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#450 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Mon Nov 28, 2005 1:52 am
Subject: Fw: [HanMuDo] Taekwondo Times
hbchuah
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Hanmudo Singapore will be featured in Jan 2006 Taekwondo Times as one of the global schools.
 
----- Original Message -----
From: dkimm
Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 5:06 PM
Subject: [HanMuDo] Taekwondo Times

Hello Everyone,

I hope that this note finds you in good health and spirits.

First off, best wishes to Dr. Chua for the Singapore Han Mu Do Seminar.

And best wishes to all who had a hand in the article for Taekwondo Times.

Thanks to Mr. Zollie Guidry (Baton Rouge Han Mu Do) for the headsup on the posting of the cover of the January 2006 issue of Taekwondo Times.

You can see it at http://www.taekwondotimes.com/next.html .  Can't wait for the issue to reach the stores.

There is also an account of my father's previous visit's to North Korea on the site as well.

Happy Holidays and Best Wishes,
Donald Kimm


#449 From: bactrimsg
Date: Tue Nov 22, 2005 3:32 pm
Subject: BaGua Zhang - Combat Applications (2 Days) Seminar by 3 Beijing Masters
bactrimsg
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Ba Fang Wushu Training Centre will be organising a 2 days seminar on
BaGua Zhang - Combat Applications. ʵս°ËØÔÕÆ - É¢ÊֺͶÔÁ·

The seminar will be conducted by famous Cheng Style Bagua Zhang
grandmaster: Sun Zhijun who at 72 years old, is one of the oldest
living BaGua grandmaster from the fourth generation lineage. GM Sun
is widely regarded in China as the authoritative figure in Cheng
Style Ba Gua Zhang and he hold a Wushu 8th dan (Chinese Wushu
Association). GM Sun is also the advisor to the Beijing BaGua Zhang
Research Association.

GM Sun will be assisted by his 2 senior disciples: Master Ge ChunYan
and Master Wang DeMin. Both are former China National Bagua Zhang
Champion. Master Wang is also a former China National Hsing Yi Quan
champion.

Date:
17 Dec (Sat) and 18 Dec (Sun)
2pm to 6pm

Venue:
HomeTeanNS JOM Club House
(Formerly known as SPANS-JOM club house)
31 Ah Hood Road
17 Dec (Level 2 Multipurpose Hall)
18 Dec (Level 3 Learning Centre)

Topics Covered:
- BaGua Zhang - Combat Application (also known as BaGua Sanshou)
- Traditions, Philosophy and Techniqes
- Demonstration of various BaGua zhang routines
80% of the seminar time will be on BaGua combat drills and
application

Fee:
S$ 180 per person
Certificate of participation signed by the 3 masters will be issued
to all participants

Those who wish to register for the seminar can call Mdm Ge at HP:
90253887 or register at:

Dong Lian Shu Dian Supplies (Bras Basah Complex, #02-03)
Tel: 6 3371760

More information available at www.mamaster.com

#448 From: tcthub
Date: Sat Nov 19, 2005 1:27 am
Subject: Korea Hapkido Federation
tcthub
Offline Offline
 
Hi,

Just to let everyone know, Korea Hapkido Federation has changed its
website address from www.hapkidokorea.org to www.daehanhapkido.org.

Do check out Master Low's Website too, www.hapkidojeetkunedo.com, lots
of information has been published with some videos updated too.

You guys can also check out www.jinpalhapkido.com, nice
history,pictures and videos. This is Grandmaster Jin Pal,9th dan
Hapkido, he is a pioneer in Hapkido who has lots of experience and
solid skills.

Cheers!

Daniel

#447 From: tcthub
Date: Sat Nov 19, 2005 1:22 am
Subject: Re: why Koreans have martial spirit
tcthub
Offline Offline
 
Hi Dr. Chua,

Maybe You like to change the font colour from yellow to something
darker? Can't see very clear.

