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THE GENERAL AND FOUNDER

Choi Hong Hi (November 9, 1918 - June 15, 2002) was a South Korean army general and the founder of Taekwon-do. As a boy he was educated in Korea under the Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula. At that time, many of the traditions of the Korean people were suppressed by the Japanese, including the country's ancient martial arts,which were and still are renowned for the dynamic kicking techniques that are taught in them.
photo of general Choi
In his adult years, Choi fled to Japan to complete his education after a wrestler was set on his trail following a gambling dispute.

In 1942, he was drafted into the Japanese army, but was imprisoned for attempting to escape to join the opposition Korean Liberation Army in 1945. Only the liberation of Korea saved him from the death penalty. After the war, the division of Korea between north and south left him unable to return to the land of his birth. He rose quickly in the new South Korean army, and, two years after the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, he created an officer training program and an infantry division that provided Taekwon-do instructors. After the cessation of hostilities in 1953, his rise continued, and in 1961 he supported the military coup d'etat, but suffered a setback when General Park Chung-Hee emerged as the new president. In the late 1940s, Park had received a death sentence, later rescinded, from a military panel that had included Choi, who was thus forced to retire from the military following the coup.

photo of general Choi kicking
In 1962, he was sent to Malaysia as ambassador, but after his return to South Korea in 1965 he continued to find life under the Park regime so intolerable that in 1972 he left for Canada. Choi took the headquarters of the ITF to Toronto with him, and South Korea responded by forming a new organization, the World Taekwon-do Federation (WTF), based in Seoul. Choi's final years were marked by his efforts to return to North Korea. He introduced Taekwon-do there in 1980, and won further favor with the government by changing the name of one solo practice form from Kodang (after a North Korean democratic Christian moderate, presumed slain by the Red Army in 1946) to Juche (after the isolationist policy of self-reliance advocated by North Korean leader Kim Il-Sung). Though Choi's intention had been reconciliatory, unfortunately South Korea saw it as treasonous. Shortly before his death in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, Choi was able to announce through the ITF website, I am the man who has the most followers in the world: be that as it may, the impact of Taekwon-do, with 50m practitioners after 50 years of existence, is undeniable.Choi leaves behind his wife, two daughters and a son.

photo of general Choi kicking
Choi's martial arts achievements were threefold. First, in 1952 he brought about the adoption of training in martial arts as an aid to South Korean military conditioning. Secondly, he supported the development of Korean karate, given the name Taekwon-do in 1955, which he believed was superior in both spirit and technique to Japanese karate. Lastly, he and his students spread Taekwon-do across the globe, and saw it become a medal sport in Sydney at the 2000 Olympics. Korean practitioners argued over a number of names for the form of Korean karate unified during the 1950s and 60s, but Choi won acceptance for Taekwon-do, and in 1966 founded the International Taekwon-do Federation (ITF).For the rest of his life, he led demonstration tours all over the world. His first manual in English, Taekwon-Do (1965), eventually led to the publication of an entire encyclopedia on the art in 1985.