CHUN KUHN DO [The Complete Wellness Art] Volume 1 Sword, Double Sword, Cane, Belt Patterns 10-6 (2002) By Kim Bok Man This is a softcover book first published in 2002. It was published by World Chun Kuhn Do Federation. and printed by O Sung Printing Co. Seoul, Korea. This book has 415 pages and has over 1,500 of black and white photos. It is 8.5" X 11.5" and weighs in at about 5 bs 3oz

True 1st print 1st issued

 Part I Introduction Chapter 1 History of Chun Kuhn Do 

Chapter 2 Moral Conduct 

Chapter 3 Principles of Weapons 

Chapter 4 General Pattern Explanation Part II Sword Patterns Part III Cane Patterns Part IV Chun Kuhn Patterns 

Part V Sparring Chapter 1 Defense Against a Sword Attack 

Chapter 2 Defense Against a Cane Attack 

Chapter 3 One-Step Sparring 

Chapter 4 How to Release From a Grab Part VI Appendix Chapter 1 Stance

 Chapter 2 Body Parts for Attack and Defense 

Chapter 3 Theory of Chun Kuhn Do Action 

Chapter 4 Use of the bag

 Chapter 5 Vital Spots 

Biography

Chun Kuhn Taekwondo was developed by Supreme Master Bok Man Kim, one of the pioneers of Taekwon-Do in the ROK (Republic of Korea) Army. As a Master Sergeant, Bok Man Kim helped General Hong Hi Choi (also known as Gen. Choi Hong Hi) develop some of the martial techniques of Taekwon-Do and 15 of the 24 Ch'ang Hon patterns, the first Korean patterns developed for Taekwon-Do, in Malaysia from 1963-1964. The Ch'ang Hon patterns remain the official patterns of the International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF) more than 50 years later. Master Sergeant Bok Man Kim also served as an instructor of Taekwon-Do under General Choi's command. During his military service, Bok Man Kim helped General Choi, often called the "Father" of Taekwondo and certainly the Principal Founder of the art, to update the ROK Army Field Manual and to write the book Taekwon-do: The Art of Self-Defence, the first book about Taekwondo in English, although Bok Man Kim asked General Choi to remove his name from the book due to personal differences. Chun Kuhn Taekwondo represents Supreme Master Kim's continuous efforts to perfect the martial art he helped create and introduce to nations throughout southeast Asia, including Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Brunei, Sarawak, the Philippines and Hong Kong, during the 1950s, 60s and early 1970s. 

Born on December 3, 1934, Supreme Master Kim's martial arts journey began, like that of all other first generation pioneers of Taekwondo, during the Japanese occupation of Korea. The year was 1941. Korea had been brutally occupied by Japan for more than 30 years. Japan had assumed control of Korea in 1910 and renamed it Chosen. During the military occupation, Japan banned the teaching of the Korean language and history, and burned many historical Korean documents.2 Koreans young and old were oppressed and bullied at school, at work and in the street by their Japanese co-workers and neighbors. Koreans were forced to assume Japanese names and to teach and speak in Japanese. World War II had begun in 1939, and Koreans were drafted into the Japanese army or forced to work under dangerous slavelike conditions while the Japanese military kidnapped thousands of Korean girls and women to work as comfort women for Japanese soldiers.

In 1941, when he was just seven years old, Supreme Master Kim’s grandmother arranged to have a Buddhist priest named Lee teach him to defend himself. Lee, a member of a civilian protection group, taught the young Master Kim for several hours once or twice a month. Physical conditioning was an important part of Master Kim’s training. Lee expected him to condition his body by kicking and striking trees and jumping over large obstacles such as tree stumps every day. Lee taught Supreme Master Kim a martial art called Taekyun Moosul. Tae, Lee explained, meant jumping or flying with kicks; kyun meant fighting position; moosul meant martial arts. When World War II ended in August 1945, Lee no longer came to Master Kim’s village to teach. Master Kim, however, continued training by himself and began to develop new techniques, a habit he follows yet today, more than 70 years later. Supreme Master Kim for many years was renowned for his jumping and flying techniques, feats captured in many of the photographs in his book Taekwon-Do: Origins of the Art: Bok Man Kim's Historic Photospective (1955-2015). For Taekwon-Do pioneers in the Korean armed forces – including General Choi, Colonel Nam Tae-Hi, Master Sergeant Kim Bok-Man and others – the Japanese occupation proved to be a powerful catalyst to develop, teach, demonstrate and distribute Taekwon-Do. 