Thanks!
Daniel

--- In hapkidoflyingeagle@yahoogroups.com, "Dennis Chua"
<hbchua@p...> wrote:
>
> Marine Corps GazetteHere's a good article on  why Koreans are good
in martial arts.It's more than technique.It is martial spirit.
> The writer of this article also took some information from
Grandmaster He-Young Kimm's research on Taekwondo to place into his
article below.
> Notes no.3. He Young Kimm, "General Choi Hong Hi: A Tae Kwon Do
History Lesson," Tae Kwon Do Times, January 2000,
>
> In Hanmudo Founder Dr.He-Young Kimm's research, early Korean
ancestors migrated from the cold Central Asia,crossed the Altai
mountain in northern asia down into the Korean peninsula,where the
climate was warmer.They had to fight their way thru.Even when they
settled in the Korean peniinsula,they had to ward off both Chinese
and Japanese invasion.Today, South Korea technically is in a state
of war with the North.That's why they still have a martial spirit
for survival.
> Here's an interesting account of the modern Korean warrior in
Vietnam.See below.
> Grandmaster Dr. Kimm  ,himself a lieutenant in the Korean
Marines ,taught the 8th US Army in Korea in the 1950's.He told me
warfare martial art is different.Taking a brick to crack an enemies
skull is good Hapkido in the army!
>
> Before we get too carried away with the sporting aspects of
martial arts, we should not forget that martial art training is to
develop a good martial spirit to see us through life's challenges.
>
> Here's a  snippet from the article
> "The role of martial arts training in the battle has been a topic
of discussion for nearly four decades. At the press conference
following the battle, Capt Jung was adamant in his opinion that tae
kwon do contributed greatly to the combat abilities and fighting
spirit of the Korean Marines, both enlisted and officers.24 In a
graphic description, Time noted that martial arts training was
critical to the victory:
>
>
>   It was knife to knife and hand-to-hand-and in that sort of
fighting the Koreans, with their deadly tae kwon do (a form of
karate), are unbeatable. When the action stopped shortly after dawn,
104 enemy bodies lay within the wire, many of them eviscerated or
brained.25"
>
>   Asked to provide their opinions for this article, both Taeguk
Medal recipients stated that martial arts training significantly
contributed to the Marines' victory. LtCol Jung, now retired and
living in Seoul, emphasized two areas in which tae kwon do
influenced his Marines:
>
>
>     First, the enemy suddenly overwhelmed our trenches and
continuously piled up to the degree that we were unable to use
rifles and bayonets as weapons. There were many instances in which
we were pushing and pulling each other inside the trenches. At that
time, Tae Kwon Do became the Korean Marines' weapon and by hitting
the enemy in his vital parts, we brought him under our control.
>
>
>     Second, it can be seen that the courage to be unafraid when
facing your enemy was trained through Tae Kwon Do. Although we
didn't have a path of retreat and had to stay in our position, the
fortitude to fight bravely while exposed to the enemy led to victory
at the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.26
>
>
>   Retired MajGen Shin Won Bae, who later commanded the Blue Dragon
unit (now the 2d ROK Marine Division) provided similar insights,
noting:
>
>
>     Even though tactics call for fixing bayonets to rifles during
close quarters to neutralize the enemy, our weapon at the time, the
M-1 rifle, was not a weapon that could be wielded quickly. In urgent
situations, the Marine in the front would fiercely strike the
enemy's face and vital parts using Tae Kwon Do, causing him to
momentarily lose his will to fight. Then a second Marine would
finish off the enemy with the rifle. Additionally, striking the
enemy with an entrenching tool was highly effective in destroying
the will to fight among the enemy's lead elements. While Tae Kwon Do
demonstrated its practical effectiveness on the battlefield, more
importantly, martial arts training instilled the confidence to
defeat the enemy in each Marine. I think this is the greater
significance of Tae Kwon Do training.27
>
>
>
>    Regards
>   DrChua
>   Hanmudo Assn Singapore
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>       The Battle of Tra Binh Dong and the Korean Origins of the
U.S. Marine Corps Martial Arts Program
>
>       by LtCol James F. Durand
>
>         Lasting impressions of Korean Marines' martial arts skills
led to the establishment of the MCMAP.
>
>
>       In establishing the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program
(MCMAP), Gen James L. Jones frequently recounted his observations of
Korean Marines during the Vietnam War. The fact that Republic of
Korea (ROK) servicemen were skilled in the Korean martial art tae
kwon do was widely known, evoking respect among allies and
instilling fear in the enemy. The former Commandant recalled that
his own Marines envied this skill, believing the Korean Marines were
the most feared adversary on the battlefield and that North
Vietnamese soldiers and Viet Cong irregulars would bypass Korean
units whenever possible.
>
>
>       Despite a long and rich martial arts history, the Korean
martial arts program was in its relative infancy at the time of the
Vietnam War; tae kwon do had yet to achieve its current status as a
national pastime or an international sport. Nonetheless, tae kwon do
was a martial art in the truest sense of the word, developed by a
soldier to enhance the fighting abilities of his soldiers. By the
time the first servicemen deployed to Vietnam, all branches of the
Korean military had implemented martial arts training programs.
Moreover, it was in Vietnam that the value of martial arts training
in combat operations was conclusively demonstrated. Accordingly, the
history of tae kwon do in the Korean Armed Forces provides valuable
insight to American Marines as the MCMAP enters its fifth year.
>
>
>
>             Overhead view of Tra Binh Dong.
>             Photo courtesy of the ROKMC Headquarters.
>       MG Choi Hong Hi-The Father of Tae Kwon Do
>       Although Koreans had practiced martial arts for centuries,
using both indigenous arts and styles borrowed from Japan and China,
Korea's martial artists faced serious challenges during the Japanese
occupation. Fearing the consequences of a populace skilled in
martial arts, the Japanese Colonial Government banned the teaching
and practice of martial arts in Korea in 1909.1 Despite the ban,
Koreans continued to learn tae kyon, karate, or kenjo through secret
instruction or service in the Japanese military. Army GEN Choi Hong
Hi followed both paths and, in the process, developed a new art that
would forever change military training and international sport.2
>
>
>       As a boy, Choi's father sent him to study calligraphy and
Chinese classics in hopes that his son might earn a living carving
tombstones. From his calligraphy teacher, he secretly learned tae
kyun, Korea's indigenous martial art that emphasizes fighting with
one's feet. At age 21, Choi moved to Japan to further his education
and studied karate, earning a second- degree black belt. Conscripted
into the Japanese Army, he was sent to Korea for duty, where he and
other Korean soldiers planned to desert the Imperial Army and join
the Korean Restoration Army in order to fight the Japanese. When
Choi's plans were discovered, he was sent to prison and was within
days of being executed when the Japanese surrendered and Korea was
liberated.
>
>
>       Following his release from prison, Choi journeyed to Seoul
and was among the first group of officers to join the newly
established ROK Army. He rose through the ranks quickly and was
given several commands. At each level of command, Choi instructed
his soldiers in the techniques of unarmed combat, proving that
martial arts could be taught on a large scale. By the end of the
Korean War, Choi had become a general officer and was tasked with
forming the final division that would be created during the
conflict. The 29th Division, also known as the "Fist Division," was
unique in that all soldiers had been trained in martial arts and
were "ready to fight with or without weapons."3
>
>
>       While commanding the Fist Division, Choi advocated martial
arts training for all servicemen. GEN Choi arranged for a
demonstration for Korean President Syngman Rhee in order to secure
backing for his initiative. The President was impressed-particularly
after witnessing a master break 13 roofing tiles with a single
strike-and directed that all soldiers receive martial arts training.4
>
>
>       Despite President Rhee's endorsement, MG Choi faced many
obstacles in implementing his plans. The new program had to compete
with traditional combat skills training-marksmanship and physical
fitness training-as well as established fighting programs. The
Service academies, modeled on their American counterparts, were
teaching boxing.5 Because the 29th Division was stationed on Cheju
Island, far from the frontlines, MG Choi was never able to show the
benefits of martial arts training in combat. Consequently, many
general officers were skeptical of the alleged benefits and critical
of his activities.6
>
>
>       Even among advocates of martial arts training, there was no
consensus that the style advocated by GEN Choi was the best.
Following liberation from Japan, there had been a resurgence in the
teaching and practice of martial arts, and no less than 17 forms
existed at the time of the Korean War.7 The issue of standardizing
the forms was resolved at a meeting in April 1955 between now-MG
Choi and the leaders of each of the major styles of martial arts.
During this meeting MG Choi persuaded the other masters to adopt his
style and the Korean Tae Kwon Do Association was formed.
>
>
>       MG Choi continued to advocate martial arts training for all
servicemen. Assigned to the Army Staff in 1959, he created the
Division of Martial Arts Training and was appointed its first
director.8 In this capacity, MG Choi led demonstration teams on
visits to Taiwan and the Republic of Vietnam in 1959. South
Vietnamese military officials were so impressed with the
demonstration that they requested the Korean Government send tae
kwon do instructors to Vietnam to institute a similar program there.
Four Korean instructors taught 50 Vietnamese servicemen during 1962-
63.9
>
>
>       Political and personal rivalries threatened MG Choi's
initiatives when Army MG Park Chung Hee seized power in a coup on 16
May 1961. Park ordered the popular general into retirement and sent
him abroad as the Korean Ambassador to Malaysia in 1962. MG Choi
remained a tireless advocate of tae kwon do, sponsoring and leading
exhibitions in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian countries. He
revised the forms for tae kwon do and began writing an English
language textbook. While serving in Malaysia, Choi traveled to
Vietnam and, on the roof of his hotel, met with the Korean
instructors and taught them the new forms. He directed that his
changes be taught to soldiers in both Korea and Vietnam.
>
>
>
>             LtGen Louis W. Walt, Commanding General (CG), III MAF,
speaks with Capt Jung, Commanding Officer, 11th Company, the morning
following the battle, surrounded by BGen Kim Young Sang, CG, 2d ROK
Marine Brigade, and other senior Marines.
>             Photo courtesy of the Vietnam Veterans of Korea.
>       Tae Kwon Do in the Vietnam War
>       In response to appeals for international support, the Korean
Government dispatched 10 tae kwon do instructors and a mobile Army
surgical hospital to South Vietnam on 13 September 1964, the first
increments of Seoul's lengthy and significant commitment to the
Republic of Vietnam.10 The instructors taught South Vietnamese
servicemen from all military Services. The tae kwon do detachment
would be the longest serving unit in Vietnam-by 1973, 647 tae kwon
do instructors had served in Vietnam.11 The arrival of combat forces
in 1965 would further demonstrate the value of martial arts training
by friend and foe alike.
>
>
>       The first commander of ROK Forces Vietnam, Army LTG Jae
Myung Shin, was an early pupil of MG Choi, earning a fifth-degree
black belt.12 A devoted practitioner of tae kwon do, he practiced 30
minutes daily, and visitors were apt to find the general leading his
entire staff in martial arts training in front of his
headquarters.13 Similar activities occurred at the headquarters of
the Capital and White Horse Divisions and the Blue Dragon Brigade.
>
>
>       The knowledge of the Korean's martial arts prowess, fueled
by frequent unit-wide demonstrations, quickly spread to allies and
adversaries. Allied servicemen envied this skill, believing that the
Koreans were the most feared opponent on the battlefield. Captured
enemy documents confirmed this suspicion. Viet Cong commanders
ordered their troops to avoid contact with the Koreans "at all
costs, unless a Viet Cong victory is 100% certain."14 Should they
come into contact, the Viet Cong were advised to retreat rather than
fight.15
>
>
>       Because the Viet Cong were hesitant to engage them, the
Korean units were able to restore stability within their assigned
areas of responsibility. By 1966, 8 months after the Capital
Division arrived, the Tigers had secured the port of Qui Nhon and
Highways 1 and 19 in Binh Dinh Province, a feat that neither the
South Vietnamese nor the French had been able to accomplish in over
20 years.16 And the actions of a single company of Marines from the
Blue Dragon Brigade would make a small hamlet at Tra Binh Dong a
place that would become synonymous with Korean military and martial
arts prowess.
>
>
>       The Battle of Tra Binh Dong17
>       In early February 1967, North Vietnamese Army (NVA)
commanders took advantage of the truce following the Tet holiday to
begin preparations for a major attack. The 2d NVA Division
infiltrated into the coastal lowlands of the Quang Ngai Province.
Using elephants to transport 120mm mortars, the division assembled a
regimental-sized force composed of two battalions from the 1st and
21st Regiments and a battalion of Viet Cong guerrillas in order to
attack the city of Quang Ngai and the U.S. Marine base at Chu Lai.
Built at the direction of LtGen Victor H. Krulak, Commanding
General, Fleet Marine Forces Pacific, the base was a critical
aviation and logistics center that supported operations across the I
Corps tactical zone.18 The airbase was home to nine fixed-wing
squadrons assigned to Marine Aviation Group 12 (MAG-12) and MAG-13,
the 1st Service and 9th Engineer Support Battalions, and the 1st
Hospital Company.19
>
>
>       The 2d ROK Marine Brigade had been assigned a tactical area
of operations within the Chu Lai region since August 1966. Although
the Blue Dragons were not under the command of III Marine Amphibious
Force (III MAF), Korean and American Marines coordinated their
actions in defense of the base. The Blue Dragon Brigade was
organized around three infantry battalions supported by a composite
(105mm and 155mm) artillery battalion, heavy mortar company, an
aviation detachment, and headquarters, service, medical, and
security companies.
>
>
>       The 3d Battalion's 11th Company was assigned near the
village of Tra Binh Dong. Capt Jung Kyung Jin, a graduate of the
Korean Naval Academy's 15th Class (1961), commanded 294 Marines
positioned in a clearing atop a small hill on the outskirts of the
village. Within the 300- by 200-meter heart-shaped perimeter, the
Marines built trenches connecting their fighting positions, mortar
pits, and command posts. Barbed wire and claymore mines surrounded
the trenches, and heavy and light machineguns were interspersed
throughout the perimeter. Capt Jung's company was reinforced with a
section of 4.2-inch mortars, a communications detachment, and
supported by the brigade's 105mm and 155mm artillery batteries.
>
>
>       On 14 February 1967, at approximately 2320, an enemy force
approached the company's perimeter from the west. A Marine in the
observation post detected the movement and reported back to the 3d
Platoon. Capt Jung quickly placed the company on alert. He waited
until the platoon-sized unit closed to within 5 meters of the
company's perimeter before ordering his Marines to fire. Flares lit
up the sky, revealing one corpse tangled in the wire and the
remaining Vietnamese withdrawing to the tree line. Believing that
the objective of this attack was to test the Marines' defense, Capt
Jung immediately prepared his company for the larger attack that
would surely follow, assigning additional Marines to the listening
posts, reapportioning ammunition, checking crew-served weapons, and
reviewing fire support plans. Using the call sign "Seoul," Capt Jung
ordered his platoon commanders to remain vigilant throughout the
night.
>
>
>       At 0410, approximately 2,400 North Vietnamese soldiers began
their attack on the 11th Company with an intense barrage of mortar
and recoilless rifle fire. One battalion advanced from the
southeast, blowing whistles, beating drums, and screaming "Tai Han
ra di, ra di" (come out Koreans) as they advanced on the 1st
Platoon's position. Two minutes later, two more battalions attacked
from the north to the 3d Platoon's sector. The Marines immediately
responded with rifle and machinegun fire. Under attack from two
directions, Capt Jung ordered the weapons platoon commander to
direct fires from the company's mortars and provide a situation
report to the battalion commander, while telling the forward
observer to begin coordinating artillery support from the brigade's
105mm and 155mm batteries. Clad in a running shirt under his flak
jacket, Capt Jung moved about the company's perimeter, assessing the
situation and encouraging his Marines. Despite the intensity of
direct and indirect fire weapons and claymore mines, the North
Vietnamese continued to advance upon the company's position,
attacking in human waves.
>
>
>
>             Newspaper headlines about the battle. All major Korean
and English language papers, including the Chosun Ilbo, Dong-A Ilbo,
Seoul Shinmun, Korea Herald, and Pacific Stars and Stripes, gave
front page cover to accounts of the battle.
>             Photo courtesy of ROKMC Headquarters.
>       Rearmed and reequipped, the third wave of the assault
attacked the 3d Platoon's position and destroyed the protective wire
with Bangalore torpedoes. Led by soldiers armed with rocket
propelled grenades and flamethrowers, the North Vietnamese attempted
to infiltrate a platoon into the breach at approximately 0422. SSgt
Bae Jang Choon's 1st Squad bore the brunt of the assault. Despite a
serious wound to his right shoulder, SSgt Bae refused to abandon his
position, ordering his Marines to stand their ground and prepare for
hand-to-hand combat. The fighting shifted from rifles to grenades as
North Vietnamese commanders continued to push soldiers into the
breach. Entrenching tools, pix axes, and fists became the Marines'
weapons when the North Vietnamese entered the trenches.
>
>
>       In the face of an overwhelming and relentless enemy, the
actions of the squad were characterized by tenacity and
selflessness. PFC Kim Myoug Deok killed 10 enemy soldiers with his
automatic rifle as they crawled toward his position. Despite serious
injuries received from hand-to-hand combat, Sgt Lee Hak Won took
handgrenades in both hands, waited for the enemy to draw near, and
detonated the grenades in a suicide attack that killed himself and
four Vietnamese soldiers. PFC Lee Young Bok, who was the only member
of the squad not to have been killed or injured at this point, lured
the enemy toward his position, disappeared into a spider hole, then
released several grenades as the soldiers entered the trench,
temporarily obstructing the attack.
>
>
>       In the 1st Platoon sector, the North Vietnamese set up a
mortar firing point that was now firing upon the company command
post. 2dLt Shin Won Bae, 1st Platoon commander, immediately
assembled an assault force to destroy the mortar position, located
behind a group of rocks approximately 100 meters in front of his
platoon's position. Ordering his squad leaders to provide covering
fire, 2dLt Shin and his platoon sergeant, GySgt Kim Yong Kil, led a
