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1877 TEAMTKD

Taekwondo is a modern martial
art, characterized by it's fast, high and spinning kicks. There
are multiple interpretations of the name taekwondo. Taekwondo
is often translated as 'the way of hand and foot'. My definition
of the name Taekwondo is
Tae='to strike or block with the foot'
or 'to kick', it also means 'jump'
K'won='Fist', 'to strike or block with hand'
Do='The way of' or 'art'.
Put this together and Taekwondo means: "The art of Kicking
and Punching" or "The art of unarmed combat". The
sport has been founded in Korea and is one of the popular modern
martial arts.

Disciplinces of taekwondo
Taekwondo has four disciplinces which are explained in a seperate
page/chapter of this site. The four displinces are:
Patterns
Sparring
Self-defence
Breaktest
It is the combination of these four disciplines that makes the
art called taekwondo.
Objectives of Taekwondo
to develop an appreciation for Taekwondo as a sport and as an
art
to achieve physical fitness through positive participation
to improve mental discipline and emotional equanimity
to learn self-defense skills
to develop a sense of responsibility for one self and others.
Taekwondo for kids
Taekwondo has no age limits and is a very good sport for children.
They learn fast reactions through games, learn to respect others
and learn to know their abilities and disabilities. Competition
rules are a bit different for children then they are for adults.
Although children wear full body protection (preferably thicker
than the protection for adults) only kicks and punches to the
body are allowed, no kicks to the head.
Is Taekwondo dangerous?

Although WTF Taekwondo is a full contact sport where it is allowed
to kick to the head (throwing punches to the head are not allowed),
it is not very dangerous to practise Taekwondo. During training,
there is no need to actually win. During competition, full protection
is used to protect the competitors.
To avoid head injuries, a competitor is
not allowed to participate in a competition for three months (this
seems to vary) if one was knocked out by a kick to the head. If
the same incident happens again after these three months, you're
not allowed to participate for half a year. Another K.O. to the
head after this half year period results in a permanent exclusion
of competitions.
ITF Taekwondo is so-called semi-contact.
It is not allowed to attack the head with full force. However,
it is allowed to throw punches to the head, by using the so-called
"killing-blow", stop just an inch before the target.
To avoid injuries, ITF uses gloves at sparring-competition.
Q. What is the difference between Taekwondo
and Hapkido?
A. Sometimes not all that much; there has
been a LOT of cross-pollinization.
Virtually everyone in Korea gets some Taekwondo training (it's
their national sport - ever know an American boy who'd NEVER played
baseball?). The specialty jumping spinning kicks of Hapkido proved
very useful for demonstration and breaking purposes and got adopted
into Taekwondo. Any Hosinsool (self-defense) techniques you see
in Taekwondo got adopted from out of Hapkido. Any HKDists that
want to spar tend to do so under TKD rules and adapt their techniques
accordingly. There's a lot of mixed versions out there. Who originated
what techniques? Who cares? But in general if its sport oriented,
it's Taekwondo; and if it's self-defense oriented, it's Hapkido.
Q. What's the difference between Taekwondo,
Tae Kwon Do, Taekwon-do, Tang Soo Do, Tae Soo Do, Kong Soo Do,
Soo Bahk Do, Su Do, and Korean Karate?
A. Essentially politics, what set of forms
are done, and what rules of sparring are followed. Really all
these arts come from the same background, the Koreans that studied
Japanese/Okinawin Karate and opened schools (Kwans) after World
War II that (mostly) cooperated with each other to achieve more
success.
Kong Soo Do = Korean pronounciation for
karate-do. Tang Soo Do = Korean pronounciation for way of the
Tang hand. Karate Do = Okinawin way of the Kara (Tang dynasty
Chinese) hand.
Of the arts pronounced 'tie kwahn doe',
if they're spelled: Taekwondo - probably WTF, with the kind of
sparring you'll see in the Olympics, the largest organization
Taekwon-do - probably ITF, following Hong Hi Choi
Tae Kwon Do - probably with one of the small federations, an independent,
probably calling themselves 'traditional' with little changes
in the last 50 years
All of these are kicking/punching arts
that have placed more stress on the kicking aspects than did their
forebears. How much stress is placed on competition, sparring,
forms, etc in a particular school varies much more with the particular
instructor than with what it's called or what organization the
school is affiliated with.