On September 15, 1950, Supreme Master Kim made the pivotal decision to join the ROK Army 8th Division to fight in the Korean War. He was only 16 (the legal age to enlist was 17, but the recruiter liked Supreme Master Kim’s spirit and enthusiasm). After six weeks of training, Supreme Master Kim marched into combat and, by 1951, was teaching martial arts to soldiers in his unit. A short time later, Supreme Master Kim began to formally teach martial arts to larger groups of soldiers. Supreme Master Kim taught hand-to-hand combat, as well as guerilla warfare with knife, bayonet and baton. Supreme Master Kim has always believed that weapons were a natural part of the martial arts and has taught weapons techniques throughout his life, even when doing so opposed General Choi’s vision for Taekwon-Do. Supreme Master Kim fought in the Korean War for two and a half years, until he was critically wounded by shrapnel in his left hip in February 1953, just five months before the war ended in a cease-fire. He was sent to the Army hospital in Dae Jeon City for treatment. Although doctors feared he would never walk again, much less do anything as demanding as a martial art, Supreme Master Kim recovered, and in March 1954 he was re-assigned to the Dae Jeon City Army Hospital for his ability to keep order among and lead the more than 3000 patients who were sometimes unruly. Despite his injury, Supreme Master Kim Bok-Man would later astound audiences with his extraordinary skill, particularly with jumping and flying kicks. Sixty-two years later, the wound has not slowed him down. 

While stationed in Dae Jeon City, Master Sergeant Kim Bok-Man met Sergeant First Class Han Cha-Kyo, a martial arts instructor for the ROK Army under the command of General Choi, and they became loyal friends. At the time, Han Cha-Kyo was also an outstanding student at the Chung Do Kwan under Grand Master Son Duk-Sung and Colonel Nam Tae-Hi, who was then a young Captain and General Choi’s chief assistant.

“1955 was a lucky year,” Supreme Master Kim says. “Lucky for me, lucky for General Choi and lucky for Taekwon-Do.” In February 1955, Grand Master Son scheduled a demonstration to celebrate the opening of a branch gym in Dae Jeon City, and Han Cha-Kyo invited Master Sergeant Kim to join the demonstration. Master Kim agreed and afterward met General Choi Hong-Hi and Grand Master Son Duk-Sung for the first time. Master Sergeant Kim privately demonstrated his kicks and punches for General Choi and Grand Master Son, and they interviewed him about his martial arts and military experience. They also talked about the future of the martial arts in Korea. Grand Master Son recommended to General Choi that he award a black belt to Master Sergeant Kim for the skills exhibited during the demonstrations. Toward the end of the meeting, General Choi also asked Master Sergeant Kim if he would like to transfer to his division and help him teach martial arts to Korea’s armed forces. Master Sergeant Kim respectfully declined both offers. Just 20 years old, the future Supreme Master Kim was not interested in learning or teaching a Japanese martial art. Instead, he wanted to establish and promote a martial art for Korea. After the meeting, Master Sergeant Kim returned to his duties at the hospital. Three days later, General Choi called Master Sergeant Kim’s commanding officer and ordered Kim to meet with him to continue their discussion. General Choi’s request was so urgent that Master Sergeant Kim was given a car to drive to the meeting. Supreme Master Kim laughs yet today about the unusual situation of being given a car to drive alone. Within days, Master Sergeant Kim transferred to General Choi’s division to help develop and establish the Korean martial art they both desired. Supreme Master Kim and Grand Master Son remained lifelong friends until Grand Master Son’s death on March 29, 2011.

The kicking and punching arts taught at the kwans in Korea, including the Chung Do Kwan, were Japanese karate, the Japanese name simply translated into Korean depending on lineage: tang soo do or kong soo do. General Choi himself had earned a black belt in karate while studying in Japan. Supreme Master Kim, on the other hand, had no formal training in Japanese karate, only in Taekyun Moosul, a martial art native to the region of his village. In this, Supreme Master Kim was unique among the pioneers of Taekwon-Do in the Korean military. General Choi and Colonel Nam respected Supreme Master Kim for this aspect of his martial art.