fire team toward the rocks amidst constant enemy fire. When they
closed to within 20 meters of the objective, GySgt Kim threw two
handgrenades toward the hidden enemy. At the instant the grenades
exploded, the Marines moved forward, repeating this tactic until
they reached the rocks. Twenty dead soldiers surrounded the three
menacing tubes, which the Marines quickly seized and withdrew to the
platoon's position.
>
>
>       On the other side of the perimeter, the entire 3d Platoon
was engaged in hand-to-hand combat as they fought to hold their
position against the Vietnamese attack. Discovering two soldiers
attempting to take the Marines' 60mm mortars from the mortar pit,
PFC Lee Ki On struck both in the face with the butt of his pistol,
recovered the mortars, then killed the pair with a handgrenade. As
two Marines fought enemy soldiers within the confines of the 4.2-
inch mortar pit, a North Vietnamese armed with a flamethrower
advanced on the pit, spewing flames. PFCs Kim Bo Hyun and Yung Sang
Yul dashed toward the enemy under cover of friendly fire, attacked
the flamethrower with grenades in a spectacular explosion, and
seized one light machinegun.
>
>
>       The North Vietnamese attempted the same tactic against the
1st Platoon, sending soldiers armed with two flamethrowers into the
breach in the platoon's lines. 2dLt Shin and SSgt Oh Sung Hwan
dashed toward the flames. Firing machineguns and throwing
handgrenades, the two Marines killed the soldiers, seized the Soviet-
made flamethrowers, and rallied the platoon to restore the
perimeter.
>
>
>       Two hours into the attack, the Marines faced a grave
situation. The North Vietnamese continued to attack from two
directions, had breached the perimeter at both points of attack, and
now held approximately one-third of the company's position.
Believing that his position might be overrun, Capt Jung considered
calling for a napalm strike on his own position from U.S. Marine
Corps aircraft on station.20 However, the thick fog and rain made
visibility so poor that even this desperate measure was not an
option. More significantly, the ferocity of the enemy attack began
to falter in the face of the desperate resistance by the 3d Platoon
Marines. Capt Jung ordered the 2d Platoon commander to provide one
squad to 3d Platoon to assist them in their fight.
>
>
>       At 0630 1stLt Kim Se Chang, the forward observer attached to
the company, determined the likely location of the regimental
command post and began directing fires from the brigade's 105mm
howitzers against it. The Blue Dragon artillerymen responded with
devastating fires that soon crippled the enemy's ability to direct
the attack. His assistant, SSgt Kim Hyun Chul, refused to take the
binoculars from his eyes despite intense small arms fire as he
scanned the trees in search of the enemy's mortars. Locating the
enemy 61mm, 81mm, and 120mm mortars, he reported their locations to
his lieutenant who quickly passed them along to the fire direction
center. The Marine artillery quickly overwhelmed the enemy mortars.
>
>
>       Isolated from their commander and lacking fire support, the
North Vietnamese attack began to falter as casualties rapidly
mounted. Capt Jung then made what would be the critical decision of
the battle-assembling a squad-sized counterattack force from the 1st
and 2d Platoons and ordering it into the breach to isolate the North
Vietnamese soldiers within the perimeter. 1stLt Kim Ki Hong, the
weapons platoon commander, volunteered to lead the Marines in a
daring and courageous counterattack. As the 3d Platoon Marines and
North Vietnamese soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat in the
trenches immediately below the company's observation post, 1stLt Kim
led his squad in a double envelopment of the North Vietnamese within
the perimeter beginning at 0652. The lieutenant quickly killed five
enemy soldiers with his pistol and began pushing the enemy back into
the breach. Encouraged and emboldened by the attack, SSgt Kim Son
Kwan, the 3d Platoon platoon sergeant, led his Marines in joining
the assault, shouting and using whatever weapon was available to
strike the enemy. With the North Vietnamese surrounded by the
assault force, it was the Koreans turn to shout "ra di, ra di." The
North Vietnamese refused calls to surrender and continued a
desperate resistance, only to be shot to death by the Marines.
>
>
>       The soldiers who managed to escape the Marines linked up
with North Vietnamese support units. In order to lure the company-
sized force toward the Marine position, at 0724 Capt Jung ordered
the 3d Platoon to destroy its bunkers and withdraw to the company
observation post. 1st and 2d Platoons were directed to envelop the
attackers on order. Sensing victory, the North Vietnamese again
began to beat gongs as they advanced upon the company for a final
time. When they closed to within 80 meters, Capt Jung ordered his
Marines to fire and began coordinating fires from the brigade's
heavy mortar company. Shortly thereafter, the skies cleared and four
U.S. Marine Corps A-4 Skyhawks repeatedly attacked the remaining
Vietnamese force. Helicopters followed the attack aircraft and cut
their path of retreat.
>
>
>       At 0800, 16 helicopters carrying the 6th Company, 2d
Battalion arrived from the Blue Dragon Brigade headquarters.
Advancing outward from the protective wire, the Marine
reinforcements began clearing operations. The fleeing North
Vietnamese left the bodies of 243 soldiers behind. An additional 60
soldiers were presumed to have been killed. As a testament to the
ferocity of the battle, over 100 North Vietnamese corpses lay within
the company's perimeter, and 140 bodies lay next to the protective
wire. One of the two prisoners captured during the fighting was a
North Vietnamese battalion commander. The company also captured 3
flamethrowers, 5 antitank rocket launchers, 2 machineguns, 28
rifles, 100 pieces of dynamite, and over 6,000 rounds of ammunition.
The 11th Company lost 15 Marines during the fighting, and 33 were
injured. Following the defeat, the North Vietnamese abandoned plans
for subsequent attacks against the Chu Lai airbase and the city of
Quang Ngai.
>
>
>       News of the battle traveled throughout the country and
world. The commanding generals of III MAF and 2d ROK Marine Brigade
went to Tra Binh Dong and met with the 11th Company Marines the
morning of the battle. They were quickly followed by the commanders
of I Corps, ROK Forces Vietnam, and the U.S. Military Assistance
Command Vietnam. After being briefed on the battle, President Park
Chung Hee directed that all enlisted Marines in the 11th Company be
promoted one rank, the first unit-wide promotion since the Korean
War. He also dispatched the Prime Minister, Defense Minister, and
Marine Commandant to Vietnam. Defense Minister Kim Sung Eun-the most
storied Marine commander of the Korean War, commander of the only
other unit to be promoted en masse, and former Commandant-promoted
the Marines on behalf of the President.
>
>
>       The Korean Government awarded more decorations for the
battle of Tra Binh Dong than any other action of the Vietnam War.
Capt Jung and 2dLt Shin received the Taeguk Medal, Korea's
equivalent of the Medal of Honor; the Korean Government awarded the
medal only 11 times during the war, and Tra Binh Dong was the only
battle for which the medal was awarded to two individuals. GySgt Kim
and SSgt Bae received the Ulchi Medal, Korea's second highest award
for valor; the Chung Mu Medal, the third highest military
decoration, was awarded to 11 Marines. The 11th Company received the
U.S. and ROK Presidential Unit Citations in recognition of
their "effective teamwork, aggressive fighting spirit and many
individual acts of heroism."21
>
>
>       Accounts of the battle were carried in media throughout the
world. The New York Times reported the battle as the "South Korean's
greatest victory in their 15 months in South Vietnam."22 Following a
briefing to foreign journalists, the phrase "Myth-Making Marines"
began to appear in the press, continuing the legacy of the "Ghost-
Catching Marines" and "Invincible Marines" of the Korean War.
>
>
>
>             Surveying the aftermath of the battle. LtGen Walt and
Capt Jung view the bodies of Viet Cong and NVA soldiers killed
during the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.
>             Photo courtesy of ROKMC Headquarters.
>       Lessons Learned and Epilogue
>       The battle of Tra Binh Dong is studied by military
professionals throughout Korea, and its lessons are taught to all
Marines. The ROK Marine Corps (ROKMC) cites four factors as critical
to the 11th Company's victory: the distinguished combat leadership
of the company and platoon commanders, the hard fighting by all
Marines in the unit, the effective use of fire support, and the
boldness of the counterattack.23
>
>
>       The role of martial arts training in the battle has been a
topic of discussion for nearly four decades. At the press conference
following the battle, Capt Jung was adamant in his opinion that tae
kwon do contributed greatly to the combat abilities and fighting
spirit of the Korean Marines, both enlisted and officers.24 In a
graphic description, Time noted that martial arts training was
critical to the victory:
>
>
>         It was knife to knife and hand-to-hand-and in that sort of
fighting the Koreans, with their deadly tae kwon do (a form of
karate), are unbeatable. When the action stopped shortly after dawn,
104 enemy bodies lay within the wire, many of them eviscerated or
brained.25
>
>
>       Asked to provide their opinions for this article, both
Taeguk Medal recipients stated that martial arts training
significantly contributed to the Marines' victory. LtCol Jung, now
retired and living in Seoul, emphasized two areas in which tae kwon
do influenced his Marines:
>
>
>         First, the enemy suddenly overwhelmed our trenches and
continuously piled up to the degree that we were unable to use
rifles and bayonets as weapons. There were many instances in which
we were pushing and pulling each other inside the trenches. At that
time, Tae Kwon Do became the Korean Marines' weapon and by hitting
the enemy in his vital parts, we brought him under our control.
>
>
>         Second, it can be seen that the courage to be unafraid
when facing your enemy was trained through Tae Kwon Do. Although we
didn't have a path of retreat and had to stay in our position, the
fortitude to fight bravely while exposed to the enemy led to victory
at the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.26
>
>
>       Retired MajGen Shin Won Bae, who later commanded the Blue
Dragon unit (now the 2d ROK Marine Division) provided similar
insights, noting:
>
>
>         Even though tactics call for fixing bayonets to rifles
during close quarters to neutralize the enemy, our weapon at the
time, the M-1 rifle, was not a weapon that could be wielded quickly.
In urgent situations, the Marine in the front would fiercely strike
the enemy's face and vital parts using Tae Kwon Do, causing him to
momentarily lose his will to fight. Then a second Marine would
finish off the enemy with the rifle. Additionally, striking the
enemy with an entrenching tool was highly effective in destroying
the will to fight among the enemy's lead elements. While Tae Kwon Do
demonstrated its practical effectiveness on the battlefield, more
importantly, martial arts training instilled the confidence to
defeat the enemy in each Marine. I think this is the greater
significance of Tae Kwon Do training.27
>
>
>       Yet LtCol Jung is careful to emphasize the importance of
fire support in the battle, noting that the artillery and mortar
fires prevented the North Vietnamese from sending reinforcements to
the troops engaged with the Korean Marines.28
>
>
>       As if to underscore the strength of the ROKMC Martial Arts
Program, the Korean Marine team won the National Tae Kwon Do
Championship in November 1967, the same year as the battle of Tra
Binh Dong.29 The following year ROKMC headquarters began to include
tae kwon do with marksmanship qualification and physical fitness
testing as measures of combat readiness. (Tae kwon do is now part of
the ROKMC physical fitness test.)30 Despite the demonstrated success
of the martial arts program, both the Marine Corps and Army
continued to experiment with new styles and techniques. The Marines
developed mu chuk do, a more lethal form of tae kwon do. However,
after teaching this form throughout the Corps for several years, the
Marines reverted to tae kwon do as the standard, reserving mu chuk
do for Marines assigned to reconnaissance units.31 Similarly,
Special forces units practice tu kong moo sul, while tae kwon do
remains the standard for the ROK Army.32
>
>
>       For American Marines, the early history of the Korean
martial arts program and the battle of Tra Binh Dong provide four
important lessons. First, developing and instituting the program
took time and required the dedicated efforts of senior leaders and
commanders. It took over a decade from the first demonstrations to
the adoption of training objectives and standards. Second, because
many of the program's initial benefits were psychological, they were
difficult to measure. Indeed, it is impossible to quantify how the
confidence and fighting ability of soldiers and Marines were
improved through tae kwon do or the number of times North Vietnamese
or Viet Cong units bypassed Korean units. Third, martial arts
training proved critical in close combat. The ability of the Korean
Marines to prevail against overwhelming odds in hand-to-hand
fighting in the battle of Tra Binh Dong is a testament to the
benefits of tae kwon do training. Lastly, martial arts training is
one of many necessary combat skills. Timely and accurate fire
support, exceptional combat leadership, and countless individual
acts of courage all contributed to the 11th Company's victory.
>
>
>       Fifty years after MG Choi began to advocate martial arts
training for Korean soldiers, tae kwon do has grown far beyond its
military roots. It is the national martial art of Korea, practiced
by millions throughout the world, and has been an Olympic medal
sport since 2000. In turn, the growth of tae kwon do as a sport has
further strengthened the Korean military's martial arts program.
Most men entering the military have already received significant
training in some form of martial arts. Because of its focus on
developing the physical skills, combative fitness, and mental
discipline for combat, it is unlikely that the MCMAP will spur a
similar revolution in sport. However, the MCMAP has been an
unqualified success in improving the fighting abilities and warrior
ethos of all Marines. Commenting on its applicability to today's
conflicts, GEN Shin notes, "For the U.S. Marine Corps, which will
encounter battlefields in various countries in the war against
terrorism, Tae Kwon Do training on a regular basis is advisable."33
Whether at bases in their home countries or deployed overseas,
American and Korean Marines continue to train in martial arts,
working to uphold the ideal that Marines are the most respected and
feared adversary on the battlefield.
>
>
>       Notes
>
>
>       1. In order to meet military training requirements, the
Japanese Government lifted the ban on martial arts training,
teaching Koreans judo and juken-jutsu (bayonet art) in 1941 and
karate and kung fu in 1943. Dakin Burdick, "People and Events of
T'aekwondo's Formative Years," Journal of Asian Martial Arts, Volume
6, Issue 1, 1997, pp. 30-49, updated and available online in two
parts at http://www.indiana.edu/~iutkd/history/tkdhist.html and "A
History of Taekwondo," copyright 1990, available online at
http://www.indiana.edu/~iutkd/history/dbhistor.html.
>
>
>       2. All names follow the convention of listing the surname
first with the exception of President Syngman Rhee, whose popular
usage dictates otherwise.
>
>
>       3. He Young Kimm, "General Choi Hong Hi: A Tae Kwon Do
History Lesson," Tae Kwon Do Times, January 2000,
>       p. 48.
>
>
>       4. Burdick, "People and Events of T'aekwondo's Formative
Years," Part 1, p. 7.
>
>
>       5. Hae Gun Sa Gwan Hak Kyo (Republic of Korea Naval
Academy), Dae Han Min Gook Hae Gun Sa Gwan Hak Kyo 50 Nyun Sa (1946-
1996) (The Fifty Year History of the Republic of Korea Naval Academy
(1946-1996)). Chinhae: ROK Naval Academy, 1996, p. 21. Translations
of this and subsequent Korean sources are by the author.
>
>
>       6. Kimm, p. 49.
>
>
>       7. Dohrenwend, R.E., "Informal History of Chung Do Kwan Tae
Kwon Do," available online at
https://www.sos.mtu.edu/husky/tkdhist.htm.
>
>
>       8. Burdick, "A History of Taekwondo," p. 2.
>
>
>       9. Kimm, p. 53.
>
>
>       10. LTG Larsen, Stanley R. and BG James. L Collins, Jr.,
USA, Allied Participation in Vietnam, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1975, pp. 121-2.
>
>
>       11. Kimm, p. 53.
>
>
>       12. Kimm, p. 51.
>
>
>       13. "South Viet Nam: Other Guns," Time, 22 July 1966, p. 26.
>
>
>       14. Ibid.
>
>
>       15. Kimm, p. 53.
>
>
>       16. Time, July 22, 1966, p. 26.
>
>
>       17. Unless otherwise noted, accounts of the battle are taken
from Tra Binh Dong Chon Tu (ROKMC Won (sic) Great Triumph at Tra
Binh Dong), http://www.vietvet.co.kr. This is the most readable
account of the battle and accurately reflects the events of the
battle contained in the official ROKMC historical accounts.
>
>
>       18. Summers, Jr., COL Harry G., Vietnam War Almanac, Facts
on File Publications, New York, 1985, p. 119.
>
>
>       19. Tefler, Maj Gary L., LtCol Lane Rogers, and V. Keith
Fleming, Jr., U.S. Marines in Vietnam: Fighting the North
Vietnamese, 1967, History and Museums Division, Headquarters, U.S.
Marine Corps, Washington, DC, 1984, p. 6.
>
>
>       20. Personal letter from LtCol Jung Kyung Jin, ROKMC(Ret) to
the author, dated 29 April 2004.
>
>
>       21. United States Presidential Unit Citation presented to
the 11th Company (Reinforced), 3d Battalion, 2d Republic of Korea
Marine Brigade, 28 May 1968.
>
>
>       22. "Koreans Kill 242 in Vietnam Clash," The New York Times,
16 February 1967, p. 3.
>
>
>       23. Hae Byung Dae Sa Ryoung Bu (ROKMC Headquarters). Hae
Byung Dae Won Haeng Dong Chi Chim Seo (Guidebook for Marines), ROKMC
Headquarters, Seoul, Korea, 1996, p. 29.
>
>
>       24. LtCol Jung letter.
>
>
>       25. "A Savage Week," Time, 24 February 1967, p. 25.
>
>
>       26. LtCol Jung letter.
>
>
>       27. Undated personal letter from MajGen Shin Won Bae, ROKMC
(Ret), received May 2004.
>
>
>       28. LtCol Jung letter.
>
>
>       29. Don Su Choi, Hae Byung Sa (Marine Corps History), Do Seo
Publishing, Seoul, Korea, 1994, p. 64.
>
>
>       30. The Marine Education Base, which oversaw initial
training for officers, staff noncommissioned officers, and enlisted
Marines, initially established an objective of 85 percent of Marines
earning the highest tae kwon do certification. Hae Byung Dae Sa
Ryoung Bu (ROKMC Headquarters), Hae Byung Sa Jae 6 Jip (Marine Corps
History, Volume 6. 1 January 1968 to 31 December 1969), ROKMC
Headquarters, Seoul, Korea, 1971, p. 461.
>
>
>       31. Mu chuk do, the invincible way, takes its name from the
phrase mu chuk hae byung, given to the Marines by President Syngman
Rhee in recognition of their actions at the battle of Mount Do Sol
during the Korean War.
>
>
>       32. Johty, Ben, "The Best of the Best: Korean MacGyvers,"
The Korea Herald, 7 July 2001, pp. 6-7.
>
>
>       33. MG Shin letter.
>
>
>       >LtCol Durand is an intelligence officer and East Asia
foreign area officer. He served 5 years in Korea, including
assignments with the Special U.S. Liaison Advisor, Korea; Commander,
U.S. Marine Corps Forces Korea; and the ROK Naval War College. He is
currently a student at Japan's National Institute for Defense
Studies.
>
>       Top of page
>       Back to Web Articles
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
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>
>       Home / On the Net / Archives / Advertising / Writers'
Guidelines / Links / Subscribe / Change Address / FAQs / Site Map
>       ©2005 Marine Corps Association. All rights reserved.
>

