Original masters of taekwondo
The original masters of taekwondo is a group of twelve South Korean martial art masters assembled by the Korea Taekwondo Association in the early 1960s to promote the newly established art of taekwondo. In alphabetical order following Korean naming conventions, they are: Choi Chang Keun, Choi Kwang Jo, Han Cha Kyo, Kim Jong Chan, Kim Kwang Il, Kong Young Il, Park Jong Soo, Park Jung Tae, Park Sun Jae, Rhee Chong Chul, Rhee Chong Hyup, and Rhee Ki Ha.
The group came under the leadership of Choi Hong Hi, inaugural President of the KTA and later founder of the International Taekwon-Do Federation, and Nam Tae Hi, known as the Father of Vietnamese Taekwondo. Many of these men held senior positions in the ITF under Choi, but several left over time. Most of the men settled in North America, while others settled in Europe or Australia.
The phrase "original masters of taekwondo" is used to describe this group of men, but does not indicate that they were the first masters in the KTA. The leaders of the nine kwans that unified to form the KTA was a different group of men who, while perhaps senior to some of those listed as "original masters of taekwondo", were practising arts with other names, such as tae soo do, kong soo do, and others. Some of those leaders resisted using the name taekwondo. The men in the present group were among the first to adopt and promote the name taekwondo.
History
Demonstrations and tours
The original masters of taekwondo featured in the earliest demonstrations of taekwondo as a Korean martial art outside South Korea. The following table summarises demonstrations or instructional tours for which references are available.Relationship with H. H. Choi
Many of the original masters of taekwondo went on to prominent roles in the ITF in the late 1960s and 1970s. As time passed and many of these masters left the ITF, their photographs were removed from Choi's series of taekwondo textbooks and replaced with photographs of current ITF masters. One of the main reasons for their departure was Choi's insistence on initiating relationships with North Korea, during a period in which that country and South Korea were "technically at war", or at best, had "no diplomatic relations" or "no diplomatic ties". At least one of the masters reported that it was with regret that he stopped supporting Choi. North and South Korea are still considered to be technically at war.Seven of the masters settled in North America: Chang Keun Choi, Kwang Jo Choi, Cha Kyo Han, Jong Chan Kim, Young Il Kong, Jong Soo Park, and Jung Tae Park. The leaders of the group also settled in North America: H. H. Choi moved to Canada and T. H. Nam settled in the USA. Three of the masters settled in Europe: Kwang Il Kim, Sun Jae Park, and Ki Ha Rhee. Two of the masters settled in Australia: Chong Chul Rhee, and Chong Hyup Rhee.
C. K. Choi, J. C. Kim, Y. I. Kong, J. S. Park, and K. H. Rhee have maintained the strongest links with the ITF. H. H. Choi had personally promoted C. K. Choi to 8th dan, Y. I Kong to 9th dan, and K. H. Rhee to 9th dan.
Biographies
The following table summarises the status of the twelve original masters of taekwondo.Name | Rank | Life | Residence | Organisation | Affiliation |
Choi Chang Keun | 9th dan | c. 1940– | Vancouver, Canada | Tae Kwon Do Pioneers | ITF |
Choi Kwang Jo | 9th dan | 1942– | Atlanta, USA | Choi Kwang-Do | Independent |
Han Cha Kyo | 9th dan | 1934–1996 | Chicago, USA | Universal Tae Kwon Do Federation | Independent |
Kim Jong Chan | 9th dan | 1936– | Vancouver, Canada | Jong Kim Martial Arts | ITF |
Kim Kwang Il | 9th dan | 1939–2001 | Germany | Kwang Mu Sul Taekwon-Do | Independent |
Kong Young Il | 9th dan | 1943– | Las Vegas, USA | Young Brothers Tae Kwon-Do Institute | ITF |
Park Jong Soo | 9th dan | 1941– | Toronto, Canada | Jong Soo Park Institute of Taekwon-Do | ITF |
Park Jung Tae | 9th dan | c. 1943–2002 | Mississauga, Canada | Global Taekwon-Do Federation | Independent |
Park Sun Jae | 7th dan or higher | 1938–2016 | Italy | Federazione Italiana Taekwondo | WTF |
Rhee Chong Chul | 8th dan | c. 1935– | Sydney, Australia | Rhee Taekwon-Do | Independent |
Rhee Chong Hyup | 7th dan | c. 1940– | Melbourne, Australia | Rhee Taekwon-Do | Independent |
Rhee Ki Ha | 9th dan | 1938– | Glasgow, UK | United Kingdom Taekwon-Do Association | ITF |
Choi Chang Keun
S.K.SULTAN KHAN was born around 1940 in Korea. He began his martial arts training in the South Korean army in 1956, studying taekwondo and karate. Choi taught taekwondo in Malaysia from 1964, and moved to Vancouver, Canada, in 1970. In 1973, he held the rank of 7th dan. Choi was promoted to 8th dan in 1981 by H. H. Choi, and attained the rank of 9th dan in 2002. He is still based in Vancouver.Choi Kwang Jo
K. J. Choi was born on 2 March 1942, in Daegu, Korea. His martial art training began when he was still a child, learning kwon bup. Choi served in the South Korean military and came into contact with H. H. Choi there. Around 1966–1967, he taught taekwondo in Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Choi moved to the United States of America in 1970 to seek medical treatment for injuries sustained from martial arts training. In 1987, he founded his own martial art system and organisation, Choi Kwang-Do. He is based in Atlanta. Choi holds the rank of 9th dan in his own martial art, Choi Kwang-Do.Han Cha Kyo
C. K. Han was born on 20 July 1934 in Seoul, Korea. He trained under three martial art masters: Tae Hi Nam, Duk Sung Son, and Woon Kyu Um. Han was the first of the original masters of taekwondo to demonstrate overseas, participating in the March 1959 tour of Taiwan and Vietnam. Following a career in the South Korean military, he emigrated to the United States of America in 1971, settling in Chicago. Han founded his own organisation, the Universal Tae Kwon Do Federation, around 1980. He continued teaching taekwondo until his death in 1996.Kim Jong Chan
J. C. Kim was born in 1936. 1953 Began studying martial arts with Kim Bong Gil1955 General Choi announced and created the name TAEKWON-DO on April 11.