For the next 13 years, General Choi often asked for Supreme Master Kim’s opinion and advice on many matters regarding Taekwon-Do, and as a result Supreme Master Kim became a primary influence on the art’s technical development and growth. General Choi shared the name Tae Kwon Do with Supreme Master Kim, although he was not a member of the Naming Committee, and asked his opinion. After General Choi explained the strange, unfamiliar name, as he would later explain it to the Naming Committee (a scene which General Choi describes at length in his memoirs), Supreme Master Kim agreed that Taekwon-Do was a good name for the new Korean martial art. Master Sergeant Kim Bok-Man and Sergeant First Class Han Cha-Kyo for the next few months drove General Choi and Colonel Nam to the meetings of the Naming Committee and waited outside with the car, smoking.

It is generally accepted that Taekwon-Do was born on April 11, 1955, but few living today know why. Some believe that this is the date that General Choi, with the assistance of Colonel Nam Tae-Hi and a Chinese dictionary, came up with the name Tae Kwon Do. Others believe that this is the date that General Choi proposed the name to the Tae Kwon Do Naming Committee he had convened with Grand Master Son Duk-Sung. Some believe that is the day President Rhee Syng-Man first wrote Tae Kwon Do in Chinese hanja on a scroll for General Choi. Supreme Master Kim chuckles when this date is mentioned. “That is the date that we began to use the name Taekwon-Do,” he says, “even before it was proposed or approved.” If that is the case, it was a Monday. According to Supreme Master Kim, President Rhee would write 跆拳道for General Choi four months later, thereby approving the name in August, 1955.

Supreme Master Kim believes that General Choi liked him not only for his native martial arts and advanced skill but also because Supreme Master Kim always gave him his proper opinion and advice, despite his junior military rank. Many blindly agreed with General Choi due to his rank and authority, so they could avoid trouble. Supreme Master Kim and General Choi, however, had many disagreements and arguments during the 13 years they worked together for the benefit of Taekwon-Do. There was much raising of voices and slamming of doors. “General Choi worked very hard,” Supreme Master Kim acknowledges. “I respected him very much. He had a sharp mind, and he was not corrupt. He was very straight forward. Without General Choi, there would be no Taekwon-Do, no Korean national martial art. He was in proper position to get things done. He thought and worked like that.”

Despite their differences, General Choi continued to ask for Supreme Master Kim’s ideas and opinions. Supreme Master Kim provided input on many of the patterns that General Choi designed for Taekwon-Do between 1956 and 1964 to replace the karate patterns being taught to civilians and soldiers alike, for virtue of being the only patterns available. Supreme Master Kim also recommended to General Choi that the tuls or patterns be named for and symbolize prominent Korean historical figures and events to preserve the best of Korean history within the new national martial art. Supreme Master Kim helped develop and provided input on more Ch’ang Hon patterns than any other individual save General Choi himself. More than half the tuls – 15 to be exact – were developed for the most part in Malaysia between 1963 and 1964, when General Choi chose Master Kim Bok-Man and Master Woo Jae-Lim, both 4th Dan, from among thousands to come to Malaysia and assist him. Supreme Master Kim is said to have provided various degrees of input for as many as four additional tuls, bringing the total patterns with his involvement to 19. Twenty Ch’ang Hon tuls in total would be finalized for publication in General Choi’s 1965 Taekwon-Do textbook, Taekwon-Do: The Art of Self-Defence. Balance is perhaps Supreme Master Kim’s most important contribution to most of the patterns he helped develop, treating the left and right sides of the pattern and body equally. This signature characteristic appears in all of Supreme Master Kim’s future patterns, including those for weapons. When asked why some of the patterns he helped develop for General Choi are not balanced left and right, Supreme Master Kim simply replies, “I get tired arguing and fighting with General Choi.”

In 1963, Grand Master Kim Bok-Man helped General Choi Hong-Hi, the Father of Taekwon-Do, develop, organize and prepare the first Taekwon-Do textbook in English in Malaysia, a book which would prove to be a pivotal instrument in the international and global promotion of Taekwon-Do. Published in 1965, Taekwon-Do: The Art of Self-Defence features thousands of photographs illustrating the state of the new Korean martial art.Supreme Master Kim Bok-Man also helped General Choi develop, organize and prepare the first Taekwon-Do textbook in English, a pivotal instrument in the international and global promotion of Taekwon-Do. While General Choi’s first book, published in Korean in 1959, may be considered half karate, half Taekwon-Do, the new book made greater efforts to leave karate behind. Supreme Master Kim had formalized Taekwon-Do techniques and methods while working on the tuls. When work on the new book began in 1963, he proposed and argued with General Choi to use Korean names for most if not all techniques in the book, to further distance Taekwon-Do from karate. Supreme Master Kim, however, was not satisfied with the book despite his contributions and asked that his name not appear. General Choi’s Taekwon-Do: The Art of Self-Defence, published in 1965, served as the original master text for the new national martial art and the foundation for the International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF), which General Choi would establish in 1966. Copies of the book were given as gifts before Taekwon-Do demonstrations, as a few of the photos published here reveal. Taekwon-Do: The Art of Self-Defence would eventually lead to the publication of General Choi’s momentous 15-volume Encyclopedia of Taekwon-Do in 1985.

