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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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652 Vovinam/Viet Vo Dao<br />

tem was developed with the practical intent of both providing, after a short<br />

period of study, an efficient means of self-defense and establishing an ideological<br />

basis for national identity and patriotism among the beleaguered<br />

Vietnamese people.<br />

Nguyen was born in 1912 in Huu Bang village in northern Vietnam.<br />

Tradition maintains that when his family moved to Hanoi during his early<br />

childhood, Nguyen’s father placed him under the tutelage of an “old master”<br />

who instructed the boy in martial arts, both for the boy’s health and<br />

for self-defense purposes. <strong>The</strong> nature of the curriculum apparently has not<br />

been preserved, but oral history specifies “wrestling” as well as other<br />

martial techniques. <strong>The</strong> martial styles Nguyen studied at this period have<br />

been labeled traditional, but the martial and cultural tradition remains<br />

unknown.<br />

From 1859 to 1954, Vietnam was under French rule. During his<br />

youth in the early 1900s, founder Nguyen Loc was profoundly influenced<br />

by the inequities French colonial rule imposed on his people. Turning to his<br />

early training, he concluded that the martial arts could provide a vehicle for<br />

freeing Vietnam from outside domination by training both the spirits and<br />

bodies of the Vietnamese people. Thus, after researching and practicing<br />

many different martial arts, at the age of 26 he added elements of traditional<br />

Chinese wushu (martial arts), Japanese jûdô and related wrestling<br />

systems, Japanese karate, and Korean taekwondo to his preexisting knowledge<br />

to create an early version of Vovinam. <strong>The</strong>refore, Vovinam is best described<br />

as a modern eclectic system created out of practical necessity.<br />

Nguyen began teaching his new system to a group of friends in 1938 in the<br />

capital city of Hanoi.<br />

In 1940, Nguyen and his disciples were invited to demonstrate Vovinam<br />

in the Great <strong>The</strong>ater of Hanoi. This exhibition led to an invitation<br />

by Dr. Dang Vu Hy, president of the Sport Friendship Association, to begin<br />

teaching the new art formally at Hanoi Ecole Normal (Hanoi University of<br />

Education). <strong>The</strong> slogans that arose within the system—“Vietnamese practice<br />

Vietnamese martial arts,” “Not a Vovinam disciple, not a Vietnamese<br />

patriot”—reveal that Nguyen’s goal of using his system to promote nationalism<br />

was attainable.<br />

In fact, members of the Vovinam group led many of the demonstrations<br />

against the French during the early 1940s, including demonstrations<br />

at the University of Hanoi and the Ministry of Agriculture. At this point,<br />

Nguyen Loc’s focus was political; he utilized Vovinam to further the cause<br />

of Vietnamese independence. Thus, he created techniques that were simple<br />

but practical. <strong>The</strong> training focused on endurance, speed, and strength. Vovinam<br />

instructors were sent to cities throughout the country to promote<br />

Vovinam, and most of the training sessions lasted about three months. Vo-

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