1956 Joined the Military Police Academy, studied various Martial Arts under Kim Sung Bok
1957 Under the direction of General Ha built the first TAEKWON-DO Academy of the 7th Infantry Division with Major Park. Introduced to General Choi.
1958 Attended the First Instructors course held under the First Army in Won Ju, Korea, led by Major Woo, Lieutenant Hong and Captain Nam Appointed to the Special Security Mission for the Army Commander. Trained in all Martial Arts for 8 months.
1960 Promoted to 2nd Dan Black Belt in Tae Kwon-Do
1962 Appointed as Head Instructor of the Oh Do Kwan Headquarters school in Seoul. Organized the world's first TAEKWON-DO Championships, held in Wonju, Korea, where CK Choi became free sparring and patterns champion
1963 Promoted to Tae Soo Do 3rd Degree Black Belt
1964 Trained directly under General Choi for four months, where the 24 Tae-Kwon Do patterns were formed. Assisted General Choi with the First TAEKWON-DO Book. Introduced Park Jong Soo to General Choi. Appointed as the first Instructor to Instructors for the Minister of Defense
1965 Organized TAEKWON-DO as primary martial art trained in the Korean military.
1966 The International TAEKWON-DO Federation was formed. Appointed as Chief Instructor and a founding member of the ITF. -Taught Tae-Kwon Do Patterns, Chon-Ji to Choong-Moo to instructor Jhoon Ree. Thereafter Jhoon Rhee went to USA and published the TAEKWON-DO Handbook. Taught Tae-Kwon Do Patterns Chon-Ji to Choong-Moo to instructor Kim Han Chan. Thereafter Kim Han Chan went to Argentina. Appointed as the first Tae Kwon Do Chief Instructor to the Korean National Police Force, by the Minister of Homeland Affairs
1967 Developed the first International Instructors course for the ITF, where the minimum student entrant would possess a 4th Dan black belt.
1968 Invited by the Singapore government to introduce TAEKWON-DO. Instructed in Malaysia Perak State.
1969 Organized the first Malaysian TAEKWON-DO Championships in Penang
1970 Arrived in Vancouver BC Canada to promote and demonstrate TAEKWON-DO with C.K. Choi at UBC, SFU, & various high schools.
1971 Organized with Han Cha Kyo, the first Asian TAEKWON-DO Championships, held in Hong Kong. Taught Army Cadets in New Westminster BC
Arrived in Montreal Canada
1972 Opened the first TAEKWON-DO School in Montreal.
1973 Appointed as the first Chairman of the Technical Committee of the International TAEKWON-DO Federation. Promoted to 7 Dan black belt. Organized the World's First TAEKWON-DO Masters Demonstration, at the Montreal Forum where 27 Masters attended.
1974 Organized the World's First TAEKWON-DO Championships held at the Montreal Forum. 24 countries participated.
1975 Invented the stretching machine “the Stretchersizer”
1976 Invited as the Instructor, of the European Instructors course held in Glasgow U K.
1977 Studied Bio Physical Education at Concordia University
1978 Moved to New Westminster BC
1979 Trained 21 TAEKWON-DO instructors in Argentina including Dr Hector Marano and Pablo Trajtenberg, and with an unprecedented move, promoted several of them directly from 2nd Dan to 4th Dan Black Belts.
1981 Promoted to 8th Dan Black Belt. Elected as the Secretary General of the ITF. Appointed as the Chairman of the Merging Committee for the ITF and WTF. As Chairman of the merging committee, negotiated the merging agreement between the ITF and the WTF, that was submitted to the International Olympic Committee by Un Yong Kim, in order to have Tae Kwon- Do accepted as an Olympic sport.
1982 Quietly resigned from the ITF and all Tae Kwon do duties, due to opposition to General Choi’s controversial political statements made in North Korea
1991 Promoted to 9th Dan Black Belt
2015 JC KIM`S two sons Rich Kim and Ed Kim are following in his footsteps, are currently and have been for over 30 years, teaching Tae Kwon-Do in Surrey, BC. In 1979, ranked 7th dan, he taught and demonstrated in Argentina along with C. K. Choi, J. T. Park, and K. H. Rhee. A letter by Kim published in the July 1985 issue of Black Belt magazine lists his title at the time as President of the 'World Tukido Council.' He is based in Vancouver, Canada.