The early demonstrations of Taekwon-Do were thrilling, dangerous events, as Supreme Master Kim’s photos clearly establish in his book Taekwon-Do: Origins of the Art. Colin Wee, Chief Instructor of Joong Do Kwan Tae Kwon Do in Perth, Australia, has aptly noted that the early demonstrations showcased in Supreme Master Kim's latest book were “Taekwondo out to prove itself.” Taekwon-Do, the new national martial art developed by the Korean military, could not disappoint. There were no mats and no protective gear. The swords, poles, batons, bayonets and knives were real. The kicks and strikes were as real as possible for demonstration purposes. The bruises are evident. There are bandages and dark glasses in the group photographs which commemorate the demonstrations. Supreme Master Kim described bleeding, swollen hands and broken bones, particularly during the historic 1959 demonstrations in Vietnam and Taiwan. Later demonstrations were no less dangerous, as one can see from the photos. The first large-scale demonstration in Malaysia was made at the request of Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman in September 1963 to celebrate Malaysia’s Independence during an international soccer tournament at Independence Stadium in Kuala Lumpur before an audience of 30,000 people. Was Supreme Master Kim ever injured during these demonstrations? “Only twice,” he says. His first injury occurred when he was pierced in the side with a bayonet. Fortunately, the blade damaged his dobok more than himself. For the second injury, he slipped on damp grass and was hit hard on the forehead with a baton. He awoke dazed and confused.

Supreme Master Kim retired from the ROK Army on February 28, 1962, after nearly twelve years of service, but he has never retired from martial arts. He was the first to list “Taekwon-Do Instructor” as an occupation officially recognized by the Korean government in 1963 when he became the first Korean to teach Taekwon-Do in Singapore. He developed the first two weapons patterns for Taekwon-Do, the Silla Pole and Silla Knife patterns, in 1966 while living and teaching in Hong Kong. In 1972, he organized the first Hong Kong Taekwon-Do Tournament. He was instrumental in establishing the first Taekwon-Do Associations in nearly a dozen countries, including Malaysia, Hong Kong, Brunei, Singapore and the Philippines. He was the first to demonstrate Taekwon-Do in Uganda and Kenya. In 1973, he starred in two films, Only the Brave Stands and The Big Show Down, shot in Hong Kong. By 1977, he had become interested in the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF), which honored him with 8th Dan, and in 1978 he sponsored the 3rd Asian Taekwon-Do Championships in Hong Kong at the request of Kim Un Yong, President of the WTF. He published his first book, Practical Taekwon-Do: Defenses Against Weapons, in 1979, culled from nearly 3000 pages of material and more than 20 patterns. The World Chun Kuhn Do Federation, which he founded in the United States in 2002, published his second book, Chun Kuhn Do: The Complete Wellness Art (Volume 1), which features 15 new patterns developed for Chun Kuhn Taekwondo. In 2007, the Official Taekwondo Hall of Fame® inducted Supreme Master Kim Bok-Man, recognizing his lifelong contributions. Supreme Master Kim was further honored by the Official Taekwondo Hall of Fame® at the Second Induction Banquet in 2009. His third book, Taekwondo: Defense Against Weapons, was published in 2012 by YMAA Publication Center and selected as a Best Books Award Finalist by USA Book News.

At 80 years old, Supreme Master Kim Bok-Man continues to develop, teach and promote Taekwon-Do around the world, as he has done for the past 60 years. Taekwon-Do is practiced in more than 200 countries by an estimated 90 million people due to the contributions of talented and dedicated pioneers of the ROK Army like Supreme Master Kim. Not only does he teach principles of the art he helped found and develop, he also shares his historical firsthand experiences. Those fortunate to spend time with Supreme Master Kim before or after training are also sure to hear about his more personal experiences during Taekwon-Do’s formative years. Supreme Grandmaster Kim Bok-Man continues to teach seminars and preside over advanced testings around the world, in countries such as the United States, the Netherlands, Great Britain and Malaysia, to name only a few.