Q. So Taekwondo isn't 2000 years old or
older?
A. No. It's true people have always been
fighting, and some have always been better at it, and some taught
others passing down techniques from generation to generation.
There are cave murals in Korea from ~50 BC showing men in poses
that *MIGHT* be from a martial art, although to an unbiased observer
they look more like they are dancing. There are historical references
to the Hwarang - a group of young Silla noblemen - practicing
a kicking punching art called 'soo bakh' during the 3 kingdoms
(Koguro, Paekje, Silla) period of Korean history, well before
the trip in 520 AD of the famous Buddist monk Bodhitsuharma from
India to the Shaolin temple that began the development of kung
fu. And the Paekje royalty (the losing side) moved to Japan when
the Korean peninsula was conquered by Silla in 668, possibly becoming
the Japanese culture. (Japan means 'land of the rising sun', which
is how it'd be seen from Korea.) So it's *conceivable* that systematic
martial arts arose first in Korea. But the evidence is pretty
scant.
In any case, the Yi dynasty (1392-1910)
strongly discouraged any sort of martial art during the time that
kung fu was spreading through China and becoming karate in Okinawa.
Between that and the Japanese occupation of Korea from 1909-1945,
indiginous Korean arts were lost. It is conceivable that some
were practiced in secret, and many historical records *were* lost
in the Korean War, but realistically, *all* the founders of the
Kwans that cooperated to form Taekwondo had studied Japanese/Okinawin
martial arts, and that's what they taught. Claims of having studied
Soo Bakh, Korean royal court martial arts, Tae Kyon, or with some
monk up in the hills in secret with techniques passed down through
50+ generations came later; after WW II was long over and it was
politically expedient to sever any hint of Japanese influence.
The 5 original kwans:
Chung Do Kwan - founded in 1944 by Won Kyuk LEE who'd studied
Shotokan karate, called his art Tang Soo Do.
Moo Duk Kwan - founded in 1945 by Hwang KEE. Kee had studied Tai
Chi and some types of Kung Fu with Kuk Jin YANG in China and opened
a school . His first two attempts were unsuccessful, he then met
with Won Kyuk Lee and visited the Chung Do Kwon periodically.
Lee claims Kee was his student, Kee says no, Kuk Jin Yang was
his only teacher. Kee says he learned the Shotokan forms from
Gichin Funakoshi's books. Kee started teaching the Shotokan forms
and his school became successful. Kee was close friends with some
noted Japanese karate people as well. Regardless of the source
of his skills, what Kee taught was obviously very influenced by
Japanese karate. Kee originally called his art Hwa Soo Do, then
Tang Soo Do, then Soo Bakh Do.
Song Moo Kwan - founded in 1946 by Byung Jick RO, who'd studied
Shotokan karate, called his art Tang Soo Do.
Kwon Bop Bu/Chang Moo Kwan - founded in 1947 by Byung in YOON
who had studied Chinese kung fu (chu'an-fa, or 'fist law') in
Manchuria and Shudokan karate with Kanken Toyama in Japan, originally
called Kwon Bop Kong Soo Do (meaning fist method of karate). Yoon
disappeared during the Korean War. Yoon's teachings were carried
on by his top student Nam Suk LEE, who changed the name of the
school to Chang Moo Kwan.
Yun Moo Kwan - founded in 1946 by Kyung Suk LEE (judo) and Sang
Sup CHUN (karate), called originally Choson Yun Moo Kwan (The
Choson Yun Moo Kwan had been the original Japanese Judo school
in Korea for over 30 years previously). Lee became missing and
Chun died during the Korean War, and this kwan essentially became
the Ji Do Kwan.