#446 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Wed Nov 16, 2005 6:15 am
Subject: why Koreans have martial spirit
hbchuah
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Here's a good article on  why Koreans are good in martial arts.It's more than technique.It is martial spirit.
The writer of this article also took some information from Grandmaster He-Young Kimm's research on Taekwondo to place into his article below.
Notes no.3. He Young Kimm, “General Choi Hong Hi: A Tae Kwon Do History Lesson,” Tae Kwon Do Times, January 2000,
In Hanmudo Founder Dr.He-Young Kimm's research, early Korean ancestors migrated from the cold Central Asia,crossed the Altai mountain in northern asia down into the Korean peninsula,where the climate was warmer.They had to fight their way thru.Even when they settled in the Korean peniinsula,they had to ward off both Chinese and Japanese invasion.Today, South Korea technically is in a state of war with the North.That's why they still have a martial spirit for survival.
Here's an interesting account of the modern Korean warrior in Vietnam.See below.
Grandmaster Dr. Kimm  ,himself a lieutenant in the Korean Marines ,taught the 8th US Army in Korea in the 1950's.He told me warfare martial art is different.Taking a brick to crack an enemies skull is good Hapkido in the army!
 
Before we get too carried away with the sporting aspects of martial arts, we should not forget that martial art training is to develop a good martial spirit to see us through life's challenges.
 
Here's a  snippet from the article

"The role of martial arts training in the battle has been a topic of discussion for nearly four decades. At the press conference following the battle, Capt Jung was adamant in his opinion that tae kwon do contributed greatly to the combat abilities and fighting spirit of the Korean Marines, both enlisted and officers.24 In a graphic description, Time noted that martial arts training was critical to the victory:

It was knife to knife and hand-to-hand—and in that sort of fighting the Koreans, with their deadly tae kwon do (a form of karate), are unbeatable. When the action stopped shortly after dawn, 104 enemy bodies lay within the wire, many of them eviscerated or brained.25"

Asked to provide their opinions for this article, both Taeguk Medal recipients stated that martial arts training significantly contributed to the Marines’ victory. LtCol Jung, now retired and living in Seoul, emphasized two areas in which tae kwon do influenced his Marines:

First, the enemy suddenly overwhelmed our trenches and continuously piled up to the degree that we were unable to use rifles and bayonets as weapons. There were many instances in which we were pushing and pulling each other inside the trenches. At that time, Tae Kwon Do became the Korean Marines’ weapon and by hitting the enemy in his vital parts, we brought him under our control.

Second, it can be seen that the courage to be unafraid when facing your enemy was trained through Tae Kwon Do. Although we didn’t have a path of retreat and had to stay in our position, the fortitude to fight bravely while exposed to the enemy led to victory at the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.26

Retired MajGen Shin Won Bae, who later commanded the Blue Dragon unit (now the 2d ROK Marine Division) provided similar insights, noting:

Even though tactics call for fixing bayonets to rifles during close quarters to neutralize the enemy, our weapon at the time, the M–1 rifle, was not a weapon that could be wielded quickly. In urgent situations, the Marine in the front would fiercely strike the enemy’s face and vital parts using Tae Kwon Do, causing him to momentarily lose his will to fight. Then a second Marine would finish off the enemy with the rifle. Additionally, striking the enemy with an entrenching tool was highly effective in destroying the will to fight among the enemy’s lead elements. While Tae Kwon Do demonstrated its practical effectiveness on the battlefield, more importantly, martial arts training instilled the confidence to defeat the enemy in each Marine. I think this is the greater significance of Tae Kwon Do training.27

 
 Regards
DrChua
Hanmudo Assn Singapore


  

 

The Battle of Tra Binh Dong and the Korean Origins of the U.S. Marine Corps Martial Arts Program

by LtCol James F. Durand

Lasting impressions of Korean Marines’ martial arts skills led to the establishment of the MCMAP.

In establishing the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP), Gen James L. Jones frequently recounted his observations of Korean Marines during the Vietnam War. The fact that Republic of Korea (ROK) servicemen were skilled in the Korean martial art tae kwon do was widely known, evoking respect among allies and instilling fear in the enemy. The former Commandant recalled that his own Marines envied this skill, believing the Korean Marines were the most feared adversary on the battlefield and that North Vietnamese soldiers and Viet Cong irregulars would bypass Korean units whenever possible.

Despite a long and rich martial arts history, the Korean martial arts program was in its relative infancy at the time of the Vietnam War; tae kwon do had yet to achieve its current status as a national pastime or an international sport. Nonetheless, tae kwon do was a martial art in the truest sense of the word, developed by a soldier to enhance the fighting abilities of his soldiers. By the time the first servicemen deployed to Vietnam, all branches of the Korean military had implemented martial arts training programs. Moreover, it was in Vietnam that the value of martial arts training in combat operations was conclusively demonstrated. Accordingly, the history of tae kwon do in the Korean Armed Forces provides valuable insight to American Marines as the MCMAP enters its fifth year.


Overhead view of Tra Binh Dong.
Photo courtesy of the ROKMC Headquarters.

MG Choi Hong Hi—The Father of Tae Kwon Do
Although Koreans had practiced martial arts for centuries, using both indigenous arts and styles borrowed from Japan and China, Korea’s martial artists faced serious challenges during the Japanese occupation. Fearing the consequences of a populace skilled in martial arts, the Japanese Colonial Government banned the teaching and practice of martial arts in Korea in 1909.1 Despite the ban, Koreans continued to learn tae kyon, karate, or kenjo through secret instruction or service in the Japanese military. Army GEN Choi Hong Hi followed both paths and, in the process, developed a new art that would forever change military training and international sport.2

As a boy, Choi’s father sent him to study calligraphy and Chinese classics in hopes that his son might earn a living carving tombstones. From his calligraphy teacher, he secretly learned tae kyun, Korea’s indigenous martial art that emphasizes fighting with one’s feet. At age 21, Choi moved to Japan to further his education and studied karate, earning a second- degree black belt. Conscripted into the Japanese Army, he was sent to Korea for duty, where he and other Korean soldiers planned to desert the Imperial Army and join the Korean Restoration Army in order to fight the Japanese. When Choi’s plans were discovered, he was sent to prison and was within days of being executed when the Japanese surrendered and Korea was liberated.

Following his release from prison, Choi journeyed to Seoul and was among the first group of officers to join the newly established ROK Army. He rose through the ranks quickly and was given several commands. At each level of command, Choi instructed his soldiers in the techniques of unarmed combat, proving that martial arts could be taught on a large scale. By the end of the Korean War, Choi had become a general officer and was tasked with forming the final division that would be created during the conflict. The 29th Division, also known as the “Fist Division,” was unique in that all soldiers had been trained in martial arts and were “ready to fight with or without weapons.”3

While commanding the Fist Division, Choi advocated martial arts training for all servicemen. GEN Choi arranged for a demonstration for Korean President Syngman Rhee in order to secure backing for his initiative. The President was impressed—particularly after witnessing a master break 13 roofing tiles with a single strike—and directed that all soldiers receive martial arts training.4

Despite President Rhee’s endorsement, MG Choi faced many obstacles in implementing his plans. The new program had to compete with traditional combat skills training—marksmanship and physical fitness training—as well as established fighting programs. The Service academies, modeled on their American counterparts, were teaching boxing.5 Because the 29th Division was stationed on Cheju Island, far from the frontlines, MG Choi was never able to show the benefits of martial arts training in combat. Consequently, many general officers were skeptical of the alleged benefits and critical of his activities.6

Even among advocates of martial arts training, there was no consensus that the style advocated by GEN Choi was the best. Following liberation from Japan, there had been a resurgence in the teaching and practice of martial arts, and no less than 17 forms existed at the time of the Korean War.7 The issue of standardizing the forms was resolved at a meeting in April 1955 between now-MG Choi and the leaders of each of the major styles of martial arts. During this meeting MG Choi persuaded the other masters to adopt his style and the Korean Tae Kwon Do Association was formed.

