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Chan-Yong
Kim holds the 9th-degree black belt in Taekwondo, the 8th-degree
black belt in Yu-Do, and the 6th-degree black belt in Hapkido.
Grandmaster Kim is one of the best-known and most highly respected
individuals in the international martial arts community. People
from all walks of life are proud to consider him as their special
friend. Grandmaster Kim enjoys a close and loving marriage of
more than 30 years, his son Jimmy Young Kim captured the first
heavyweight Olympic Gold Medal in Taekwondo, and now Jimmy and
his sisters Jenny and Susan hold or are completing doctoral degrees,
and Grandmaster Kim is immensely proud of his new grandson Matthew.
Grandmaster Kim's story is not that of someone born with special
physical ability or family standing. Rather, he represents what
one can make of oneself. Chan-Yong Kim began his life in the midst
of warfare and privation. Through 1953, savage fighting between
world superpowers brutalized the whole Korean peninsula. Families
suffered incredibly, and there was no food or shelter or safety.
On January 4th, 1935, Chan-Yong Kim was born in the
village of Kaesong. As an infant and child he was thin, weak, and
ill; later as a young man he would have to go for days upon end
eating only leaves while performing heavy labor. How did he become
the six foot, 190 pound warrior we know today? Chan-Yong Kim began
his martial arts training in 1941. He now has been training continuously
for more than half a century (his Yu-do teacher was Dr. Lee Je-Hwang,
his Taekwondo teacher General Choi Hong-Hi) and except for his time
in high school, college, or the military service, he has never had
a different occupation. Notably, Chan-Yong Kim received a scholarship
to Yong-In University, the Korean Yo-Do College to which only elite-level
black belts were admitted. The demanding curriculum mixed university
courses with rigorous Yu-Do training. Grandmaster Kim recalls that
at the Yu-Do College 'tapping out' to ask to be released from a
choke hold or armbar simply was not permitted: Seniors would not
allow the junior this escape. Rather, the junior would have to struggle
and find a way out, or else. Or else? Grandmaster Kim recalled that
at first he might literally be choked into unconsciousness several
times in a single workout. Until, over the months and years he learned
to find a way out of even seemingly hopeless situations. Clearly
more a mental than physical task.

After graduating from Yong-In University in 1960,
Grandmaster Kim taught Yu-Do and Taekwondo in Korea, Malaysia, and
Brunei, and he coached the Australian Olympic Judo Team. Coming
to America in 1971 with his martial arts knowledge and $300, Chan-Yong
Kim opened the Oriental Moo-Do School in Artesia, California. Working
steadily with his family, Grandmaster Kim has personally instructed
more than 5,000 students during the past quarter-century.
He also served as President of the California State
Taekwondo Association from 1973 to 1991, and as Chair of The World
Taekwondo Association's International Referee Committee from 1989
to 1994.
Chan-Yong Kim's knowledge of martial arts is encyclopedic.
Striking, grappling, weaponry. Strategy, tactics, philosophy. Even
now I am convinced that in an actual physical confrontation no one
-- and I mean NO ONE! -- could actually beat Grandmaster Kim. And
underlying all, genuine calm and gentleness that others can really
sense. Grandmaster Kim always points out that he likes everyone
and everyone likes him, so there is just no need for conflict. What
else about Chan-Yong Kim? Intelligent, literate, and broadly educated.
Happy, fun-loving. World-class classical Oriental calligraphy. Flawless
English. Massive hands. Knowledge of physical healing. And of emotional
recovery. Strict teacher. High expectations of his students. Meticulous
attention to politeness and manners. A human who sometimes gets
irritated, impatient, fatigued. A human who has learned to let go
of irritation, to wait out impatience, and to work through fatigue.
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