Jae Joon Kim

Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim

Dan #38- Grandmaster Kim was born in Seoul, Korea in 1929. He was the son of a full-time merchant and a part-time Sumo wrestler, who had trained in Japan and won the Korean Sumo Championships. The prize, Grandmaster Kim recalls, was the traditional one – a live cow.

An avid sportsman and athlete, the elder Kim wanted his son to master a "manly" sport. In 1945 he enrolled his son in a Western-style boxing club. He was a good student, winning eleven of his fifteen bouts on the Korean amateur circuit (similar to our own Golden Gloves). Two events, however, led to a road he has traveled ever since. In his fifteenth bout he knocked out his opponent and the boy, a friend, lay unconscious for twenty minutes. "I thought," Grandmaster Kim remembers, "that I had killed him."

 

Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim

While studying Sumo in Japan, Grandmaster Kim’s father (Dong Hwan Kim) had witnessed karate training and had been impressed by what he saw. He decided to end his son’s boxing career and in April of 1945 enrolled him in Grandmaster Hwang Kee’s Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do Dojang in Seoul. Grandmaster Kim became a devoted and gifted student of Tang So Do under Grandmaster Hwang Kee’s firm leadership and iron discipline. In 1947 he earned his black belt. Grandmaster Hwang Kee’s training was rigorous and sometimes brutal. He required hard body conditioning through constant repetition. Students punched and kicked the Tal yun bong (makiwara) 100 times a day with each hand and foot, often leaving the board stained with blood. All students had Tal yun bong in their homes, Grandmaster Kim had two. Grandmaster Hwang Kee assigned “homework” and Grandmaster Kim was often up smashing the board well past midnight, sometimes to his neighbor’s chagrin.

In 1952 Grandmaster Kim assisted in the formation of the Korean Tang Soo Do Association in Seoul, Korea. From 1955 to 1959 he was the top Master Instructor of Moo Duk Kwan in Korea. In 1955 he gave an exhibition at the 1st International Goodwill Tang Soo Do Tournament. In 1961, he was appointed Vice President of the Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do Association and in 1962 was elected Vice President of the Korean Soo Bahk Do Association (the parent organization headed by Grandmaster Hwang Kee.) During 1967 he was awarded the 8th Dan and 1968 appointed president of the Moo Duk Kwan in the United States by Grandmaster Hwang Kee. He brought Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do to the United States and founded the Association in Detroit, Michigan.

Through the years, Grandmaster Kim toured the world for exhibitions and has trained Master Instructors in Europe, Asia, North and South America and South Africa. Along the way he found time to train and promote Chuck Norris, Pat Johnson and World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Leon Spinks. Grandmaster Kim also instructed Detroit Mayor Coleman Young’s bodyguards. His selfless contributions to the community have resulted in numerous proclamations from mayors around the country. In fact he is listed as the instructor for Grandmaster Hwang Kee’s son Kwan Jang Nim H.C. Hwang, president of United States Soo Bahk Do Moo Duk Kwan Federation, Inc. which was established by Grandmaster Hwang Kee.

Veteran martial artists will recognize that Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim held one of the highest ranks in Tang Soo Do in the world: in fact his Dan Number is #38, which was awarded by Grandmaster Hwang Kee (the founder of Tang Soo Do.) For over 50 years Grandmaster Kim was a devoted teacher and inspiration to all who come in contact with him.

Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim continued to develop World Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do, which now stretches its way from California to New York and from Michigan (where the main club started) to Florida, the world headquarters of the World Moo Duk Kwan Tang Soo Do Federation. Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim traveled to all four corners of the United States and around the world, conducting tests and seminars to further the expansion of the Federation.

In 2004, Grandmaster J.J. Kim was inducted into the Tae Kwon Do Times Hall of Fame. On April 22, 2006 Grandmaster J.J. Kim was inducted into the Grandmasters Society Hall of Fame. Later that same year, he founded the World Traditional Tang Soo Do Federation. The world’s martial art community considered Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim a Master’s Master. Grandmaster Jae Joon Kim, 77, died January 09, 2007 in Brandon, Florida. His impact on Tang Soo Do throughout the world is immeasurable. He will be missed by us all.