General Choi
Hong Hi – 10 years on
The man pivotal to
the development and spreading of the art of Taekwon-Do will be ten
years dead this June. General Choi Hong Hi, the principal
founder of Taekwon-Do and founder and
first president of the International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF)
died of stomach cancer in Pyongyang,
North Korea on June 15th
2002.
Reportedly
a 2nd dan in Japanese Karate he began work on developing a new Korean
Martial Art and during the 1950's while developing this new Korean
Martial Art of Self Defence he received permission from the then
President of The Republic of (south) Korea to use the name Taekwon-Do
as
the
new Martial Art of Korea. The date of 11th
April 1955 became the day recognised as the birthday of Taekwon-Do.
For over nearly
half a century and being well into his 80's General Choi worked
tirelessly to develop Taekwon-Do through his seminars and
International
Instructor
courses. He controlled the International Taekwon-Do Federation with
an iron fist and commanded genuine respect from followers the world
over.
Historical
Context
On March 22nd
1966 General Choi formed the International Taekwon-Do Federation
after separating
from the Korean Taekwon-Do
Association in a bid to spread Taekwon-Do around the globe, a feat he
lived to appreciate.
The separation from the Korean Taekwon-Do Association was caused in
part by General Choi’s autocratic leadership style and differences
with the second generation leaders who were emphasising sports rules
as a unifying rallying point and not the first set of Korean patterns
that General Choi had designed. Along with his contentious battle to
have them adopt his name of Taekwon-Do over their preferred
compromise name of Tae Soo Do, General Choi eventually parted ways
with the KTA.
General Choi
courted controversy. He was incarcerated for resisting Japanese rule
during the Japanese occupation of Korea. He was also an outspoken
critic
of the military dictatorships that plagued South Korea at that time.
It was during the height of this government brutality in 1972 that
General Choi exiled himself to Canada while leaving his entire family
behind. He remained a fierce critic of the government while exiled.
When
the Korean dictator General Park was assassinated by the director of
the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, General Choi had hoped he
could return to Korea to continue his build of Taekwon-Do. However
this was not to be. Another military coup took control as General
Chun Do Hwan became the leader of South Korea.
The South Korean government and the KCIA
were adamant on destroying the ITF as it provided General Choi with a
world-wide traveling platform which he used in addition to his
teaching to severely criticise his government back home. Additionally
South Korea was looking to use Taekwon-Do as a political and cultural
propaganda tool. Dr. Kim Un Yong (first president of the WTF) was
already working on his vision to have Taekwon-Do become an Olympic
Sport. So naturally they would also look to minimise the influence of
the ITF, a rival organisation. As the pressure from the KCIA of South
Korea increased and the WTF became more successful in attracting and
building their Taekwon-Do, General Choi's Korean following shrank.
In
light of this General Choi courted North Korea in an attempt to gain
more Korean instructors, as well as political and financial help to
battle the political influence and money South Korea was providing to
the WTF. This was a move that greatly helped the ITF but also one
that was to frustrate it in the years ahead.
His desire to see
the ITF grow led General Choi to make many enemies and even in death
he stirred controversy. His final wishes in relation to the future of
his ITF remains a topic of controversial debate, with many ITF
members disputing the direction of his final wishes.
He died in a
Pyongyang hospital ward surrounded by North Korean officials some of
which were his closest masters. From that ward it was announced that
General Choi chose Prof Chang Ung a North Korean politician and
member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to become the
next and second president of the ITF.
It has been documented that this was in fact
General Choi's wish, it was not a last minute decision, but rather
one that took place over a course of time. At this point there were
serious and very high level government talks between South and North
Korea, which included an idea to exchange Taekwon-Do Demonstration
teams while discussions to merge the Taekwon-Do's of both Koreas took
place. As a result, General Choi, who fought his adult life to get to
this point wanted to be at that table and he probably would have been
if he hadn't passed away prior.
