Prof. Patrick Joseph
Browne was born in Berwyn, Illinois on November 9, 1947. He grew up
in Brookfield, Illinois, where he attended St. Barbara's grade school
and later St. Joseph's High School in Westchester. After his graduation
from high school in 1965, Pat received a B.A. in biology from North
Central College in Naperville. It was while he was a student at North
Central that he began his study of jujitsu.
Pat had an interest
in martial arts throughout his childhood and had studied some judo and
karate while still in elementary school. Then, in the fall of 1967,
Pat visited the Naperville YMCA and saw DanZan Ryu jujitsu for the first
time. The class that evening was being taught by Steve Paulding Sensei,
a longtime student of Professors Ray and Marie Law. Steve had a class
full of beginners, and he urged Pat to join and help him. Pat began
learning DanZan Ryu the next day.
Teaching judo
and jujitsu
A few years later,
Pat founded Explorer Post 187 Judo Club, where he taught until 1972.
Pat was promoted to the rank of shodan in 1969. He also took
over the Naperville Judo Club from Steve Paulding in July of that year,
when Steve left the Midwest after completing his graduate studies. Pat
was promoted to nidan in 1970. In 1973, Pat took a job as a biochemist
at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago, and was promoted to sandan
that year.
In 1974, Pat moved
his jujitsu club to the Downers Grove YMCA and renamed it the Suburban
KodenKai. Pat continued to teach in Downers Grove until 1990. In 1983,
Pat was promoted to Professor by the AJJF. During these years, Pat completed
a Masters Degree in counseling psychology from the Alfred Adler Institute
and worked as a therapist with AIDS patients.
Acupuncture and
ikebana
Pat also developed
an interest in acupuncture. In 1978 he graduated from the Accumoon School
of Acupuncture, and in 1981, the Midwest Center for the Study of Oriental
Medicine. He received national certification as an acupuncturist and
served as the president of the Illinois State Acupuncture Association
from 1988-1990. Pat was instrumental in getting acupuncture licensed
in Illinois. The Illinois Acupuncture Practice Act was signed into law
on January 31, 1997, a few months after Pat's death.
In 1983 Pat hosted
Camp Kodenkan Midwest for the first time. Through the 10-day camp every
summer, Pat was able to introduce the Midwest jujitsu students to the
top DanZan Ryu instructors in the country. Also, camp created and solidified
the Midwest Kodenkan community. In the summer of 2002, Camp Kodenkan
Midwest celebrated its 20th anniversary.
In 1984 Pat sponsored
the first of many AJJF massage certification programs. He was instrumental
in spreading Okazaki Long Life Massage throughout the Midwest.
In 1990 Pat wrote
an in-depth study of shingin no maki, which combined his
vast knowledge of both Eastern and Western medicine with his extensive
training in the DanZan Ryu techniques. He would present a copy of this
manual to his students when he initiated them into shingin no maki.
It was also in 1990
that Professor Browne moved his dojo from the Chicago suburbs into downtown
Chicago, where he taught until 1996.
In 1991, Pat began
the study of Ikenobo ikebana with Nakashima Sensei. Pat related the
practice of flower arranging to his martial arts training and eventually
achieved the rank of Advanced Student. Pat's arrangements were the focal
point of the tokonoma at all of the Midwest jujitsu events for the next
five years.
Failing health
In the winter of
1996, Pat's health began to fail. It was at that time he told his family,
friends and students that in 1983 a needle in a machine at the biochemistry
lab had accidentally pierced his thumb. At the time it happened, there
was no test for AIDS. A few years later, he was tested and found to
be HIV positive. Pat didn't tell anyone at the time, feeling there was
nothing that could be done.
Pat attended his
last AJJF convention in March, 1996. He passed away on May 23 of that
year, surrounded by his family and jujitsu yudansha. Professor Browne
held the rank of 7th dan in DanZan Ryu at the time of his death.
Pat's legacy
Over the years,
Pat promoted 17 black belts and was responsible for the propagation
of DanZan Ryu jujitsu throughout the Midwest. As of 2002, there are
at least a dozen active DanZan Ryu schools currently headed by Pat's
yudansha or their students, and that number is growing every year. Also,
several of Pat's black belts are currently massage therapists or acupuncturists
as a direct result of Pat's inspiration.
In September 2002,
Professor Pat Browne was inducted into the DanZan Ryu jujitsu Hall of
Fame by the Shoshin Ryu Yudanshakai.
Each year at the
end of May, Pat's friends, students and his "grand students"
(as he used to call them) gather for the Professor Pat Browne Memorial
Convention to celebrate Pat's life through the practice of DanZan Ryu
jujitsu.