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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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654 Vovinam/Viet Vo Dao<br />

Vietminh, a nationalist coalition who opposed both French and Japanese<br />

colonialism.<br />

In 1942, fearing Vovinam’s potential for resistance, the French puppet<br />

regime ordered the closing of all Vovinam schools and prohibited Nguyen<br />

Loc from teaching. However, he continued secretly teaching his students.<br />

Nguyen’s program maintained a political orientation beyond simple moral<br />

and physical improvement.<br />

At the end of <strong>World</strong> War II, the French were allowed to return to Vietnam<br />

in force. By 1946, Vietnam was officially at war with France. Vovinam<br />

was utilized in the training of military cadets and to train militias of remote<br />

villages. Nguyen Loc led his students to join the war effort, where many<br />

distinguished themselves in the field. However, a disagreement with the tactics<br />

of the Viet Minh led Nguyen Loc to sever his ties with them and urge<br />

his disciples to follow suit. In retaliation, the Viet Minh ordered the capture<br />

of Nguyen and placed him in the precarious position of being wanted<br />

by both the Viet Minh and the French. He responded by telling his disciples<br />

to return to their hometowns to wait for an opportunity. Taking his<br />

own advice, he returned to Huu Bang village. <strong>The</strong>re, he helped organize<br />

and train local militia units in combative techniques. He also assigned instructors<br />

to the Military Academy of Tran Quoc Tuan.<br />

In 1954, in Geneva, Switzerland, an armistice agreement between<br />

France and the Vietminh was signed that provided for the temporary partition<br />

of Vietnam at about the seventeenth parallel, with North Vietnam<br />

under control of the Communist Vietminh and South Vietnam under Nationalist<br />

control. Fearing the effects of Communism, Nguyen Loc had immigrated<br />

to South Vietnam during the early 1950s, opening a Vovinam<br />

school in Saigon and others subsequently. Within ten years, Vovinam became<br />

popular around Saigon and its provinces and was introduced into the<br />

curricula of the military and police academies. In fact, Vovinam became so<br />

popular that the Vovinam association refused to open new classes due to<br />

the lack of instructors.<br />

In 1960, Nguyen Loc passed away at the age of 47 because of an illness.<br />

Before his death, his senior student, Le Sang, was appointed to lead<br />

and further advance Vovinam. After a series of clashes with both the South<br />

Vietnamese government and later the Republic of Vietnam, Le Sang was<br />

able to preserve the system created by Nguyen Loc and was instrumental<br />

in the development of its training curriculum and philosophy.<br />

From its creation until several years following the founder’s death, the<br />

system was called Vovinam. <strong>The</strong> name Vovinam is a blending of two<br />

words: Vo and Vietnam. In Vietnamese, Vo means “martial arts,” and Vo<br />

Vietnam means “martial arts of Vietnam.” Nguyen Loc shortened Vietnam<br />

to vinam. Hence, Vo Vietnam was combined to form Vovinam. <strong>The</strong>n in

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