This Young Genius Pioneer Tournant was in truth a project aid at supplenting the Sand Village’s future military strength.
The goal was to gather all the outstanding children throughout the Land of Wind, including holess children, war orphans, and others living in difficult circumstances.
Although the Land of Wind had not been severely affected by the Great Ninja War directly, given the generally harsh living conditions throughout the ninja world, many children were still struggling or being raised by others without stable support.
The project served two purposes simultaneously. First, it allowed the Sand Village to identify promising talents and expand its future military foundation. Second, it would provide additional enrollnt for the orphanage and the elentary school now under construction.
A ninja academy was a ninja academy, and an elentary school was an elentary school. Not every child was suited to beco a ninja. The Sand Village would certainly do its best to train all who showed potential, but those who were genuinely unsuitable for the ninja path would be directed toward the elentary school instead, learning general knowledge alongside other practical skills.
Although the school facilities were not yet finished, the Sand Village’s future education plan and system had already been fully mapped out.
It drew heavily from the education system of his previous life, adapted for the unique ecosystem and environnt of the ninja world. Nine years of compulsory education had been compressed into five years.
Elentary school was two years, followed by a specialized education period of three years roughly equivalent to middle school, and then a two-year advanced program including options for adult learners.
A child who enrolled at age five would essentially graduate by age twelve or thirteen. In other words, even a child without the aptitude to beco a ninja could achieve aningful success through this system.
Of course, a mature and successful education system required a long period of accumulation to produce real results. Having the regulations and frawork established was far less significant than waiting for the first few graduating groups to erge, mature fully, and return to contribute to the village’s own education system. This was ultimately a long-term project.
They arrived quickly at a stadium being used temporarily as the competition venue. Many buildings in the Sand Village were still under renovation and not yet available for use, which ant the available spaces were always crowded. The mont Yuji appeared in his Kazekage robes, the packed stadium imdiately erupted into noise.
Looking around, almost everyone present was a child. So were accompanied by parents or relatives. These children had co from various parts of the Land of Wind and were dressed differently from one another, their clothing reflecting the regional characteristics of wherever they had co from.
Because their living conditions and access to information differed significantly from those within the Sand Village, many of them knew little about the Fourth Kazekage beyond the fact that he was a very powerful adult.
Of course, so children had heard more about him. The expressions directed at him from the crowd varied considerably. So showed admiration, so showed apprehension, and so showed open curiosity.
In short, the reactions were very interesting to observe.
Several hidden ninja were stationed around the arena to maintain order. Managing this many children required careful control.
The first order of business was entering the arena, delivering a brief speech about the competition format, and then sitting aside to observe and assess the children as they competed.
To properly test the talent of children from throughout the Land of Wind, the Sand Village had intentionally selected a group of children from within the village to serve as the baseline challengers.
The Sand Village’s environnt was thick with ninja culture, and with a mature training system and resources available to them from birth, the village children had naturally developed a higher baseline than their counterparts from outside.
Even though all of them were young and inexperienced, the overall level of the Sand Village children was noticeably stronger than those coming from elsewhere.
Furthermore, seeing that this was a competition held in front of the Kazekage personally, the eyes of the village children lit up with obvious competitive fire.
They were clearly preparing to give everything they had. They absolutely did not want to lose face in front of Lord Kazekage.
These children were wonderfully naive. Their thinking was simple and their desire to show off was genuine and completely unguarded.
As the competition began, the village children took turns entering the arena, fighting in a round-robin format against children of similar age from the outer regions. Watching them, Yuji found himself drifting into a half-daze, his eyes open but his mind wandering.
A group of small children wrestling and scuffling was not exactly riveting viewing. It was more likely to give him a headache than anything else. With his sharp observational abilities, he could roughly assess which children showed genuine ninja potential.
However, what he had initially expected to be a straightforward and sowhat dull competition to watch developed in an unexpected direction.
While the village children were stronger on average, their advantage was limited. They had not yet officially entered the ninja academy for formal training. By the ti the tournant was more than halfway through, many children from the outer regions were still standing, while only a few from within the village remained.
The sheer number of outer region participants gave them a significant nurical advantage to begin with.
At this point, a small boy with ash-colored hair stepped out from among the remaining village representatives and entered the arena to challenge.
He was noticeably younger and physically smaller than his opponent. As the fight began, the ash-haired boy quickly fell into a disadvantage and was knocked down repeatedly. The age gap between the two was quite significant.
The gray-haired boy was actually the only one among the remaining village children who appeared to be completely outmatched from the first mont of their encounter. This angered the surrounding village children considerably. They felt he was representing the Sand Village and was bringing sha to it.
However, every single ti he was knocked down, the gray-haired boy would get back up with what seed like an almost impossible degree of determination and continue fighting. He displayed extraordinary willpower for soone his age.
Ultimately, through that willpower alone, he defeated his opponent.
When everyone assud he would inevitably fall in the second round, he won again. His thod of winning was difficult and painful to watch, far from clean or impressive in technique. But he won.
