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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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In 1955, General Choi Hong-Hi, known as the “father of modern<br />

taekwondo,” unveiled the art of taekwondo to the Korean public. General<br />

Choi and several other practitioners took the fighting arts of several<br />

schools, or kwons, and unified them into a single fighting art. Some kwons<br />

(e.g., Tang Soo Do) did not participate in this unification. General Choi<br />

also took several of the kata from Japanese karate, most notably Shôtôkan,<br />

and adopted them into taekwondo. General Choi took the name taekwondo,<br />

in part, because of the resemblance of the name to t’aek’kyŏn.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Korean conflict brought many United States military personnel<br />

into Korea and exposed them to the art. Some Americans remained in Korea<br />

after the end of the conflict in 1953 and received teaching certification<br />

in taekwondo, later returning to America to teach the art.<br />

Jhoon Rhee formally introduced the art to America in 1956, founding<br />

the first taekwondo academy in San Marcos, Texas. By the 1960s, the art<br />

had spread worldwide, into the Middle East, Taiwan, Canada, and Western<br />

Europe. With the outbreak of the Vietnam War, many more Americans<br />

were exposed to the art while stationed in Korea, which helped to account<br />

for a surge in popularity in the 1970s, when returning American service<br />

personnel brought the art with them. Taekwondo continued to expand<br />

worldwide in the 1980s, moving into the newly open societies of Eastern<br />

Europe and the former Soviet Union. Taekwondo received exposure when<br />

the art was entered as a demonstration sport at the 1988 Olympics in South<br />

Korea. Today, it is practiced by an estimated 20 million persons worldwide.<br />

Information on the fate of taekwondo in North Korea is sketchy at<br />

best. It is known that North Koreans do practice taekwondo, along with<br />

other Korean martial arts, but given the highly secretive nature of the<br />

A scene of ringstyle<br />

training of<br />

Miss Kim, ca.<br />

1950. (Courtesy<br />

of Joe Svinth)<br />

Taekwondo 611

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