MG Choi continued to advocate martial arts training for all servicemen. Assigned to the Army Staff in 1959, he created the Division of Martial Arts Training and was appointed its first director.8 In this capacity, MG Choi led demonstration teams on visits to Taiwan and the Republic of Vietnam in 1959. South Vietnamese military officials were so impressed with the demonstration that they requested the Korean Government send tae kwon do instructors to Vietnam to institute a similar program there. Four Korean instructors taught 50 Vietnamese servicemen during 1962–63.9

Political and personal rivalries threatened MG Choi’s initiatives when Army MG Park Chung Hee seized power in a coup on 16 May 1961. Park ordered the popular general into retirement and sent him abroad as the Korean Ambassador to Malaysia in 1962. MG Choi remained a tireless advocate of tae kwon do, sponsoring and leading exhibitions in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian countries. He revised the forms for tae kwon do and began writing an English language textbook. While serving in Malaysia, Choi traveled to Vietnam and, on the roof of his hotel, met with the Korean instructors and taught them the new forms. He directed that his changes be taught to soldiers in both Korea and Vietnam.


LtGen Louis W. Walt, Commanding General (CG), III MAF, speaks with Capt Jung, Commanding Officer, 11th Company, the morning following the battle, surrounded by BGen Kim Young Sang, CG, 2d ROK Marine Brigade, and other senior Marines.
Photo courtesy of the Vietnam Veterans of Korea.

Tae Kwon Do in the Vietnam War
In response to appeals for international support, the Korean Government dispatched 10 tae kwon do instructors and a mobile Army surgical hospital to South Vietnam on 13 September 1964, the first increments of Seoul’s lengthy and significant commitment to the Republic of Vietnam.10 The instructors taught South Vietnamese servicemen from all military Services. The tae kwon do detachment would be the longest serving unit in Vietnam—by 1973, 647 tae kwon do instructors had served in Vietnam.11 The arrival of combat forces in 1965 would further demonstrate the value of martial arts training by friend and foe alike.

The first commander of ROK Forces Vietnam, Army LTG Jae Myung Shin, was an early pupil of MG Choi, earning a fifth-degree black belt.12 A devoted practitioner of tae kwon do, he practiced 30 minutes daily, and visitors were apt to find the general leading his entire staff in martial arts training in front of his headquarters.13 Similar activities occurred at the headquarters of the Capital and White Horse Divisions and the Blue Dragon Brigade.

The knowledge of the Korean’s martial arts prowess, fueled by frequent unit-wide demonstrations, quickly spread to allies and adversaries. Allied servicemen envied this skill, believing that the Koreans were the most feared opponent on the battlefield. Captured enemy documents confirmed this suspicion. Viet Cong commanders ordered their troops to avoid contact with the Koreans “at all costs, unless a Viet Cong victory is 100% certain.”14 Should they come into contact, the Viet Cong were advised to retreat rather than fight.15

Because the Viet Cong were hesitant to engage them, the Korean units were able to restore stability within their assigned areas of responsibility. By 1966, 8 months after the Capital Division arrived, the Tigers had secured the port of Qui Nhon and Highways 1 and 19 in Binh Dinh Province, a feat that neither the South Vietnamese nor the French had been able to accomplish in over 20 years.16 And the actions of a single company of Marines from the Blue Dragon Brigade would make a small hamlet at Tra Binh Dong a place that would become synonymous with Korean military and martial arts prowess.

The Battle of Tra Binh Dong17
In early February 1967, North Vietnamese Army (NVA) commanders took advantage of the truce following the Tet holiday to begin preparations for a major attack. The 2d NVA Division infiltrated into the coastal lowlands of the Quang Ngai Province. Using elephants to transport 120mm mortars, the division assembled a regimental-sized force composed of two battalions from the 1st and 21st Regiments and a battalion of Viet Cong guerrillas in order to attack the city of Quang Ngai and the U.S. Marine base at Chu Lai. Built at the direction of LtGen Victor H. Krulak, Commanding General, Fleet Marine Forces Pacific, the base was a critical aviation and logistics center that supported operations across the I Corps tactical zone.18 The airbase was home to nine fixed-wing squadrons assigned to Marine Aviation Group 12 (MAG–12) and MAG–13, the 1st Service and 9th Engineer Support Battalions, and the 1st Hospital Company.19

The 2d ROK Marine Brigade had been assigned a tactical area of operations within the Chu Lai region since August 1966. Although the Blue Dragons were not under the command of III Marine Amphibious Force (III MAF), Korean and American Marines coordinated their actions in defense of the base. The Blue Dragon Brigade was organized around three infantry battalions supported by a composite (105mm and 155mm) artillery battalion, heavy mortar company, an aviation detachment, and headquarters, service, medical, and security companies.

The 3d Battalion’s 11th Company was assigned near the village of Tra Binh Dong. Capt Jung Kyung Jin, a graduate of the Korean Naval Academy’s 15th Class (1961), commanded 294 Marines positioned in a clearing atop a small hill on the outskirts of the village. Within the 300- by 200-meter heart-shaped perimeter, the Marines built trenches connecting their fighting positions, mortar pits, and command posts. Barbed wire and claymore mines surrounded the trenches, and heavy and light machineguns were interspersed throughout the perimeter. Capt Jung’s company was reinforced with a section of 4.2-inch mortars, a communications detachment, and supported by the brigade’s 105mm and 155mm artillery batteries.

On 14 February 1967, at approximately 2320, an enemy force approached the company’s perimeter from the west. A Marine in the observation post detected the movement and reported back to the 3d Platoon. Capt Jung quickly placed the company on alert. He waited until the platoon-sized unit closed to within 5 meters of the company’s perimeter before ordering his Marines to fire. Flares lit up the sky, revealing one corpse tangled in the wire and the remaining Vietnamese withdrawing to the tree line. Believing that the objective of this attack was to test the Marines’ defense, Capt Jung immediately prepared his company for the larger attack that would surely follow, assigning additional Marines to the listening posts, reapportioning ammunition, checking crew-served weapons, and reviewing fire support plans. Using the call sign “Seoul,” Capt Jung ordered his platoon commanders to remain vigilant throughout the night.

At 0410, approximately 2,400 North Vietnamese soldiers began their attack on the 11th Company with an intense barrage of mortar and recoilless rifle fire. One battalion advanced from the southeast, blowing whistles, beating drums, and screaming “Tai Han ra di, ra di” (come out Koreans) as they advanced on the 1st Platoon’s position. Two minutes later, two more battalions attacked from the north to the 3d Platoon’s sector. The Marines immediately responded with rifle and machinegun fire. Under attack from two directions, Capt Jung ordered the weapons platoon commander to direct fires from the company’s mortars and provide a situation report to the battalion commander, while telling the forward observer to begin coordinating artillery support from the brigade’s 105mm and 155mm batteries. Clad in a running shirt under his flak jacket, Capt Jung moved about the company’s perimeter, assessing the situation and encouraging his Marines. Despite the intensity of direct and indirect fire weapons and claymore mines, the North Vietnamese continued to advance upon the company’s position, attacking in human waves.


Newspaper headlines about the battle. All major Korean and English language papers, including the Chosun Ilbo, Dong-A Ilbo, Seoul Shinmun, Korea Herald, and Pacific Stars and Stripes, gave front page cover to accounts of the battle.
Photo courtesy of ROKMC Headquarters
.

Rearmed and reequipped, the third wave of the assault attacked the 3d Platoon’s position and destroyed the protective wire with Bangalore torpedoes. Led by soldiers armed with rocket propelled grenades and flamethrowers, the North Vietnamese attempted to infiltrate a platoon into the breach at approximately 0422. SSgt Bae Jang Choon’s 1st Squad bore the brunt of the assault. Despite a serious wound to his right shoulder, SSgt Bae refused to abandon his position, ordering his Marines to stand their ground and prepare for hand-to-hand combat. The fighting shifted from rifles to grenades as North Vietnamese commanders continued to push soldiers into the breach. Entrenching tools, pix axes, and fists became the Marines’ weapons when the North Vietnamese entered the trenches.

In the face of an overwhelming and relentless enemy, the actions of the squad were characterized by tenacity and selflessness. PFC Kim Myoug Deok killed 10 enemy soldiers with his automatic rifle as they crawled toward his position. Despite serious injuries received from hand-to-hand combat, Sgt Lee Hak Won took handgrenades in both hands, waited for the enemy to draw near, and detonated the grenades in a suicide attack that killed himself and four Vietnamese soldiers. PFC Lee Young Bok, who was the only member of the squad not to have been killed or injured at this point, lured the enemy toward his position, disappeared into a spider hole, then released several grenades as the soldiers entered the trench, temporarily obstructing the attack.

In the 1st Platoon sector, the North Vietnamese set up a mortar firing point that was now firing upon the company command post. 2dLt Shin Won Bae, 1st Platoon commander, immediately assembled an assault force to destroy the mortar position, located behind a group of rocks approximately 100 meters in front of his platoon’s position. Ordering his squad leaders to provide covering fire, 2dLt Shin and his platoon sergeant, GySgt Kim Yong Kil, led a fire team toward the rocks amidst constant enemy fire. When they closed to within 20 meters of the objective, GySgt Kim threw two handgrenades toward the hidden enemy. At the instant the grenades exploded, the Marines moved forward, repeating this tactic until they reached the rocks. Twenty dead soldiers surrounded the three menacing tubes, which the Marines quickly seized and withdrew to the platoon’s position.

On the other side of the perimeter, the entire 3d Platoon was engaged in hand-to-hand combat as they fought to hold their position against the Vietnamese attack. Discovering two soldiers attempting to take the Marines’ 60mm mortars from the mortar pit, PFC Lee Ki On struck both in the face with the butt of his pistol, recovered the mortars, then killed the pair with a handgrenade. As two Marines fought enemy soldiers within the confines of the 4.2-inch mortar pit, a North Vietnamese armed with a flamethrower advanced on the pit, spewing flames. PFCs Kim Bo Hyun and Yung Sang Yul dashed toward the enemy under cover of friendly fire, attacked the flamethrower with grenades in a spectacular explosion, and seized one light machinegun.

The North Vietnamese attempted the same tactic against the 1st Platoon, sending soldiers armed with two flamethrowers into the breach in the platoon’s lines. 2dLt Shin and SSgt Oh Sung Hwan dashed toward the flames. Firing machineguns and throwing handgrenades, the two Marines killed the soldiers, seized the Soviet-made flamethrowers, and rallied the platoon to restore the perimeter.

Two hours into the attack, the Marines faced a grave situation. The North Vietnamese continued to attack from two directions, had breached the perimeter at both points of attack, and now held approximately one-third of the company’s position. Believing that his position might be overrun, Capt Jung considered calling for a napalm strike on his own position from U.S. Marine Corps aircraft on station.20 However, the thick fog and rain made visibility so poor that even this desperate measure was not an option. More significantly, the ferocity of the enemy attack began to falter in the face of the desperate resistance by the 3d Platoon Marines. Capt Jung ordered the 2d Platoon commander to provide one squad to 3d Platoon to assist them in their fight.

At 0630 1stLt Kim Se Chang, the forward observer attached to the company, determined the likely location of the regimental command post and began directing fires from the brigade’s 105mm howitzers against it. The Blue Dragon artillerymen responded with devastating fires that soon crippled the enemy’s ability to direct the attack. His assistant, SSgt Kim Hyun Chul, refused to take the binoculars from his eyes despite intense small arms fire as he scanned the trees in search of the enemy’s mortars. Locating the enemy 61mm, 81mm, and 120mm mortars, he reported their locations to his lieutenant who quickly passed them along to the fire direction center. The Marine artillery quickly overwhelmed the enemy mortars.