Then ca the third match. The fourth. Only after defeating five consecutive opponents did the gray-haired boy’s strength finally give out entirely and he collapsed.
Judging purely by his results, it was already a remarkable achievent.
But the gray-haired boy’s ability to win had nothing to do with the quality of his taijutsu. It was entirely the product of his unwavering willpower. This was what gradually pulled Yuji out of his half-daze and made him pay proper attention.
Yuji glanced over, and the Chunin beside him imdiately ca to his side, flipping through the participant na list and leaning in to whisper.
"His na is Shira. He is five years old. His family situation is ordinary, with no ninja among his relatives. Furthermore, it appears he registered to participate in the competition entirely on his own initiative."
Shira?
Yuji felt the na was familiar. After a mont of thought, it ca back to him.
Was this not the character who would later create the Seven-Heaveans Breathing Technique in the Sand Village? The very person who would beco Gaara’s taijutsu master.
The reason this character had left an impression on him was that, looking across the broader ninja world, the Leaf Village’s Eight Gates technique stood nearly alone in the field of pure taijutsu enhancent.
It was virtually without equal, particularly in how completely it could unlock human physical potential at maximum output, as demonstrated by the devastating finishing techniques it enabled.
But Shira Seven-Heaveans Breathing Technique, which worked through controlled breathing and lung capacity developnt to enhance the activity of every cell in the body, had been shown capable of suppressing even the opening of the Fourth Gate’s effects.
And at the ti of that demonstration, Shira had only achieved what amounted to Third Gate equivalent activity through his thod.
From this perspective alone, even if the Seven-Heaveans Breathing Technique could not match the Eight Gates at their absolute ceiling, it was at minimum an extraordinarily refined martial arts system.
"So it was him," Yuji said quietly to himself.
This was a talent specializing entirely in physical martial arts developnt.
Thinking of Shira led him naturally to think of another character. Yo, a female dical ninja who in later years had mastered a unique combination of Water Release and healing ninjutsu, developing variations that were quite distinct from anything else in the ninja world.
This female character was also likely part of the Sand Village’s erging new generation of talent. It would be worth having soone look into whether Yo had already been born.
He instructed the Chunin beside him to look into this after the competition concluded and check the village records for any sign of her.
Several hours passed and the final events wrapped up. Outside the stadium, darkness had already fallen. Yuji began distributing rewards to the children.
During this process, he noticed Shira standing apart from the crowd. His eyes were red and swollen. His face was bruised and a tooth had been knocked out. These children had been genuinely vicious with each other.
Shira’s performance during the competition had been remarkable, but he appeared to be excluded by the other children from outside the village. The reason was straightforward.
The children selected to represent the village were essentially all descendants of Sand Village ninja families. Even those with modest aptitude still had the background and potential to beco ninja.
Shira, by contrast, ca from a completely ordinary civilian background with no connection to the ninja world in his family. Furthermore, his fighting style during the competition had shown no technique whatsoever.
He had simply fought with raw recklessness, throwing himself at opponents in a chaotic style that bore no resemblance to ninja combat.
That kind of performance would naturally invite ridicule from others in a world where ninja superiority was the default assumption.
As one of the Five Great Ninja Villages, the Sand Village increasingly advocated for a concept of broader equality. But the effectiveness of that advocacy was limited to words and policy fraworks.
The mindset of ninja supremacy was ingrained in this world at a fundantal level, built into its customs and basic principles. It was not sothing that could be changed quickly or easily.
Shira seed to feel the humiliation of his situation acutely. He had retreated to a corner and was quietly crying with his head bowed.
Then a commotion rippled through the crowd nearby. A pair of shoes appeared in his field of vision.
Shira looked up, startled.
The Fourth Kazekage was standing directly in front of him, smiling.
Yuji sat down to bring himself to the boy’s level and extended his hand, placing it gently near Shira’s face. Warm chakra flowed from his fingertips and healed the facial wounds quietly.
"Your na is Shira, correct?" Yuji asked with a smile.
"Uh..." Shira was slightly dazed. He had clearly not expected the Kazekage to have noticed him specifically, let alone co to his side in front of everyone.
After healing Shira’s injuries, Yuji withdrew his hand, gave the boy a firm thumbs up, and spoke with genuine warmth.
"You did extrely well today."
"In the future, you will definitely beco an outstanding ninja of the Sand Village. Believe in yourself. I have great expectations for you."
Yuji winked at the boy and gave him one more encouraging smile.
A simple sentence was enough to instantly brighten Shira’s eyes, which had been clouded with sadness only monts before. The children from the village standing nearby could not help but feel a twinge of envy watching this exchange.
In that mont, to young Shira, the Kazekage standing before him seed to be radiating actual light. It was an image he would carry with him for the rest of his life.
"Not only Shira, but every single participant here today," Yuji said, raising his voice so all the children around him could hear. "You are all little heroes. I believe every one of you will beco an outstanding ninja in the future."
"Give it everything you have!"
The children around him erupted in response, cheering with the kind of pure and uncomplicated enthusiasm that only children could produce.
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