Showing posts with label Tae Kwon Do. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tae Kwon Do. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2018

IN MEMORY OF: Jhoon Rhee (Jan 7, 1932 - Apr 30, 2018)



 

It is with deep sadness that I post on the passing of Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee (Hangul: 이준구 / Hanja: 李俊九)
, widely acknowledged as the Father of American Tae Kwon Do.


As reported earlier on http://www.jhoonrhee.com/ :

With a heavy heart I want to announce the passing of my father, Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee, this morning at 7:25 am. He was with his wife Theresa and daughter Meme. Information about his Memorial service will be posted later this week.

-Chun Rhee
 



Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee was born on January 7, 1932 in  a small village of Sanyangri, Asan, Korea. His mother was Kay Im Rhee (1906-1994) and his father was Jinhoon Rhee (1909-1965). GM Rhee had 2 older sisters and started lifting weights when he was 6 until he was 13 when he moved to Seoul to enroll in high school. During high school, GM Rhee taught himself the violin as well as the  harmonica and learned to play songs by ear. When GM Rhee was 14 on August 15, 1945, Korea gained its independence from Japanese rule.

In 1947, at the age of 15, GM Rhee started on his martial arts path by joining the Chung Do Kwan academy of Grandmaster Won Kook Lee and learning Tae Kwon Do. He earned his brown belt by his eleventh grade and after watching an American movie, dreamed of teaching Tae Kwon Do in the USA. GM Rhee opened his first dojang, Jhoon Rhee School of Tae Kwon Do on June 28, 1962 at the age of 30 located at 2035 K Street NW, Washington, DC.


Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee with Bruce Lee


GM Rhee met Bruce Lee in August 1964 when they met at the Ed Parker's International Karate Championships in Long Beach, California. Rhee was 32 and Lee was 23. They visited each other regularly and exchanged letters for almost 10 years. In May 1966 both GM Rhee and Bruce Lee convinced Joe Lewis to compete as Lewis was against tournament competition. Lewis  was voted twice as the greatest fighter in karate history. In 1969, after seeing a student take a hard kick resulting in broken cheekbones, he invented safety equipment which allowed full-contact training/competition and reduced the risk of serious injury. In the 1970's, he published his 5-volume series of Tae Kwon Do books:  Chon-Ji of Tae Kwon Do Hyung; Tan-Gun and To-San of Tae Kwon Do Hyung; Won-Hyo and Yul-Kok of Tae Kwon Do Hyung; Chung-Gun and Toi Gye of Tae Kwon Do Hyung; and Hwa-Rang and Chung-Mu of Tae Kwon Do Hyung. In the summer of 1973, with the help of Bruce Lee, GM Rhee starred in the Hong Kong film, When Taekwondo Strikes aka The Sting of the Dragon. GM Rhee played GM Lee, the underground leader of a patriot group in Korea, occupied by the Japanese at the time.  GM Rhee also wrote the synopsis for the film which the plot was based off of. GM Rhee was back in the US by July 19, 1973 after filming wrapped. Bruce Lee called to say that the movie was edited and ready for release. The next day Bruce Lee passed away. GM Rhee was one of the last people that spoke to Bruce Lee. GM Rhee met Muhammad Ali in 1975, before his championship fight with Joe Frazier dubbed "The Thrilla in Manila". Rhee worked as the head coach of Muhammad Ali for his fight against British champion Richard Dunn, whom Ali kocked out. He also was the head coach for Ali's famous boxing vs wrestling match in Japan vs champion Antonio Inoki.
 


Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee with Muhammad Ali

Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee with Jackie Chan

GM Rhee started his website, listed below, in April of 2000. Within 45 days, it was the world's most popular online martial arts community. In 2005, at the age of 73, Rhee underwent heart surgery which lasted 11 hours. He had been living with a heart murmur since he was born and suffered a stroke during the heart surgery.

GM Rhee was inducted into the Taekwondo Hall of Fame in 2007.

GM Jhoon Rhee passed away at 7:25 AM on April 30, 2018.


My deepest condolences to Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee's loved ones, associates and students.





For more information:


When Taekwondo Strikes (1973) (Full movie)




GM Jhoon Rhee passed away earlier today.

I'm posting the full movie "When Taekwondo Strikes" (1973) (aka Sting of the Dragon Master) in which Grandmaster Jhoon Rhee starred with Angela Mao and Sammo Hung, in his honor.