Isolated from their commander and lacking fire support, the North Vietnamese attack began to falter as casualties rapidly mounted. Capt Jung then made what would be the critical decision of the battle—assembling a squad-sized counterattack force from the 1st and 2d Platoons and ordering it into the breach to isolate the North Vietnamese soldiers within the perimeter. 1stLt Kim Ki Hong, the weapons platoon commander, volunteered to lead the Marines in a daring and courageous counterattack. As the 3d Platoon Marines and North Vietnamese soldiers engaged in hand-to-hand combat in the trenches immediately below the company’s observation post, 1stLt Kim led his squad in a double envelopment of the North Vietnamese within the perimeter beginning at 0652. The lieutenant quickly killed five enemy soldiers with his pistol and began pushing the enemy back into the breach. Encouraged and emboldened by the attack, SSgt Kim Son Kwan, the 3d Platoon platoon sergeant, led his Marines in joining the assault, shouting and using whatever weapon was available to strike the enemy. With the North Vietnamese surrounded by the assault force, it was the Koreans turn to shout “ra di, ra di.” The North Vietnamese refused calls to surrender and continued a desperate resistance, only to be shot to death by the Marines.

The soldiers who managed to escape the Marines linked up with North Vietnamese support units. In order to lure the company-sized force toward the Marine position, at 0724 Capt Jung ordered the 3d Platoon to destroy its bunkers and withdraw to the company observation post. 1st and 2d Platoons were directed to envelop the attackers on order. Sensing victory, the North Vietnamese again began to beat gongs as they advanced upon the company for a final time. When they closed to within 80 meters, Capt Jung ordered his Marines to fire and began coordinating fires from the brigade’s heavy mortar company. Shortly thereafter, the skies cleared and four U.S. Marine Corps A–4 Skyhawks repeatedly attacked the remaining Vietnamese force. Helicopters followed the attack aircraft and cut their path of retreat.

At 0800, 16 helicopters carrying the 6th Company, 2d Battalion arrived from the Blue Dragon Brigade headquarters. Advancing outward from the protective wire, the Marine reinforcements began clearing operations. The fleeing North Vietnamese left the bodies of 243 soldiers behind. An additional 60 soldiers were presumed to have been killed. As a testament to the ferocity of the battle, over 100 North Vietnamese corpses lay within the company’s perimeter, and 140 bodies lay next to the protective wire. One of the two prisoners captured during the fighting was a North Vietnamese battalion commander. The company also captured 3 flamethrowers, 5 antitank rocket launchers, 2 machineguns, 28 rifles, 100 pieces of dynamite, and over 6,000 rounds of ammunition. The 11th Company lost 15 Marines during the fighting, and 33 were injured. Following the defeat, the North Vietnamese abandoned plans for subsequent attacks against the Chu Lai airbase and the city of Quang Ngai.

News of the battle traveled throughout the country and world. The commanding generals of III MAF and 2d ROK Marine Brigade went to Tra Binh Dong and met with the 11th Company Marines the morning of the battle. They were quickly followed by the commanders of I Corps, ROK Forces Vietnam, and the U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam. After being briefed on the battle, President Park Chung Hee directed that all enlisted Marines in the 11th Company be promoted one rank, the first unit-wide promotion since the Korean War. He also dispatched the Prime Minister, Defense Minister, and Marine Commandant to Vietnam. Defense Minister Kim Sung Eun—the most storied Marine commander of the Korean War, commander of the only other unit to be promoted en masse, and former Commandant—promoted the Marines on behalf of the President.

The Korean Government awarded more decorations for the battle of Tra Binh Dong than any other action of the Vietnam War. Capt Jung and 2dLt Shin received the Taeguk Medal, Korea’s equivalent of the Medal of Honor; the Korean Government awarded the medal only 11 times during the war, and Tra Binh Dong was the only battle for which the medal was awarded to two individuals. GySgt Kim and SSgt Bae received the Ulchi Medal, Korea’s second highest award for valor; the Chung Mu Medal, the third highest military decoration, was awarded to 11 Marines. The 11th Company received the U.S. and ROK Presidential Unit Citations in recognition of their “effective teamwork, aggressive fighting spirit and many individual acts of heroism.”21

Accounts of the battle were carried in media throughout the world. The New York Times reported the battle as the “South Korean’s greatest victory in their 15 months in South Vietnam.”22 Following a briefing to foreign journalists, the phrase “Myth-Making Marines” began to appear in the press, continuing the legacy of the “Ghost-Catching Marines” and “Invincible Marines” of the Korean War.


Surveying the aftermath of the battle. LtGen Walt and Capt Jung view the bodies of Viet Cong and NVA soldiers killed during the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.
Photo courtesy of ROKMC Headquarters.

Lessons Learned and Epilogue
The battle of Tra Binh Dong is studied by military professionals throughout Korea, and its lessons are taught to all Marines. The ROK Marine Corps (ROKMC) cites four factors as critical to the 11th Company’s victory: the distinguished combat leadership of the company and platoon commanders, the hard fighting by all Marines in the unit, the effective use of fire support, and the boldness of the counterattack.23

The role of martial arts training in the battle has been a topic of discussion for nearly four decades. At the press conference following the battle, Capt Jung was adamant in his opinion that tae kwon do contributed greatly to the combat abilities and fighting spirit of the Korean Marines, both enlisted and officers.24 In a graphic description, Time noted that martial arts training was critical to the victory:

It was knife to knife and hand-to-hand—and in that sort of fighting the Koreans, with their deadly tae kwon do (a form of karate), are unbeatable. When the action stopped shortly after dawn, 104 enemy bodies lay within the wire, many of them eviscerated or brained.25

Asked to provide their opinions for this article, both Taeguk Medal recipients stated that martial arts training significantly contributed to the Marines’ victory. LtCol Jung, now retired and living in Seoul, emphasized two areas in which tae kwon do influenced his Marines:

First, the enemy suddenly overwhelmed our trenches and continuously piled up to the degree that we were unable to use rifles and bayonets as weapons. There were many instances in which we were pushing and pulling each other inside the trenches. At that time, Tae Kwon Do became the Korean Marines’ weapon and by hitting the enemy in his vital parts, we brought him under our control.

Second, it can be seen that the courage to be unafraid when facing your enemy was trained through Tae Kwon Do. Although we didn’t have a path of retreat and had to stay in our position, the fortitude to fight bravely while exposed to the enemy led to victory at the Battle of Tra Binh Dong.26

Retired MajGen Shin Won Bae, who later commanded the Blue Dragon unit (now the 2d ROK Marine Division) provided similar insights, noting:

Even though tactics call for fixing bayonets to rifles during close quarters to neutralize the enemy, our weapon at the time, the M–1 rifle, was not a weapon that could be wielded quickly. In urgent situations, the Marine in the front would fiercely strike the enemy’s face and vital parts using Tae Kwon Do, causing him to momentarily lose his will to fight. Then a second Marine would finish off the enemy with the rifle. Additionally, striking the enemy with an entrenching tool was highly effective in destroying the will to fight among the enemy’s lead elements. While Tae Kwon Do demonstrated its practical effectiveness on the battlefield, more importantly, martial arts training instilled the confidence to defeat the enemy in each Marine. I think this is the greater significance of Tae Kwon Do training.27

Yet LtCol Jung is careful to emphasize the importance of fire support in the battle, noting that the artillery and mortar fires prevented the North Vietnamese from sending reinforcements to the troops engaged with the Korean Marines.28

As if to underscore the strength of the ROKMC Martial Arts Program, the Korean Marine team won the National Tae Kwon Do Championship in November 1967, the same year as the battle of Tra Binh Dong.29 The following year ROKMC headquarters began to include tae kwon do with marksmanship qualification and physical fitness testing as measures of combat readiness. (Tae kwon do is now part of the ROKMC physical fitness test.)30 Despite the demonstrated success of the martial arts program, both the Marine Corps and Army continued to experiment with new styles and techniques. The Marines developed mu chuk do, a more lethal form of tae kwon do. However, after teaching this form throughout the Corps for several years, the Marines reverted to tae kwon do as the standard, reserving mu chuk do for Marines assigned to reconnaissance units.31 Similarly, Special forces units practice tu kong moo sul, while tae kwon do remains the standard for the ROK Army.32

For American Marines, the early history of the Korean martial arts program and the battle of Tra Binh Dong provide four important lessons. First, developing and instituting the program took time and required the dedicated efforts of senior leaders and commanders. It took over a decade from the first demonstrations to the adoption of training objectives and standards. Second, because many of the program’s initial benefits were psychological, they were difficult to measure. Indeed, it is impossible to quantify how the confidence and fighting ability of soldiers and Marines were improved through tae kwon do or the number of times North Vietnamese or Viet Cong units bypassed Korean units. Third, martial arts training proved critical in close combat. The ability of the Korean Marines to prevail against overwhelming odds in hand-to-hand fighting in the battle of Tra Binh Dong is a testament to the benefits of tae kwon do training. Lastly, martial arts training is one of many necessary combat skills. Timely and accurate fire support, exceptional combat leadership, and countless individual acts of courage all contributed to the 11th Company’s victory.

Fifty years after MG Choi began to advocate martial arts training for Korean soldiers, tae kwon do has grown far beyond its military roots. It is the national martial art of Korea, practiced by millions throughout the world, and has been an Olympic medal sport since 2000. In turn, the growth of tae kwon do as a sport has further strengthened the Korean military’s martial arts program. Most men entering the military have already received significant training in some form of martial arts. Because of its focus on developing the physical skills, combative fitness, and mental discipline for combat, it is unlikely that the MCMAP will spur a similar revolution in sport. However, the MCMAP has been an unqualified success in improving the fighting abilities and warrior ethos of all Marines. Commenting on its applicability to today’s conflicts, GEN Shin notes, “For the U.S. Marine Corps, which will encounter battlefields in various countries in the war against terrorism, Tae Kwon Do training on a regular basis is advisable.”33 Whether at bases in their home countries or deployed overseas, American and Korean Marines continue to train in martial arts, working to uphold the ideal that Marines are the most respected and feared adversary on the battlefield.

Notes

1. In order to meet military training requirements, the Japanese Government lifted the ban on martial arts training, teaching Koreans judo and juken-jutsu (bayonet art) in 1941 and karate and kung fu in 1943. Dakin Burdick, “People and Events of T’aekwondo’s Formative Years,” Journal of Asian Martial Arts, Volume 6, Issue 1, 1997, pp. 30–49, updated and available online in two parts at http://www.indiana.edu/~iutkd/history/tkdhist.html and “A History of Taekwondo,” copyright 1990, available online at http://www.indiana.edu/~iutkd/history/dbhistor.html.

2. All names follow the convention of listing the surname first with the exception of President Syngman Rhee, whose popular usage dictates otherwise.

3. He Young Kimm, “General Choi Hong Hi: A Tae Kwon Do History Lesson,” Tae Kwon Do Times, January 2000,
p. 48.

4. Burdick, “People and Events of T’aekwondo’s Formative Years,” Part 1, p. 7.

5. Hae Gun Sa Gwan Hak Kyo (Republic of Korea Naval Academy), Dae Han Min Gook Hae Gun Sa Gwan Hak Kyo 50 Nyun Sa (1946–1996) (The Fifty Year History of the Republic of Korea Naval Academy (1946-1996)). Chinhae: ROK Naval Academy, 1996, p. 21. Translations of this and subsequent Korean sources are by the author.

6. Kimm, p. 49.

7. Dohrenwend, R.E., “Informal History of Chung Do Kwan Tae Kwon Do,” available online at https://www.sos.mtu.edu/husky/tkdhist.htm.

8. Burdick, “A History of Taekwondo,” p. 2.

9. Kimm, p. 53.

10. LTG Larsen, Stanley R. and BG James. L Collins, Jr., USA, Allied Participation in Vietnam, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975, pp. 121–2.

11. Kimm, p. 53.

12. Kimm, p. 51.

13. “South Viet Nam: Other Guns,” Time, 22 July 1966, p. 26.

