, they also brought advanced 
science and culture to Ryukyu, as well as Chinese traditional martial 
arts.
In the fifteenth year of Emperor Xianzong 
of the Ming Dynasty (1480), some Ryukyu people went to Fujian for a 
special assignment to learn martial arts. After five or six years, they 
returned to Ryukyu (now Okinawa) and combined Fujian Nanquan (Southern 
Fist) with the Ryukyu masters. The combination of ethnic fighting 
techniques formed a unique boxing technique called “hand” 
(transliteration of Te). This was the germination of karate due to the 
exchanges between China and Ryukyu and cultural exchanges and commercial
 trade. 
Fujian had a variety of fighting styles, 
especially those from the loyal survivors of the late Ming Dynasty who 
fled to Okinawa, and strengthened Hua “Te” fighting skills, laying the 
embryonic form of “ToDe” translated as “Tang Hand”, the meaning of 
Chinese fighting, to show that they would not forget their roots. 
Beginning in 1927, the Ryukyu Education 
Department organized the “Okinawa Karate Symposium” in Naha to study and
 develop the issue of “Te”. At the meeting, it was decided to change the
 “TouDe” (Chinese Hand) to “Karate” (Empty Hand). At that time, due to 
the environmental relations of the trading ports, the martial arts 
practice in Shuri, Naha, and Boshou was very popular, and talented 
people came out in large numbers to study and teach. Among the genres of
 Ryukyu karate, the most famous are “Shuri-Te” and “Naha-te.” They were 
created by Itsosu Anko and Higaonna Kanryo 
respectively. The technical characteristics of these two schools were 
different and each had its own strengths, but both belonged to the 
traditional Nanquan Southern Fist faction in Fuzhou, Fujian Province.
2. Karate and the style of Fujian Nanquan
Okinawa’s GoJu style karate belongs to the
 “Naha Te”, created by the Miyagi Chosun, the young disciple of Higaonna
 Kanryo. The training methods, movement structure, movement names, style
 characteristics and technical principles of “Naha Hand” and Fujian 
Yongchun White Crane Fist.  The katas and routines are roughly the same.
 Analyzing from the training method and movement structure: the 
rigid-flexible flow routine training requires the “three wars strategy” 
as the basis, and then gradually developed to the advanced routine. 
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In
 addition to standing up and running, Fujian Yongchun White Crane style”
 is to practice the “three wars strategy”. One of the expressions of the
 “three wars strategy” were the “three positives”.  The first positive 
emphasizes “head upright, body upright, and horse upright”.  The second 
positive is the “three changes”. Requiring “hand change, body change, 
step change”. These two statements are indispensable in the training of 
white crane boxing. 
“Three fundamentals” is the training basis
 of White Crane. As long as you master the “Three-Fundamentals” well, 
you can talk about the “Three Changes”. Only when you have a good grasp 
of the “Three Changes” can you change freely in the application and win 
with your hands. Analyzed from the name of the kata, the Japanese 
karate’s Superimpai (108″ hands) kata  is the same as the wording of 
Fujian White Crane’s 108 hands kata. 
A few years ago, when the Japanese karate 
delegation visited Fuzhou, they also brought “White Crane Kata Sheet”. 
They said: “My ancestors were trained according to this kata sheet and 
passed down from generation to generation.” “White Crane Boxing Book” 
was the manuscript passed down from Fujian, and it is the same as the 
book of boxing kept by Fujian’s elderly martial artists. . 
Analyzed from the style characteristics 
and technical principles: The rigid-flexible flow routine style requires
 a strong launch, a steady footwork, and the breathing and luck of the 
“Three Wars Strategy”. Trained into strong, rigid and flexible muscles 
and bones. The Fuzhou White Crane fist strike is a “stroke of muscles 
and bones in a string of energy”, the two are the same, and they are 
just like the GoJu Ryu “single (double) fingering gun fingering” attack 
method is jab, and the most vicious is eye jab. It is the same as the 
“Golden Gunner” technique of White Crane Boxing; the technique of “Wind 
Eye Boxing” punches and drills specifically to hit the opponent’s 
acupoints, the eyebrows and the throat are centered, and the single 
chicken boxing in Minghe Boxing ( He Fengyan) has the same technique; 
the palm technique of the “hand knife” specializes in cutting the 
opponent’s neck, back, and intercostal space.
- The creator of karate, GoJu Ryu was in Fujian
 
On May 23, 1987, the Japanese Okinawa GoJu
 Ryu Karate ancestor-seeking group came to Fuzhou City, Fujian Province 
to find roots and visit their ancestors, looking for the generous 
Chinese master of Higaonna Kanryo. Under the responsibility of Comrade 
Lin Weigong, the editorial board of local chronicles, they cooperated 
with the Fujian provincial military. 