Later important kwans:
Ji Do Kwan/Chi Do Kwan - founded in 1953 by Dr. Kwa-Byung YUN,
who had studied Shito-Ryu karate in Japan. Yun became the head
of the Chosun Yun Moo Kwan after its leaders were lost and renamed
it.
O Do Kwan - founded in 1954 by Hong Hi CHOI, offshoot from Chung
Do Kwan
Jung Do Kwan - founded in 1954 by Yong Woo LEE, offshoot from
Chung Do Kwan
Han Moo Kwan - founded by Kyo Yoon LEE in 1956, offshoot from
Yun Moo Kwan
Kang Duk Kwan - founded in 1956 by Chul Hee PARK offshoot from
the Kwan Bop Bu Kwan.
Hong Moo Kwan - founded ? by Jong Pyo HONG,
offshoot from the Kwan Bop Bu.
Again, *every* founder of the original
kwans had studied or been heavily influenced by some sort of karate.
It is no disservice to TKD to admit that
it is not 2000 years old and came primarily from karate. Karate
came from kung fu. Kung fu came from whatever Indian art Bodhitsuharma
studied before travelling to the Shaolin temple. All have developed
into something quite different from their source.
Q. Who founded Taekwondo?
A. There is no single person who deserves
credit as the founder. (Major) General Hong Hi CHOI claimed to
be. But in reality taekwondo is the result of many people working
together to resolve their differences, develop and promote a unified
Korean martial art.
Q. Why would CHOI be considered the founder?
A. Because he (supposedly) came up with
the name, was the head of the Korea Taekwondo Association (which
later became the World Taekwondo
Federation), did much to spread the art throughout the Korean
military and the world, and (supposedly) created the Chang Hon
forms used in many of the TKD organizations.
I would say that Choi deserves a certain
amount of credit for spreading the art, and that he could legitimately
call himself the founder of the Oh Do Kwan and of arts that spell
themselves as Taekwon-do and belong to the ITF, but he was not
the only person involved even in his own kwan, and he certainly
was NOT the founder of the majority of arts that call themselves
'tie kwan doe'. He was given an HONORARY 4th Dan ranking by Duk
Song SON, the 2nd head of the Chung Do Kwan in 1955 at the request
of Tae Hi NAM, which was rescinded by Son in a statement published
on 6/15/59 in the Seoul Shinmoon newspaper (yes, an actual document
you can look up!).
Q. Why 'supposedly' on the name?
A. Bear with me, this gets confusing. The founders of the first
five kwans had tried and failed to form an association between
World War II and the Korean War. On April 11, 1955 Choi presided
at a naming committee meeting at which 'tae kwon do' was first
proposed. Duk Sung SON says that he passed a piece of paper to
Choi suggesting it and Choi took credit for it. No one other than
those two would really know. Regardless, although the committee
accepted the name, the kwans did not, because only the Chung Do
Kwan and Oh Do Kwan (a Chung Do Kwan offshoot) were represented
at the meeting. Most of the other kwans wanted to use the name
Kong Soo Do. During the war a Korea Kong Soo Do Association was
formed by most of the kwan heads. But Hwang Kee (Moo Duk Kwan
founder) left and formed his own Korea Tang Soo Do Association,
later renaming it Korea Soo Bakh Do Association. Choi in 1959
created a Korea Taekwondo Association but again there was lots
of political infighting (there were 14 kwans by this time), and
despite the desire to unify all the kwans were basically doing
their own thing. The Ministry of Defense requested that a single
organization be formed, and finally in September 1961 a series
of unification meetings were held. The compromise name 'tae soo
do' was agreed on (tae from taekwondo, soo from kong soo do),
and the Korea Tae Soo Do Association was created. This time the
unification took, despite Hwang Kee again leaving after a while
to do his own thing. (So you have Moo Duk Kwan TKD and Moo Duk
Kwan Tang Soo Do and Moo Duk Kwan Soo Bakh Do organizations depending
on who stayed or split and when.) Finally TKD had the organization
it needed to become the national sport of Korea.