14. Ibid.

15. Kimm, p. 53.

16. Time, July 22, 1966, p. 26.

17. Unless otherwise noted, accounts of the battle are taken from Tra Binh Dong Chon Tu (ROKMC Won (sic) Great Triumph at Tra Binh Dong), http://www.vietvet.co.kr. This is the most readable account of the battle and accurately reflects the events of the battle contained in the official ROKMC historical accounts.

18. Summers, Jr., COL Harry G., Vietnam War Almanac, Facts on File Publications, New York, 1985, p. 119.

19. Tefler, Maj Gary L., LtCol Lane Rogers, and V. Keith Fleming, Jr., U.S. Marines in Vietnam: Fighting the North Vietnamese, 1967, History and Museums Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, Washington, DC, 1984, p. 6.

20. Personal letter from LtCol Jung Kyung Jin, ROKMC(Ret) to the author, dated 29 April 2004.

21. United States Presidential Unit Citation presented to the 11th Company (Reinforced), 3d Battalion, 2d Republic of Korea Marine Brigade, 28 May 1968.

22. “Koreans Kill 242 in Vietnam Clash,” The New York Times, 16 February 1967, p. 3.

23. Hae Byung Dae Sa Ryoung Bu (ROKMC Headquarters). Hae Byung Dae Won Haeng Dong Chi Chim Seo (Guidebook for Marines), ROKMC Headquarters, Seoul, Korea, 1996, p. 29.

24. LtCol Jung letter.

25. “A Savage Week,” Time, 24 February 1967, p. 25.

26. LtCol Jung letter.

27. Undated personal letter from MajGen Shin Won Bae, ROKMC(Ret), received May 2004.

28. LtCol Jung letter.

29. Don Su Choi, Hae Byung Sa (Marine Corps History), Do Seo Publishing, Seoul, Korea, 1994, p. 64.

30. The Marine Education Base, which oversaw initial training for officers, staff noncommissioned officers, and enlisted Marines, initially established an objective of 85 percent of Marines earning the highest tae kwon do certification. Hae Byung Dae Sa Ryoung Bu (ROKMC Headquarters), Hae Byung Sa Jae 6 Jip (Marine Corps History, Volume 6. 1 January 1968 to 31 December 1969), ROKMC Headquarters, Seoul, Korea, 1971, p. 461.

31. Mu chuk do, the invincible way, takes its name from the phrase mu chuk hae byung, given to the Marines by President Syngman Rhee in recognition of their actions at the battle of Mount Do Sol during the Korean War.

32. Johty, Ben, “The Best of the Best: Korean MacGyvers,” The Korea Herald, 7 July 2001, pp. 6–7.

33. MG Shin letter.

>LtCol Durand is an intelligence officer and East Asia foreign area officer. He served 5 years in Korea, including assignments with the Special U.S. Liaison Advisor, Korea; Commander, U.S. Marine Corps Forces Korea; and the ROK Naval War College. He is currently a student at Japan’s National Institute for Defense Studies.


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#445 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Wed Nov 9, 2005 5:09 am
Subject: Singapore Hanmudo Seminar
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Hi all
 

  GRANDMASTER  DR.HE-YOUNG KIMM

  SINGAPORE SEMINAR & DEMO

Hanmudo Association Singapore welcomes   

GRANDMASTER HE-YOUNG KIMM,

Founder of Korean HANMUDO

Dec 2-4,2005,Cairnhill CC. Cost $390. Per day $150.

Tel. Dr.Chua (65)-98353926 or email hbchua@...  

Public Demo Cairnhill CC 4th Dec 3pm sharp. Free.

Seminar website:

http://home.pacific.net.sg/~hbchua/HanmudoSeminar.htm

 

New classes start 10 Dec.’05


#444 From: "jaaboy3" <jaaboy3@...>
Date: Sun Nov 6, 2005 11:26 pm
Subject: For those in the El Paso- Southern New Mexico Area
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For those of you in the West Texas-Southern New Mexico area, check out
Yoon's Martial Arts Academy. This is the only certified Korean Royal
Court Hapkido Academy in the U.S. They also offer classes in Kick
Boxing, Tai Chi Chuan, Northern Kung Fu, Northern Kick Boxing, Shaolin
Long Fist, Shaolin Chin Na, Tibetian White Crane Kung Fu, Tang Soo Do,
Soo Bahk Do, Moo Duk Kwan (original Karate, Tae Kwon Do), Yu Sul
(Judo), Kum Sool Do (Sword), Bong Sool Do (Weapon), Tai Chi Ch'uan
(Classical), and Pa Qua Ch'ang.

#443 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Wed Oct 26, 2005 7:18 am
Subject: Re: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] Re: Tournaments?
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Global Hapkido Federation (GHF) is the first in the world to organise a World Hapkido Championship.In fact it started in Korea since 1997
Contests involve
Breakfalls -distance and height.
Jumping kicks - different types of kicks with breaking-by height
Forms
Self defence preset routines.
Free Style self defence routines
Korean weapons
Free sparring involving kick punch throw ground grappling
with ground hold,locks chokes.Unlike UFC style,speed is essence.
 
Dr.Drennis Chua
President
Hanmudo Association Singapore
Hapkido Shin Do Kwan Singapore
Singapore representative for World Hanmudo Association
and
Global Hapkido Federation 
 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: bull_156
Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2005 11:10 AM
Subject: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] Re: Tournaments?

I wonder if there are any tournaments for Hapkido?





#442 From: "bull_156" <bull_156@...>
Date: Wed Oct 26, 2005 3:10 am
Subject: Re: Tournaments?
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I wonder if there are any tournaments for Hapkido?

#441 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Mon Oct 24, 2005 9:08 am
Subject: Candidates taking black belt test
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To all
 
Celebrating Hanmudo Association Singapore
10th Anniversary since our founding in Sept 1995,how fitting that we are submitting the largest number of candidates taking their black belt testing at one time.
The following candidates are
 
1st Dan
Junior
1.Tan Chuan Yang
2.Adriel Beng Guan Chua
3.Justin Guan
4.Joshua Lourdesamy
 
Senior
1.Beverly Zhen Di  Siriporn Lim
2.Ryan Fleury
3.Saman Khorram (Iran)
4.Daniel Tan
5.Max Pinckers (Belgium)
6.John Weidler (USA)
7.Shirley Perumpoykail
8.Rachel Lourdesamy
 
2nd Dan
1.Jeffrey Fleury
 
How fitting and honoured that all will be testing under the Founder of Hanmudo ,Korean Grandmaster Dr.He-Young Kimm in Singapore on Dec 4 2005.
Incidentally,this will be Grandmaster Kimm's 4th and last visit to Singapore.
 
I believe ALL will pass, for you all have trained hard for the last 3 to 4 years.
I will congratulate ahead all for your success.
God bless.
 
Dr.Dennis Chua
President and Chief Instructor
Hanmudo Association Singapore
Hapkido Shin Do Kwan (Global Hapkido Federation)
 

#440 From: "simplytaty" <dragonea@...>
Date: Wed Oct 19, 2005 6:26 am
Subject: Tournaments?
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Hi everyone
I am looking for tournaments in NYC or NJ (prefer NYC). I have been
planning on taking part of some but not sure where to start. Any
ideas? My main art is Hapkido, but I could compete in any korean based
style.
Thank you,
Taty
http://www.beholders.org/

#437 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Thu Apr 28, 2005 3:17 am
Subject: Shaolin Temple trip
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+ InstantBuzz MailSpaceTM Ad Follows:(Your Advertisement Here for Free)
Laptops to Home Security. Voip,T1,Cellular,Satellite Tv,Dsl

Hi all
Some photos of World Hanmudo Association members trip to Shaolin Temple China and North Korea for martial art exchange led by Hanmudo Founder GM Kimm He -Young.
 
Also website of Master Kim Je Wook- Global Hapkido Federation Gen Sec .HIs organisation is Moo Sool Won
Master Kim Je Wook besides Hapkido is also a weapon expert in Kumdo and TaeKong Mu Sul.
DrChua
President and Chief Instructor
Hanmudo Association SIngapore(rep for World Hanmudo Association in SIngapore)
Hapkido Shin Do Kwan ( rep for Global Hapkido Federation in Singapore)
 

#436 From: "streetstyle_fight" <streetstyle_fight@...>
Date: Sun Apr 24, 2005 11:34 am
Subject: hmms...
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heyy may i noe wads al bout hap ki do flying eagle?

#435 From: "zankjitzu" <zankjitzu@...>
Date: Tue Apr 12, 2005 3:52 pm
Subject: Warrior Scholar Martial Arts www.warriorscholar.net
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Hi,
I am a business owner specializing in martial arts & Fitness dvds,
videos and books.

I currently sell:

Hapkido, Fitness, Yoga, Tai Chi, Stretching,
Muay Thai, Jujitsu, Taekwondo,
Self-Defense, Police and Law Enforcement Tactics,
Weapon Use and Defense and
much more.

My email address and website address are below.
Thanks

zankjitzu@...

www.WarriorScholar.net

#433 From: bactrimsg
Date: Wed Mar 16, 2005 5:53 am
Subject: www.mamaster.com
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Check out this website:

www.mamaster.com

Our next Learn From The Masters Martial Arts Seminar: Practical
Street Self Defense conducted by Grandmaster Jack Wang will be held
on the 23 April 2005 at Oasis Fitness Studio (directly opposite
Police Cantonment Complex)

GM Jack Wang is the chief instructor of Flying Eagle Hapkido
Association for many years. Until today, he still hold the official
appointment of chief instructor.

After the seminar, those who are keen can proceed to Orchard Tower to
patronise GM Jack Wang western food store there.

#432 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Mon Mar 7, 2005 2:05 am
Subject: Re: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] Self-Defense Seminar in Austin, TX on April 23, 2005
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Come out of the shadows, be a formidable presence on the web

Yes
Master Jeff  West is a great guy.I met and attended his seminar when he was a guest hapkido seminar instructor  at Dr.He-Young Kimm's Hanmudo seminar back in 1996 at World Hanmudo Association HQ at Baton Rouge ,Louisiana.One can tell a good master from his students behavior and techs. Master Jeff's students are great in personlities and techs.
We went out lunch together with Dr.Kimm and his love for hapkido is so great that I remembered his car license plate as HAPKIDO.
regards
Dr.Dennis Chua
President and Chief Instructor
Hanmudo Association SIngapore
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, March 07, 2005 1:38 AM
Subject: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] Self-Defense Seminar in Austin, TX on April 23, 2005

Fellow Martial Artist,

 

One of the greatest opportunities one can find in their martial arts journey is the opportunity to study with great instructors.  I have been fortunate to attend several seminars across the country as I have endeavored to expand my self-defense skills and curriculum.  One of the finest instructors that I have found in these trips is Grand Master JR West.  I and my instructors have had the opportunity to train with Master West several times and have benefited tremendously from the experience.  After a year of saving and planning we have finally made arrangements for Master West to come to Austin.

 

Master West has studied Hapkido for more than 30 years and holds the rank of 8th Dan with the Korea HapKiDo Association and is the President of the United States Korean Martial Arts Federation.  Dr. He-Young Kimm, an early pioneer of Korean Martial Arts in America, calls Master West “an outstanding instructor and leader in the martial arts community.”  Major W. Wadsworth of the U.S Army at Fort Benning said, “The level of your instructors truly impressed me.  Their professional demeanor and obvious commitment to excellence ensure the success of this program.”  You can see written letters of reference for Master West at http://www.hapkido.com/uskmaf.htm.

 

Master West will be coming to Austin with a team of five instructors to conduct and all day self-defense/Hapkido seminar.  This seminar is open to all styles and all ranks.  Students 12 years and older can attend the entire seminar.  There will be a special separate session for children ages 6-11 that will last two hours.

 

The seminar topics will include a variety of subjects such as: joint locks, chokes, ki-strikes, take downs, pressure points, rope techniques etc…  The seminar topics will be based upon the needs of the group that attends that day.  The children’s session will present exciting and appropriate material for young children.

 

You can find more information about the seminar on our site at www.natkd.com/events including two online videos that show the Masters’ Demonstrations from two of Master West’s previous seminars.

