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author | Franklin Schmidt <fschmidt@gmail.com> |
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date | Sun, 02 Apr 2023 10:30:03 -0600 |
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3 <!-- Mirrored from users.eniinternet.com/bradleym/America.html by HTTrack Website Copier/3.x [XR&CO'2014], Sun, 06 Nov 2022 06:48:48 GMT --> | |
4 <head> | |
5 <title>HOW GO CAME TO AMERICA</title> | |
6 </head> | |
7 <body text="#000000" link="#0000ff" vlink="#551a8b" alink="#ff0000" bgcolor="#c0c0c0"> | |
8 <a name="HOW GO CAME TO AMERICA"></a> | |
9 <p><hr> | |
10 | |
11 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2"><h3><strong>HOW GO CAME TO AMERICA</strong></h3> | |
12 | |
13 <p><strong>© 2002 Milton N. Bradley</strong> | |
14 | |
15 <p>It is possible that Go was first brought to America by some of the many Chinese laborers or the | |
16 (far fewer) Japanese and Koreans who immigrated here primarily in the mid to late 19<sup>th</sup> century. | |
17 But if it was, it was restricted to those (at that time very insular) communities, and therefore had | |
18 no impact on "mainstream" American life. So it wasn't until Edward Lasker, a young German | |
19 engineer and internationally known Chessmaster, immigrated to these shores in 1914 that Go | |
20 truly began its still far from complete process of integration into our society. | |
21 | |
22 <p>That story is told in the following article by Jerald E. Pinto (originally entitled "How The Young | |
23 Edward Lasker Learned About Go, And How He and The World Chess Champion Nearly Went | |
24 To Japan To Study With the Masters"), as a tribute to Dr. Lasker (1885 - 1981) on his death, and | |
25 first appeared in The American Go Journal, Vol 16, # 2, (June 1981) - reproduced here with their | |
26 permission. | |
27 | |
28 <p>On an autumn afternoon several years ago, I visited Edward Lasker in his apartment on Riverside | |
29 Drive in New York, and heard this story of his first steps as a Go player: | |
30 | |
31 <p>"One day I was at the library of the University of Berlin. At that time, that is, in 1905, I was a | |
32 student of electrical engineering. With me at the library was a fellow student, a mathematician, | |
33 and we happened on a large magazine with a treatment of Go. Korschelt, the author, gave many | |
34 old Japanese games and explained the game quite thoroughly, but what struck us was the article's | |
35 title :Das Go Spiele, ein Konkurrent des Schachs, that is 'Go: A rival of chess' which seemed a | |
36 humorous claim. Well, we glanced through the article and learned the rules in the few minutes | |
37 that takes. | |
38 | |
39 <p>Then one day at the cafe in Berlin where the Chessplayers used to gather in the afternoon my | |
40 friend Max Lange and I saw a Japanese reading a Japanese paper, on the back of which we | |
41 noticed a Go diagram. We thought 'Well, that's remarkable'; we knew, of course, about chess | |
42 columns, but Go columns? We didn't know what to think, so we waited until the fellow was | |
43 gone and took the paper down from the newspaper rack. We put ourselves to deciphering the | |
44 diagram. The problem lay in decoding the Japanese numerals the diagram used, but although we | |
45 hadn't actually played more than a game or two of Go, we worked things out without too much | |
46 trouble. So we went through the game, but after 120 or 150 moves things came to a stop, and | |
47 there was some notation. | |
48 | |
49 <p>We waited until a few days later we saw another Japanese customer at the cafe, whom we | |
50 approached to ask whether he would mind telling us what that notation meant. Oh, first it seemed | |
51 obvious to us that it must say 'White resigns', since Black had an enormous army and there | |
52 didn't seem to be any reasonable continuation for White, or else something like 'Game | |
53 adjourned'. Well, the gentleman said, 'Certainly, "Black resigns!" When we heard that we | |
54 decided that we would really have to give a good look at the game, and we took the newspaper. | |
55 About 3 weeks later Max Lange called to say that he had found a sacrificial continuation for | |
56 White ending in the capture of the Black army 22 moves later. Then we really started to play Go | |
57 in earnest. We used a piece of cardboard and two different types of coins. However when we told | |
58 the other Chessplayers that here was a really interesting game, they just smiled at us and said, | |
59 'Don't be silly!' (Ed. Note: Nothing has changed in the intervening 92 years, and this is still the | |
60 attitude of the vast majority of Chessplayers that I have encountered!) | |
61 | |
62 <p>About 2 years later, Emanuel Lasker (Ed. Note: no relation), The world chess champion, returned | |
63 to Germany after 14 years in America. Soon after I met him I revealed that my friend and I had | |
64 found a game that rivaled chess, but the other chessplayers were too silly to even look at it. | |
65 Lasker was skeptical, but he listened to me explain the rules, and said,'Well, let's play a game.' | |
66 'Alright', I replied, 'but first I'll show you a few important things which aren't in the rules, but | |
67 which you have to know.' 'No, no, no, let's play a game.' we played, and of course I won, but | |
68 Lasker immediately recognized the deep strategical and tactical possibilities which Go holds | |
69 despite its simple structure. After just one game. He's the only man I ever showed the game to | |
70 who grasped this at once. 'Look, this is what we'll do', Lasker said, "I suppose you have a fellow | |