During all this time Choi was in charge
of teaching for the entire military (ie EVERY able-bodied male)
and grew a lot in political power. When Choi became president
of the KTA in 1965, he was able to get it's name changed to the
Korean Taekwondo Association (NOT the same as Choi's Korea Taekwondo
Association.) So you had 3 different KTAs, none existing at the
same time!
Circa 1966 Choi formed the International
Taekwon-Do Federation and left Korea and the KTA, and eventually
in 1973 the KTA changed its format, essentially becoming the World
Taekwondo Federation. (Actually the Korean TKD Association still
exists as a national governing body for TKD in Korea; the World
TKD Federation is the worldwide parent organization and each country
has its own national governing body. In the U.S. this is the United
States TKD Union.)
So, whether he originated the term or not,
Choi's political muscle *is* the reason we call it 'tie kwan do'
instead of Kong Soo Do or Tae Soo Do.
Q. Why 'supposedly' on the forms?
A. The Chang Hon set of forms the ITF does
*may* have come from Choi, but more likely come from Tae Hi NAM,
who had much more experience and training in the martial arts
than Choi, his commanding officer. Nam is the person that performed
the break of 13 roofing tiles that so impressed President Syngman
Rhee in 1952 that he ordered the study of Tae Kwon Do by all Korean
military personell. With Choi in charge of the TKD training in
the military, that set of forms spread widely, and they are seen
in many of today's TKD organizations. Choi's introduction of the
'sine wave' type of movement into the ITF forms circa 1980 is
particular to the ITF.
Q. What is this 'sine wave'?
A. In their forms the ITF practice a little
up and down motion that adds power to their punching techniques.
Generally it doesn't carry over to their sparring because adding
the upward motion slows the technique and telegraphs what's coming.
The downward motion is the same kind of 'sinking' technique many
Chinese styles do, the idea being rooting to the ground and letting
gravity help you add power. It's not a new idea, but the emphasis
they place on it is not seen in any other versions of Taekwondo.
Q. How is Taekwondo different from Japanese
Shotokan Karate?
A. When it started it was basically the
same. As the years have passed, it has placed more and more stress
on developing kicking and sparring skills and sporting aspects
of the art, the forms have changed, teaching methods have changed...
The most obvious difference is that modern TKD has a greater variety
of kicks.
Q. What about Tae Kyon?
A. Tae-kyon is a native Korean game involving
kicks and sweeps in which contests were held by common people
in the same way that boxing matches were held at English country
fairs. But it was associated with uneducated peasants and undesirable
activities such as revenge fights, and was made illegal during
the Japanese occupation. It almost died out completely, being
reduced to a single known master in the 1950's, Duk Ki SON. It's
existance made the name Taekwondo more attractive than some of
the other names such as Tang Soo Do or Kong Soo Do because of
anti-Japanese feeling. Currently there has been a resurgence of
Tae-kyon in Korea all coming from Song, who's been declared a
cultural asset by the government. Many TKD 'histories' now claim
that the kwan founders had all studied Tae Kyon or use it as a
different name for soo bakh. But they're almost certainly revisionist;
there aren't that many techniques in Tae Kyon and they differ
from those in TKD. They are techniques to unbalance.
Q. What's the difference between CHOI's
ITF Taekwon-do and WTF Taekwondo?
A. Technically, there tends to be more
kicking and competition emphasis in WTF Taekwondo, and more forms
emphasis in ITF Taekwon-do.
In size, the World Taekwondo Federation
is much bigger, with many more people involved world wide all
committed to spreading the art. WTF schools vary widely in what
forms are practiced, how much stress is given to self-defense
versus competition, testing requirements, etc. Its history is
that of tolerating differences and sharing credit. The ITF is
a small (although worldwide) organization driven by one man, who
makes sure the entire organization does the same forms in the
same way.
Politically, Choi has received much criticism
for his trips to North Korea and support of the Communist dictator
Il Jung KIM. In particular Choi's creation and use of the 'Juche'
form is onerous, because Kim's political ideal of 'juche (self-reliance)'
has been blamed for the starvation deaths of millions in North
Korea, which refused all humanitarian aid for years.
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