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Beskrivelse
Tang Soo Do Chung Do Kwan describes the creation, history and evolution of the first Korean Kwan to teach martial arts called Tang Soo Do in late 1944 by the founder Grandmaster, Won Kuk Lee who was the first Korean martial arts Master to use Tang Soo Do to describe the Japanese style of Korean Karate he taught. It was also Korea's first Post World War II martial art that would get Grandmaster Won Kuk Lee arrested, imprisoned and put on trial as a Japanese sympathizer because he was allowed to teach Tang Soo Do with the Japanese still in control of Korea and later, his Tang Soo Do was so successful it became a threat to the new Korean independent government that his reputation was tarnished. The author describes Chung Do Kwan's travels through the new post World War II Korean government's work to close the Chung Do Kwan Tang Soo Do and the government forces that wanted Chung Do Kwan tang Soo Do to be changed to Chung Do Kwan Tae Kwon Do. The author includes Grandmaster Won Kuk Lee's relationship with the Japanese occupying forces in Korea that allowed him to teach Tang Soo Do just before the Japanese were forced to leave Korea by the U.S. Military and the U.S. military General that invited Grandmaster Won Kuk Lee to immigrate to the United States and avoid his enemies in the new, young independent Korean government that was destroying many Korean martial arts founders they could call a Japanese sympathizer from an earlier time. The author describes the entire evolution of the Chung Do Kwan Tang Soo Do as the first Kwan to teach Tang Soo Do and, as a political entity for the Korean government, Grandmaster Won Kuk Lee's many contribution to the development of Chung Do Kwan Tae Kwon Do and Grandmaster Won Kuk Lee's dedication to Taekwondo's journey to the 1988 Olympics. This book is for the experienced and serious Korean martial arts enthusiast.