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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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656 Vovinam/Viet Vo Dao<br />

rolling techniques in order to avoid getting injured during practice.<br />

Vovinam employs a colored belt system to denote rank, with seventeen<br />

belts ascending from shades of blue for beginners to the white belt<br />

with blue, black, yellow, and red stripes for the grand master. As with many<br />

martial art systems, the colors of the belts carry symbolic significance. Blue<br />

represents the color of hope, which means that the disciple begins to enter<br />

in the life of a martial artist and to perceive the philosophy of martial arts.<br />

Black represents the color of water, which means that the understanding of<br />

martial arts and its philosophy has started to merge into the body, building<br />

a foundation for the character of the Vovinam disciple. Yellow represents<br />

the color of earth, which means that the martial arts and its philosophy<br />

have permanently become a part of the Vovinam disciple. Red represents<br />

the color of fire, which means that the martial arts and its philosophy develop<br />

into a torch that guides the path for the Vovinam’s disciple. White<br />

represents the color of chastity, which means that the disciple’s martial art<br />

and its philosophy have reached the absolute level, and the disciple has also<br />

become the figure of the martial arts discipline of Vovinam.<br />

<strong>The</strong> major premise of Vovinam’s philosophy is to strive for the betterment<br />

of the students, their families, and mankind. <strong>The</strong> main goals of<br />

Vovinam are as follows: to preserve and develop the martial arts of Vietnam,<br />

to improve Vovinam by research and creation of new techniques, and<br />

to train students in the strength, techniques, and philosophy of Vovinam.<br />

All the functions of Vovinam are based on an established foundation:<br />

“Take mankind as the end, take character as the goal, and take invincible<br />

will as the means.”<br />

Vovinam-Viet Vo Dao was founded as short-term physical training<br />

that was simple and practical as a tool for the Vietnamese people to use for<br />

their struggle for liberation from the French. As the system matured, a<br />

broader philosophy behind Vovinam was then implemented to become Viet<br />

Vo Dao. Grand Master Le Sang systematized Vovinam techniques to prepare<br />

the system to progress from Viet Vo Dao (Vietnamese <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>) to<br />

Nhan Vo Dao (<strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> to Serve Mankind).<br />

Prior to 1975, Vovinam was virtually unknown outside Vietnam. <strong>The</strong><br />

first Vovinam school outside of Vietnam was opened in Houston, Texas, in<br />

1976 following Vietnamese emigration to the United States after the fall of<br />

South Vietnam to the Communist forces in 1975. In 1980, a German<br />

school was opened. By 2000, the following countries had Vovinam schools:<br />

Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Morocco, Poland,<br />

Spain, Switzerland, and the United States. Vovinam-Viet Vo Dao’s current<br />

headquarters are located in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), Vietnam,<br />

and Le Sang remains the grand master of the system.<br />

On August 25, 1999, the first woman was promoted to the rank of

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