Find a good school with a good instructor. Have instructor teach you.
Go to http://www.local.com
traditional jujitsu from japan and Brazilian jujitsu from Brazil
No, jujitsu is a form of martial arts and the only training you'd have to do is if you wanted to get higher up in your martial arts status for jujitsu.Answer:Depending on the order you learn martial arts in you may pick up "bad habits" that the new style will have to eradicate before you can properly learn the new skills. As a consequence, as an example, the locks you learn in aikido will have to be unlearned or at least suppressed in jujitsu. Do not think that your new teacher will be impressed with how well you've learned to do things wrong.
Jujitsu first originated in the country Japan.
The man was a guitarist, but practiced jujitsu in his spare time. The child had been taking jujitsu since he was five years old. The mixed martial artist was trained in grappling and jujitsu.
Judo was based on jujitsu.
The gracie family did not invent Jujitsu they teach it for money. Jujitsu was invented in Japan around 5000 years ago.
William Howard Taft did some boxing when he was in college. I don't know about jujitsu.
there are no such things as jujitsu karate
Jujitsu is a Japanese martial art. The word is Japanese and means 'The gentle art.'
jujitsu
yes, chokes are a type of "submission" and are legal in Brazilian jujitsu