In light of these political circumstances
General Choi thought about who would be the best person to
politically accomplish what was a highly political move, so he picked
a politician, Prof. Chang Ung. This of course did not sit well with
many members of the ITF, as they did not wish to be political, many
members were not interested in politics, with some even resenting
General Choi’s politics and his constant use of Taekwon-Do and the
ITF as a political tool.
The
cracks begin to show
At
the ITF congress in Italy 2001, General Choi's son, Choi Jung Hwa
along with his supporters initiated a plan to unseat General Choi as
president by
having him voted in for only two years out of the six year term with
the remaining four years being presided over by Choi Jung Hwa. This
was passed at the congress but due to the nature of the vote it
caused divisions between General Choi and his son. They fought
furiously after the congress with Master Choi Jung Hwa saying the
North Koreans would not work with him as he would not let them
control the ITF or exert their influence over the ITF as they did
with his father.
General
Choi met with his senior masters and instructors in a bid to plan the
undoing of the vote at the 2001 congress. General Choi stated that
the vote had to be undone as their were serious and significant
merger talks taking place between the ITF and the WTF at which he
needed to be remain as the president of the ITF. The WTF denied there
were talks happening, but that organisation had signed an agreement
in the early 1980's that WTF president Dr Kim had never honoured. The
talks that were taking place were above and beyond Taekwon-Do and
resided in the hands of the North and South Korean government's
reunification ministries. The pressure was on General Choi to remain
ITF president.
It was
January 2002 in Vienna when an emergency meeting was called by the
ITF, General Choi and his supporters voted to undo the result of the
previous congress on the grounds that these were important political
times. ITF meeting agreed with General Choi and he was reinstated as
president for the full six year term, the vienna meeting also removed
Master Choi Jung Hwa as Secretary General. This caused major
frustration for Master Choi Jung Hwa resulting in him and his
followers leaving the ITF and setting up their own organisation which
was also to be called the ITF. Master Choi and some of his supporters
were later expelled officially from the original ITF. This was the
start of a very bitter division between Master Choi and General Choi
which continued until before the time of General Choi's death when as
father and son they reconciled.
It was also the beginning of a number of further
divisions within the ITF as General Choi planned for the future of
his organisation.
Following on from the Vienna meeting which
reversed the decision to have Master Choi as the next ITF president,
a hastily called meeting of the ITF ratified Prof. Chang Ung as the
next president in accordance with General Choi's wish to have a
politician lead through a politically charged period for Taekwon-Do
and for Korea.
The decision to elect Chang Ung should have
taken place at the scheduled congress which was to take place in 2003
in Poland. Some members were disgruntled at how this decision was
handled and decided to challenge the decision at the congress in
2003. However this congress did not happen as agreed, Chang Ung and
the ITF moved the world championships to Greece where the congress
took place, while back in Poland opponents to the move held their
congress as was agreed previously by the ITF. At this congress in
Poland, Master Tran Trieu Quan was elected as president of the group
emerging from this congress also to be called the ITF.
Tran Trieu Quan was a professional business man
with an MBA, in addition to a knowledgeable martial artists with a
depth of experience as a close and long time student of General Choi.
The stage was set, there now existed three
International Taekwon-Do Federations. All three groups dispute the
legalities of each of their respective congress meetings and votes
taken within.
The ITF
today ten years on
Master Choi Jung
Hwa’s ITF went on to attract new member schools and also attracted
some followers from the original ITF structure.
Choi Jung Hwa’s
ambition was to return the ITF to South Korea, the country that his
father had been exiled from decades previously.
In 2004 his
organisation ran the first world championships held in South Korea
and again in 2010 at which he attended himself which was as a result
of his cooperation with the South Korean government. It was during
this time that he gave an interview to an international news paper
about his involvement with North Korean intelligence. Choi jung Hwa
had been previously jailed for his role in a plot to assassinate the
South Korean dictator president – General Chun Do Hwan.
Many of the
changes introduced to Taekwon-Do through his organisation are
confined to the tul, or patterns. Master Choi Jung Hwa introduced the
‘kihap’ into the patterns and also changed the name of a
controversial pattern titled ‘Juche’ to ‘Kodang’ a move seen
as a sweetener to the South Korean government as the organisation
moved closer to that country. ‘Juche’ is a North Korean communist
ideology based on Marxism and Leninism.