 

It is my sincerest hope that you or some of your representatives can attend this event of learning and sharing.  It is my goal to create network of martial artists that come together in fellowship to learn, share, and compete in a friendly and positive environment.  We host four events a year at North Austin Tae Kwon Do, two seminars and two friendship tournaments, all these events to open to all ranks and all styles.

 

Enclosed you will find flyers with applications for the seminar printed on the reveres side as well as a certificate for one free admission with one paid admission.

 

Yours in Martial Arts,

 

 

 

Jason E. Thomas, 5th Dan

Chief Instructor

North Austin Tae Kwon Do

 

 

 



#431 From: "Jason Thomas \(Y!\)" <syne7@...>
Date: Sun Mar 6, 2005 5:38 pm
Subject: Self-Defense Seminar in Austin, TX on April 23, 2005
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Fellow Martial Artist,

 

One of the greatest opportunities one can find in their martial arts journey is the opportunity to study with great instructors.  I have been fortunate to attend several seminars across the country as I have endeavored to expand my self-defense skills and curriculum.  One of the finest instructors that I have found in these trips is Grand Master JR West.  I and my instructors have had the opportunity to train with Master West several times and have benefited tremendously from the experience.  After a year of saving and planning we have finally made arrangements for Master West to come to Austin.

 

Master West has studied Hapkido for more than 30 years and holds the rank of 8th Dan with the Korea HapKiDo Association and is the President of the United States Korean Martial Arts Federation.  Dr. He-Young Kimm, an early pioneer of Korean Martial Arts in America, calls Master West “an outstanding instructor and leader in the martial arts community.”  Major W. Wadsworth of the U.S Army at Fort Benning said, “The level of your instructors truly impressed me.  Their professional demeanor and obvious commitment to excellence ensure the success of this program.”  You can see written letters of reference for Master West at http://www.hapkido.com/uskmaf.htm.

 

Master West will be coming to Austin with a team of five instructors to conduct and all day self-defense/Hapkido seminar.  This seminar is open to all styles and all ranks.  Students 12 years and older can attend the entire seminar.  There will be a special separate session for children ages 6-11 that will last two hours.

 

The seminar topics will include a variety of subjects such as: joint locks, chokes, ki-strikes, take downs, pressure points, rope techniques etc…  The seminar topics will be based upon the needs of the group that attends that day.  The children’s session will present exciting and appropriate material for young children.

 

You can find more information about the seminar on our site at www.natkd.com/events including two online videos that show the Masters’ Demonstrations from two of Master West’s previous seminars.

 

It is my sincerest hope that you or some of your representatives can attend this event of learning and sharing.  It is my goal to create network of martial artists that come together in fellowship to learn, share, and compete in a friendly and positive environment.  We host four events a year at North Austin Tae Kwon Do, two seminars and two friendship tournaments, all these events to open to all ranks and all styles.

 

Enclosed you will find flyers with applications for the seminar printed on the reveres side as well as a certificate for one free admission with one paid admission.

 

Yours in Martial Arts,

 

 

 

Jason E. Thomas, 5th Dan

Chief Instructor

North Austin Tae Kwon Do

 

 

 


#430 From: tcthub
Date: Sun Mar 6, 2005 2:46 pm
Subject: Re: cool uniform on ebay
tcthub
Offline Offline
 
Hey People!

Hmmmmm.. Interesting, never seen a red one before!

Wonder which school's uniform is that or maybe just a general one
which a shop sells.

Cheers,

Daniel


--- In hapkidoflyingeagle@yahoogroups.com, yu_kwon <no_reply@y...>
wrote:
>
> Check out this uniform on ebay
>
> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?
> ViewItem&category=73988&item=7135149658&rd=1

#429 From: yu_kwon
Date: Tue Feb 15, 2005 3:10 am
Subject: cool uniform on ebay
yu_kwon
Offline Offline
 
Check out this uniform on ebay

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?
ViewItem&category=73988&item=7135149658&rd=1

#428 From: "Jason Thomas \(Y!\)" <syne7@...>
Date: Fri Feb 4, 2005 11:46 pm
Subject: Greetings....
syne7
Online Now Online Now
Send Email Send Email
 

Hello,

 

My name is Jason Thomas.  I am the Chief Instructor for North Austin Tae Kwon Do and the webmaster of our website www.natkd.com.  I greatly enjoy both forms practice and self-defense practice and spend a lot of team doing research on the forms of various systems of all origins and putting videos/diagrams and history on our site.  I hold the rank of 5th Dan in TKD and 1st Dan in Shotokan.

 

I look forward to many exciting discussions.

 

Jason

 

P.S.

 

We will be hosting a Self-Defense/Joint Lock/Hapkido Seminar in Austin on April 23rd if any of you want to come down the most beautiful city in Texas.  You can find info at www.natkd.com/events.

 

 


#427 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Mon Jan 24, 2005 10:38 am
Subject: Hanmudo Seminar at Ubin Camp
hbchuah
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Everyone had a good,fun time at the Hanmudo Association Singapore Ubin Adventure Resort Training Camp over the Hari Raya Haji holidays.The camp was on Jan 21-22 ' 05.
Topics covered by Dr.Dennis Chua on the first day was Hanmudo knife defence techniques,Knife combat, Sand Spreading techniques,knife throwing and Seven Star Praying Mantis Wushu  .Master Jeffrey Fleury was assisting Dr.Chua.Despite the scorching afternoon sun and hot sand,the trainees showed mental focus in their training,ignoring the blistering hot sand under their bare feet.
The second day morning , we had Taekyun ,Han Teuk Keuk (Han Tai Chi) and Pushing hands and chinna ( wushu wrist locks).
The general comment at the camp- it was too short, a longer period will be better.
More camps will follow in the future ,with more days.
Some pics below:
 
4 Taking the ferry from Marina Country Club to Ubin Island Adventure Club.
 
8 Ready for Adventure
12 Knife training at the lagoon
 
 
15 Master Jeffrey Fleury at work on Max Pinckers.
 
 
16 Knife throwing drills by Dr.Chua before the actual throw.
 
19 Trainee Edmund Sim's knife right on target.
 
 
21 The 2 Daniels ,Daniel Tan and Daniel Chiam hard 24
                                                  at work till 6pm in the evening.
 
25 313233
Relaxation ,Games and Food after a hard day's training.
 
28    Mr.Singapore Arnold Swarzeneggar ,Tang Mun Kong, doing  a                                                                                                     Herculean task,cooking for the kids.
 
 
7 Taekyun and Han Teuk Keuk(Tai Chi) Training 10
 
 
11The journey home. 15
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hanmudo Association Singapore
 
 

#426 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Tue Jan 18, 2005 1:44 am
Subject: origin of Korean arts
hbchuah
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The present January 2005 magazine issue (vol.9 Issue 12) of TKD and Korean Martial arts (British magazine) has a good history of Korean arts.
Historical facts from Japanese scholars reveal how Sam Rang warriors spread the art of Yusul to Japan to be the precursor of Jujitsu and Aikido.
The above fact has already been researched by GM Kimm of Hanmudo.I followed him to Sam Rang castle in Korea in 1998 during his research.
So for martial arts followers , get this issue and know our roots.
I believe more info will be produced in GM Kimm's about to published "History of the Korean arts"
Dr.Dennis Chua
Hanmudo Singapore

#425 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Sun Jan 9, 2005 11:44 am
Subject: Re: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] hi
hbchuah
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Hanmudo
Wed. Cairnhill CC  8pm-10pm
Sat.Changkat CC Tampines St.11 3pm-5pm
Hanmudo Association Singapore
World Hanmudo Association
 
Tel 98353926
----- Original Message -----
From: Doreen Yeo
Sent: Saturday, January 08, 2005 5:54 PM
Subject: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] hi

hi, i'm learning judo now but i'm also interested in
other martial arts, i want to learn another new
martial art but this year is my a levels. so i was
thinking maybe i'll learn one after my a levels. can
you tell where are the courses held?

__________________________________________________
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Log on to Messenger with your mobile phone!
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#424 From: Doreen Yeo <lifesux_1987@...>
Date: Sun Jan 9, 2005 12:40 am
Subject: Re: [Hapkido Flying Eagle] Re: hi
lifesux_1987
Offline Offline
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oh, so where do u learn ur hapkido?




  --- pandabear41982 <pandabear41982@...> wrote:


---------------------------------

Welcome to the group. The style I'm learning is
Hapkido. I'm will be
going for my Brown Senior Belt on January 21. I've
been doing
Hapkido for 2yearss is coming May.



--- In hapkidoflyingeagle@yahoogroups.com, Doreen Yeo
<lifesux_1987@y...> wrote:
> hi, i'm learning judo now but i'm also interested in
> other martial arts, i want to learn another new
> martial art but this year is my a levels. so i was
> thinking maybe i'll learn one after my a levels. can
> you tell where are the courses held?





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#423 From: "pandabear41982" <pandabear41982@...>
Date: Sat Jan 8, 2005 3:16 pm
Subject: Re: hi
pandabear41982
Offline Offline
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Welcome to the group. The style I'm learning is Hapkido. I'm will be
going for my Brown Senior Belt on January 21. I've been doing
Hapkido for 2yearss is coming May.



--- In hapkidoflyingeagle@yahoogroups.com, Doreen Yeo
<lifesux_1987@y...> wrote:
> hi, i'm learning judo now but i'm also interested in
> other martial arts, i want to learn another new
> martial art but this year is my a levels. so i was
> thinking maybe i'll learn one after my a levels. can
> you tell where are the courses held?

#422 From: Doreen Yeo <lifesux_1987@...>
Date: Sat Jan 8, 2005 9:54 am
Subject: hi
lifesux_1987
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
hi, i'm learning judo now but i'm also interested in
other martial arts, i want to learn another new
martial art but this year is my a levels. so i was
thinking maybe i'll learn one after my a levels. can
you tell where are the courses held?

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Log on to Messenger with your mobile phone!
http://sg.messenger.yahoo.com

#421 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Wed Jan 5, 2005 4:14 am
Subject: Hall of Fame
hbchuah
Offline Offline
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Hi all
Hanmudo Founder,Dr.He- Young Kimm is featured in Jan 2005 Taekwondo Times magazine as one of 4 grandmasters in the 2004 Hall of Fame chosen by martial artists worldwide for their teaching and promotion of Korean arts .You can get this magazine at bookshops Borders or Kinokuniya in Singapore.
 
Dr.Kimm is planning to lead a group for a trip to China Shaolin and North Korea ITF TKD Palace for training and exchange in April 2005.
Those interested can email me for details.
Han
DrChua
 

#420 From: tkdmelki
Date: Mon Dec 27, 2004 5:01 am
Subject: Happy New Year
tkdmelki
Offline Offline
 
WMAOA Wishes you a Happy New Year 2005

http://www.wmaoa.com/xmas.htm
http://www.wmaoa.com/Store.htm
WMAOA Team

#419 From: "Dennis Chua" <hbchua@...>
Date: Thu Nov 25, 2004 1:21 am
Subject: Fw: Photo - Han Mu Do Seminar
hbchuah
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 22, 2004 2:00 PM
Subject: Re: Photo - Han Mu Do Seminar

Thanks Edmund. I really enjoyed yesterday's seminar. It's interesting to learn that some of the techniques and philosophies in Hanmudo are similar to Aikido. I'm glad to have a taste of what Hanmudo is about. How nice if we can have more martial artists from all disciplinces to attend such seminars.
 
Who knows. I might one day enroll as a beginner in Dr Chua's class.
 
Cheers
Fauzi
 

#417 From: tcthub
Date: Mon Nov 1, 2004 9:26 am
Subject: Free 25MB Hapkido Email Account!
tcthub
Offline Offline
 
Hi Everyone,

Like to inform you that our free hapkido email service has increased
its space from 6mb per account 25mb per account.

You can enjoy larger space now with a unique domain name and userid
of your choice!

There are still many userids avaliable so all fans of hapkido, get
one now!

You can sign up at http://mail.hapkidokr.org

You can post your enquires here if you have any.

Thank you.

Cheers,

Daniel

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