During the investigation period, an 
extensive investigation was carried out on all the more famous masters 
in Fuzhou, and finally Xie Ruru, the first generation master of the 
Fujian “Minghe Clicking Crane Boxing”, was identified as the generous 
master of Higaonna Kanryo. Chief researcher Lin Weigong said in the 
summary: Higaonna’s teacher’s real name should be Ruru, surname Xie, 
clan character Zongxiang, born on July 31, 1852 (June 15, Qing Dynasty 
Xianfeng second year) in Daibian Village, Zhanxiang Township, Changle 
County.
 At the age of 13, Xie Zongxiang (RuRu) 
moved to Fuzhou with his father Xie Zunzhi because of a fire at his home
 at the age of 13, and he also studied with his father’s friend Pan Yu 
to practice boxing. At the age of 23, Xie RuRu was exquisite in martial 
arts and became famous. . Ruru inherited Pan Yuba’s crane fist, combined
 with her own characteristics to consider a set of rigid and soft 
techniques, and created a fist that emphasizes the “three wars”. With 
the sound of clucking like a crane, it was named “Minghe Fist”.  Xie 
RuRu became ” The master of Minghe Fist. 
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On
 September 16, 1989, relevant experts once again gave a further argument
 on whether Xie Ruru (ZongXiang) was indeed the Chinese martial arts 
master of Higaonna Kanryo, the originator of Japanese Okinawan GoJu 
Ryu., learned in Fuzhou.  
 And on June 9, 1990, in the southwest 
corner of the Fuzhou New Sports Center, a solemn black marble “revealing
 monument” stood A memorial to the great amount of Chinese master Xie 
Zongxiang (Xie RuRu). This is a clear proof of the influence of the 
traditional Chinese and Japanese martial arts circles.
(Translators’ note: the name LuLu Ko ルールーコ
 often attributed to Higaonna’s Chinese master is an honorific title: 
LuLu is his name. Ko means “big brother” an honorific title.)
4. The origin of Uechi Ryu Karate in Fuzhou
 
The style of another Japanese genre Uechi 
Ryu Karate-do is similar to the tiger-shaped boxing style passed by 
Master. Zhou Zihe of Fuzhou. Its hand shape, technique, step shape, 
footwork, lvocalization, and forceful methods all maintain tiger-shaped 
boxing characteristics. 
On March 29, 1981, an Okinawa martial arts
 delegation headed by Takahikari Yuki visited Fuzhou and asked for help 
in finding the origin of Uechi-Ryu Karate-do with origins from the 
Chinese master Mr. Zhou Zihe. 
The Fujian Provincial Wushu Association 
commissioned Mr. Wei Qiqi to organize an investigation. The results 
found that: Mr. Zhou Zihe was born in 1874 in Zhiri Village, Nanyu, 
Fuzhou City, Fujian Province. He was a master of martial arts since he 
was a child. , Good at iron sand palm, specializing in hard work. Later,
 he traveled to and from Fuzhou City and often set up a pavilion to 
teach apprentices at the Gulou Marshal Temple. In 1897, the Japanese 
student Uechi Kanbun came to Fuzhou to learn martial arts with Mr. Zhou 
Zihe, and returned to Japan 13 years later.
 In order to promote the popularization of
 Japanese martial arts, combined with the characteristics of Okinawa, 
Master Uechi  created the Uechi Ryu Karate-do style. 
In 1985, relevant experts from Fujian 
Province sent the book “Tiger Shape Boxing” passed down by Mr. Zhou Zihe
 to the Uechi-Ryu Karate-do Headquarters. They happily said: “In the 
past, the Uechi Ryu karate-do headquarters participated in all-Japan 
competitions under the banner of Zhou Zihe, but they didn’t see their 
true colors. They were dubious. Now the first page of the book is a 
portrait of our ancestors. It’s really amazing.” “Crouching Tiger 
Heroes” recorded by Fujian Audiovisual Publishing House in 1990 is the 
testimony of preaching a generation of tiger-shaped boxing master Zhou 
Zihe to teach Okinawan martial artists..
Summary
In recent years, Fuzhou City, Fujian 
Province has had frequent exchanges with Okinawa martial arts circles in
 Japan. So far, Fuzhou City has also built the “Naha Friendship History 
Exhibition Hall, Ryukyu Hall” and so on. In June 1995, in order to 
commemorate the fifth anniversary of the establishment of the “Revealing
 Monument”, a Japanese Martial Arts delegation of more than 50 people 
came to hold a martial arts conference with the martial arts community 
in Fujian Province. The mutual exchanges between the two countries are 
of great benefit to martial arts becoming an Olympic event as soon as 
possible!