Synopsis

The story is about the Korea under Japanese rule during World War II. A Korean nationalist played by Carter Wong gets into a fight with some non-Korean Japanese people and is chased into a church. The priest there is captured and tortured. Trying to secure his release, the leader of the resistance, Jhoon Rhee is himself captured and tortured by the Japanese. Carter Wong, Angela Mao and Anne Winton have to now try and rescue him. This leads to an explosive climax with the heroes having to fight the likes of Wong In Sik (Hwang In-Shik), Sammo Hung and Kenji Kazama.





For more information:



Thursday, November 09, 2017

The founders of Hapkido and Tae Kwon Do - crazy coincidence or conspiracy?

I'm a bit weak on Korean Martial Arts and its history. According to wiki, which I know is not the most reliable source, however, according to wiki, both the founder of Hapkido (Hangul: 합기도; Hanja: 合氣道) and the founder of Tae Kwon Do (Hangul: 태권도; Hanja: 跆拳道) share a birthday!Yep, you guessed it, it's a 2-for-1 today, Nov 9th is their shared birthday!  Happy Birthday Choi Yong-sool and Choi Hong Hi!

(Begin Billy Mays voice)

But wait! There's more!

(End Billy Mays voice)

An aside ... for my readers who are not familiar with Billy Mays, he was an American known for his television infomercials and one of his catch phrases was "But wait! There's more!" where the first deal he talked about and an additional deal to sweeten the the already great deal.

Alright, as if that is not mind-blowing enough of the shared birthdate ... according to wiki, they share the same death date!!! Read that again my friends ... not only do they share the same birthdate, they share the same death date!

I can hear you all now, "No way Stickgrappler!!" What are the odds of sharing a birthdate? Probably not as low as one would think given 365/366 days in the year, however, tack on that the two shared the same death date as well ?!?!?! Mind-blowing!!! I'm not a mathematician or statistician, so I don't know the probability of this happening. Crazy coincidence or conspiracy? Most likely shoddy historical records or perhaps intentional misinformation given the nature of wiki.

As of the time of publishing this blog, this is the extent of my research. I will keep digging!


With all that said, Happy Birthday Choi Yong-sool and Choi Hong Hi!!






Choi Yong-sool/Choi Yong-sul
(Hangul: 최용술; Hanja: 崔龍述)
(November 9, 1904 – June 15, 1986)


The founder of Hapkido would've been 113 years old today!  He passed at the age of 81 in 1986. He was born in South Korea and taken to Japan when he was 8 years old.

Excerpted from wiki:

Choi later stated that he became a student of Takeda Sōkaku (武田 惣角, October 10, 1859 – April 25, 1943), and studied a form of jujutsu known as Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu (大東流合気柔術) while in Japan.

...

He first called his art "Yu Sul (Hangul: 유술)" or "Yawara (Hangul: 야와라; Hanja: 柔術)" later changing it to "Yu Kwon Sool (Hangul: 유권술; Hanja: 柔拳術)" and "Hap Ki Yu Kwon Sool (Hangul: 합기 유권술; Hanja: 合氣柔拳術)" and eventually Hapkido.

...

Choi Yong-Sool was honored with the titles doju (Hangul: 도주; Hanja: 道主), which can be translated as "Keeper of the way", and changsija (Hangul: 창시자; Hanja: 創始者), which simply means "founder".







Choi Hong Hi
(Hangul: 최홍희; Hanja: 崔泓熙)
(November 9, 1918 – June 15, 2002)


The founder of Tae Kwon Do would've been 99 years old today!  He passed at the age of 83 in 2002. 

From wiki:

Choi is regarded by many as the "Founder of Taekwondo" (Hangul: 태권도; Hanja: 跆拳道) — most often by International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF) organizations. Others, such as the South Korean World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) organization, portray Choi as either an unimportant or a dishonorable figure in taekwondo history, whether by omitting him from their versions of taekwondo history or through explicit statements.




Both the origins of Hapkido and Tae Kwon Do are steeped in controversy. Check the wiki's for more information:

For more info:



Happy Birthday Choi Yong-sool and Choi Hong Hi!!




WORDCOUNT

(This section I will not add towards November's tally as well as the header picture I used above... I will only use hand-drawn pictures or animated GIFs I've created towards Nov's totals):

This post: 645 words
November running tally: 40,570 words
Words left:  9,430

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

EZINES: Tae Kwon Do and Korean Martial Arts



Like Fighters, Tae Kwon Do, is not in the strictest definition of "ezine", but the print magazine, Tae Kwon Do, digitizes some of their articles and puts it up on this site:

www.taekwondomag.co.uk


You need to register on the site. You can dl as a free pdf, but again, it's not the full print magazine. If you want the full magazine, buy it.

Enjoy!

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