Korea Herald:
Martial Artist Returns to Home of "Teukgong musul"
The following article is reprinted by permission
of the author, Ben Jhoty, and his editor from the
July 27, 2001, edition of the Korea Herald.
Read the latest Korea Herald edition here

Martial Artist Returns to Home
of "Teukgong musul"
By Ben Jhoty Staff reporter
There is no bowing. No demonstrations of cracking
tiles or blindfolded displays of prowess. The fighters
wear shoes rather than battle barefoot, and their
moves are determined by the opponent's proximity as
they seamlessly combine traditional taekwondo kicks
with jujitsu chokes, while at the same time wielding
a knife. Oh, and they are trained to kill their opponent
as well.
"Anytime, anywhere, any weapon,
anything you've got," is how expert Kim In-ki
describes the philosophy behind teukgong musul,
(tukong moosul) a form of martial arts designed
to meet the demands of combat.
Kim who was born in Korea and moved
to the United States in 1982, was back here recently
to confirm the origins of teukgong musul, discuss
the establishment of ties with the Korean Teukgong
Musul Association, and teach taekwondo and computer
education in English to preschool children. He is
also researching plans for a training complex he
hopes to establish in Virginia, where he now resides
as head of the 'Tukong Moosul' Association and master
of the Tukong Martial Arts Academy.
Back in the late 1970s, President
Park Chung Hee ordered the creation of a superior
style of martial arts to counter the North Korean
elite forces' "geuksul" style. Grandmaster
Chang Soo-ok, 27th antiterrorism unit martial arts
instructor and current Chong Wa Dae presidential
bodyguard head instructor, and Lim Ung-hwan, captain
of the 27th unit and current president of the Korean
Teukgong Musul association, were responsible for
developing this new style of fighting, adapting
many different forms of martial arts to meet the
demands of the special forces. They performed a
demonstration in June 1979 for President Park, who
was delighted, christening the style teukgong musul
and ordering that it be taught to Chong Wa Dae presidential
bodyguards and units of the Korean Special Warfare
Command Corps.
Kim, who at the time was the heavyweight
taekwondo champion of the army, served in the elite
units and was trained in teukgong before moving
to the United States and starting the Tukong Martial
Arts Academy. He further developed and adapted the
style he had been taught in the special forces to
the realities of American society, changing the
emphasis to survival rather than self-defense.
"Teukgong Musul is about life
and death," Kim said. "I'm trying to help
people save their lives. I can control myself, but
if I have no choice but to kill, I can. In the army
we use a rifle, then when we run out of bullets
we have to use something else - a helmet, a buckle,
a shoe, your fists, whatever you have to do to survive.
That's the nature of combat and the nature of the
street."
The gravity of this kind of philosophy
is illustrated in an anecdote Kim recalls regarding
an encounter with a jujitsu opponent. "I was
curious about jujitsu, so I let a jujitsu guy put
me on the ground and start choking me," Kim
said. Then I bit him as hard as I could in the chest,
and he jumped off and looked at me in horror. I
said, 'Is anything wrong?'"
Naturally, such a lethal style of
combat has opponents who liken it to giving someone
a loaded gun. Kim defends this accusation, saying
the philosophy of his academy is "Never fight,
never lose."
"Once you learn it, it's always
there, but hopefully you never have to use it,"
he said.
One of the most recognizable aspects
of Kim's teachings is that fighters wear shoes in
order to impose a degree of realism on the training.
In clinics and training sessions he conducts with
law enforcement agencies in Virginia, Kim has the
officers train in police uniform and also takes
them outside of the gym to train in the elements.
All of these measures are in preparation
for a real-life situation.
"There are good reasons why people
take their shoes off in martial arts, but these
days people wear shoes most of the time, so if you're
in a fight, you can't say to the attacker, 'Wait,
I have to take my shoes off,'" Kim said. "And
you don't let your opponent get up again, you follow
up right away. Its survival."
Obviously, this mentality makes teukgong
an unlikely candidate for competition, although
it has been attempted. "Teukgong tournaments
were tried, but there really is no safe way to compete,"
Kim said. "When you can sweep or eye gouge,
elbow or headbutt, or throw and attack below the
belt and to the back of the body and the head, there
is too much chance of severe injury to try to convert
it into a sport. Teukgong will never be a sport
if taught properly."
There is some dispute as to the exact
origins of teukgong musul, with grandmaster Yi Won-ik,
who also runs an academy in the United States, claiming
that he is solely responsible for the martial art's
founding. President of the Korean Teukgong Musul
Association Lim Ung-hwan said this claim was false,
while Jimmy Higgins, co-founder of the Tukong Martial
Arts Academy, said, "Pretty much all of the
schools in Korea and America except Yi Won-ik's
in Texas recognize President Park as the actual
beginning and origin of teukgong."
In any case, Kim says that what he
teaches at his academy is very different from what
is taught in the Korean military or civilian teukgong
musul schools in Korea, which, he said, put less
emphasis on survival tactics and have more in common
with guksulwon. "I had to modify many aspects
of what the teukgong unit had and what I taught
there to make it a workable program for most Americans,"
Kim said.
The Tukong Martial Arts Academy is
highly selective in who it will teach, due to the
violent nature of the training. Some 60 percent
of applicants are turned away, as students must
be deemed committed and responsible. Along with
law enforcement agencies in Virginia, Kim has trained
officers for the FBI, Secret Service, S.W.A.T. teams,
prison guards, state and military police, Navy Seals,
U.S. Marines, Green Berets and Army Rangers.
When asked about the teukgong musul
scene in Korea, Kim believes it is strong, although
he said taekwondo is practically a national art
here. He also doubts the style will ever rival taekwondo's
popularity in the United States, as he believes
it is a much harder program that requires more dedication
to attain a black belt.
For more information on teukgong musul
taught at the Tukong Martial Arts Academy, go to
www.tukong.com. If you are interested in visiting
a teukgong musul school in Korea, go to www.tgmsa.com.
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