What if i was a ninja




















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Damaged Parcel is articles and goods collect or not collect money : Compensation according to actual damaged, based on goods value known as COD. Damage the bonded of product and does not affect to the quality product. Eighty-year-old Masaaki Hatsumi says he is the leader of another surviving ninja clan - the Togakure clan.

Hatsumi is the founder of an international martial arts organisation called Bujinkan, with more than , trainees worldwide. It is a small town and not a place you would expect to see many foreigners. But the dojo, big enough for 48 tatami mats, is full of trainees who are glued to every move that Hatsumi makes.

His actions are not big, occasionally with some weapons, but mainly barehanded. Hatsumi explains to his pupils how those small moves can be used to take enemies out. Paul Harper from the UK is one of many dedicated followers. For a quarter of a century, he has been coming to Hatsumi for a few weeks of lessons every year. Harper says his master's ninja heritage interested him at the start but "when you come to understand how the training and techniques of Bujinkan work, the ninja heritage became much less important".

Hatsumi's reputation doesn't stop there. He has contributed to countless films as a martial arts adviser, including the James Bond film You Only Live Twice, and continues to practise ninja techniques. Both Kawakami and Hatsumi are united on one point. Neither will appoint anyone to take over as the next ninja grandmaster. As a result, he has decided not to take a protege. He simply teaches ninja history part-time at Mie University. Despite having so many pupils, Mr Hatsumi, too, has decided not to select an heir.

The ninjas will not be forgotten. But the once-feared secret assassins are now remembered chiefly through fictional characters in cartoons, movies and computer games, or as a tourist attractions. The museum in the city of Iga welcomes visitors from across the world where a trained group, called Ashura, entertains them with an hourly performance of ninja tricks.

Unlike the silent art of ninjutsu, the shows that school children and foreign visitors watch today are loud and exciting. The mystery has gone even before the last ninja has died. You can follow the Magazine on Twitter and on Facebook.

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