Today Master Choi
Jung Hwa’s ITF appears to be the smallest of the three main
organisations with 14 countries at their last European championships
held in Italy 2011 (www.itf-administration.com).
They continue to work within South Korea which appears to have
become the headquarters for that organisation. Choi Jung Hwa’s
organisation has lost many significant master instructors and
countries over the past few years with many returning to either of
the other international groups or operating independently.
Grand Master Tran
Trieu Quan presided over his ITF until he was
tragically killed
in Port Au Prince, Haiti by a magnitude 7.0 earthquake. Ironically he
was there in his capacity as a civil engineer surveying buildings in
a bid to make them safer; he was killed when the hotel he was staying
in collapsed under the pressure of the earth quake. His organisation
is now presided over by GM Pablo Trajtenberg. GM Tran was the first
non-Korean to preside over an international Taekwon-Do Federation.
GM Tran's ITF
introduced many changes also, but most noticeable is their work
towards giving the organisation a more corporate image. The
introduction of a new logo is a significant step away from the
original recognisable blue and gold logo which is still in use by
this ITF presently but sources close this organisation say it will
eventually use the new design as their corporate logo moving the
ITF’s even further away from each other. In relation to
performances, this ITF tends to use a much slower rhythm when
performing patterns, nearly giving more emphasis to the aesthetic
beauty of the patterns over martial application.
This ITF attracted
twenty four countries to its last world championships in 2011 held in
New Zealand (www.tkd-itf.org) and maintains a considerable
competitive standard.
Prof Chang Ung
remains as president over the ITF which has it's headquarters in
Vienna, where controversially an Austrian court found that the
consultative committee of the ITF properly followed the rules at the
time of Prof Chang Ung's election and hence ruled him as the
president of the ITF. Much of Chang Ung's work to date as been around
courting Olympic recognition for the ITF.
This work has
resulted in many of the changes made to Taekwon-Do competition by
this organisation which many say help to promote ITF Taekwon-Do as a
dynamic kicking art. In order to achieve recognition this ITF has
introduced a two punch rule, where the competitor may only throw two
punches before kicking or pausing to throw another set of punches
thereby encouraging more kicking. Its rules have also changed to
include the compulsory use of 360 degree kicks during a bout again to
promote more aerial kicking. This group ran the largest of the recent
international tournaments with fifty eight countries participating in
the last world championships in Pyongyang North Korea
(www.itftkd.org).
Newer
organisations
Although it is acknowledged that these three
groups represent the ITF, other smaller organisations have also
popped over the course of the last ten years.
GM KS Hwang who originally supported General
Choi's wishes to have Prof Chang Ung as the next president eventually
left the ITF and formed Unified ITF as he felt Chang Ung had deviated
away from General Choi's wishes. Unified ITF is relatively small but
has a mission statement to unify all the international groups again
at some point in the future.
The Future?
Across the ITF
grass roots there is common desire for unifying the membership.
Unification of the international bodies lends more credibility to its
world and European-class tournaments as well as it’s standing as
the official world governing body for traditional Taekwon-Do.
Unfortunately with
all of the technical and aesthetic changes taking place as well as a
number of bitter court battles over trademark rights, the unification
of the ITF’s has never been so distant. While all of the groups pay
homage to their founder and still hold him dearly in their hearts,
only one action can truly show the respect and appreciation for the
work that General Choi carried through his entire life and that is
the action of unification. Until then, his legacy remains a myriad of
disputes and conspiracies as the international Taekwon-Do Family
walks in different directions.
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Acknowledgement:
A special thanks
to Dr George Vitale of New York (Taekwon-Do Master and reputed TKD
historian) for his time and assistance in compiling information for
this feature.
The Author and Dr
Vitale would appreciate any feed back, new information, memories and
insights that any Taekwon-Do practitioner may have about these past
turbulent times for the ITF.
Taekwon.