71 student at the University who is Japanese and may know the game. If you find one I'd like to | |
72 arrange a Go evening once a week at my home.' Indeed, there was a Japanese in my class who | |
73 knew the game; he surprised me in fact by saying that every educated Japanese knew the game. I | |
74 still recall his name: Yasugoro Kitabatake. At first he gave us 4 stones, but we improved | |
75 gradually, and after 2 years we beat him already. | |
76 | |
77 <p>Then one evening Kitabatake came to us with an interesting proposal. 'There's a Japanese Go | |
78 master passing through Berlin, a professor of mathematics on his way to London as an exchange | |
79 professor. Would you like to play him?' 'Of course we would.' Lasker replied, 'and I'll play him | |
80 in consultation with my brother Berthold, if you don't think he'll mind?' 'Of course he won't.' | |
81 'Well' continued Lasker, 'do you think he'll give us a handicap?' "Certainly', laughed Kitbatake. | |
82 'And how many stones?' 'Nine of course.' (Ed Note: At least equivalent to Queen odds in chess.) | |
83 'That's impossible', Lasker replied decisively. 'The man in the world who can give me nine | |
84 stones and beat me doesn't exist!' Kitabatake just smiled, and soon we found ourselves at the | |
85 Japanese club playing the master on nine stones. | |
86 | |
87 <p>No matter how long we took to plot our combinations the master never took more than a tenth of | |
88 a second for his reply, and he beat us terrifically. I don't think we had a single live group at | |
89 game's end. Lasker was the most discouraged and disappointed of men. 'Look Edward', he said | |
90 (this was in 1909 or 1910 don't forget). 'the Japanese have never had a first-class mathematician. | |
91 I'm sure that we can beat them at Go, the ideal game for the mathematical mind. Let's go to | |
92 Tokyo for a few months to play with the masters. I think that we'll be able to catch up to them | |
93 without too much difficulty.' | |
94 | |
95 <p>Naturally, I didn't think that it would be so easy to catch up to them, but I was enthusiastic about | |
96 the plan. However, I had recently graduated from the University and had just got my first job, as | |
97 an engineer for the German General Electric Company, and I couldn't tell m y boss that I wanted | |
98 a vacation of several months to travel to japan. But I told Lasker I would try to be assigned to my | |
99 company's office in Tokyo. | |
100 | |
101 <p>The next day I went to my boss with my cunning plot. 'There are 41 engineers in this | |
102 department", I began. 'I am certainly not so arrogant as to say that I am better than any of them | |
103 (MB Note: Ed Lasker later became a millionaire, so he was probably being unduly modest!), and | |
104 I don't see how I can expect to excel them to such a degree that I have a promising future here. | |
105 So I would like, therefore, to represent the company in one of the foreign offices.' 'Where?' my | |
106 boss asked. 'Tokyo, for example.' was my diabolical reply. The boss came back to me later after | |
107 speaking with the head of the Foreign Department. 'Sorry', he said, 'we only send Englishmen or | |
108 Germans who speak fluent English to Tokyo or any other foreign office. English is the | |
109 commercial language throughout the world.' The English had practically everything | |
110 monopolized in those days. Nothing daunted, I asked to be transferred to the London office to | |
111 learn English while drawing a nominal salary. Eventually they acquiesced in my request and I | |
112 was sent to live and work in London in 1912. I was in London when the first World War broke | |
113 out in August, 1914.' | |
114 | |
115 <p> From London, Lasker arrived in New York City in 1914. He made the united States his | |
116 permanent home, a turn of fate which is a distant reverberation of that awful defeat at the hands | |
117 of a traveling Go master. Soon after his arrival in New York Lasker saw Japanese waiters playing | |
118 go at Lee Chumley's restaurant in Greenwich Village. He was introduced by the headwaiter | |
119 Koshi Takashima, an avid Go player, to another patron of the restaurant who played Go, Karl | |
120 Davis Robinson. Robinson knew of one other Go player in New York, the editor-in-chief of | |
121 Harper's Magazine, Lee Hartman. The three formed a Go group at Lee Chumley's that soon | |
122 became quite large and took a room on the second floor of the restaurant. This group was the | |
123 nucleus of the New York Go Club and organized Go in the United States: the same 3 men | |
124 founded the American Go Association the same year Lasker published GO AND GO MOKU. | |
125 (MB note: 1934). | |
126 | |
127 <p>It was Max Lange who first of all made it to Japan, and Lange taught the game to his brother-in-law Felix Dueball, who became the first Westerner of genuine Dan strength. Emanuel Lasker | |
128 remained a tremendous Go enthusiast throughout his life and included an important chapter on | |
129 the game in his book Die Spiele des Menchen. On hi s death his Go set was presented to the | |
130 West Point Military Academy. (MB note: In my visit to the Academy about 10 years ago I | |
131 enquired about this, and found no one who even knew what I was talking about!) | |
132 | |
133 <p>The story which I call "How The Young Lasker Learned Go" was told by Lasker in print in his | |
134 article "From My Go Career" in #'s 7 and 9 of Go Monthly Review of 1961, and in his Chess | |
135 Secrets I Learned From The Masters (Dover, 1969)." | |
136 | |
137 <p><hr> | |
138 | |
139 <br wp="br1"><br wp="br2"> | |
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