With hundreds of martial arts schools, military bases and law-enforcement departments teaching our system, in addition to our many magazine cover appearances and hall-of-fame inductions, we have good reason to celebrate.
Many martial artists I've met have expressed interest in creating their own system, so I thought I'd review the history of the ICHF to let everyone know how the process unfolded for us.
Many people hold the naive - and mistaken - assumption that the founders of martial arts systems receive a sudden inspiration akin to a mystical experience. Reality is not that glamorous. The creation of a system involves years of hard work, sacrifice, research and difficult choices. No one wakes up one morning and casually declares, “I am going to make a new martial art!” (Well, some people probably do, but they usually lack credibility.)
The process of founding a style or system is painstaking, demanding and complex. It’s an endeavor that requires creativity, commitment, discipline, humility and strong technical knowledge. And it’s always rooted in a profound understanding of the original art. Yes, at the root of every new style lies an “original art” that’s been modified, refined, modernized and used as a foundation or framework.
Hapkido is a Korean martial art reportedly founded in 1948 by Yong-sool Choi (1904– 1986). He lived in Japan for more than 30 years, which is where he received his training in the respected system known as daito-ryu aikijujitsu under its headmaster Sogaku Takeda (1859–1943).
This story is from the Summer 2023 edition of Black Belt.
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This story is from the Summer 2023 edition of Black Belt.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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