History

    ...of the club
    ...of the club presidents and instructors
    ...of taekwondo


Taekwondo Club History

The Tufts Tae Kwon Do club was founded in 1990 by Kevin Ballou, a Tufts freshman with no martial arts experience. At the time, there was no strong martial arts presence on Tufts’ campus, so Mr. Ballou petitioned to start a new club, and chose Taekwondo as the style to be taught. He met Young Kim, another freshman who was a black belt in Tae Kwon Do, who was willing to be the instructor. And so Tufts Tae Kwon Do was founded with Kevin Ballou as the first club president, and Young Kim as its first Head Instructor. The club has continued in the same way since - always student run, always student taught - and has become the most sucessful martial arts club in Tufts’ history, with membership in past years reaching nearly 100 students.

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Taekwondo as a Martial Art

Taekwondo is a "hard style" of martial arts, meaning it focuses on punches, kicks, and blocks instead of joint locks, grabs, and throws. It is distinctive among hard styles because of its high, powerful, elegant kicks. Taekwondo is a Korean martial art and has a long and intricate history.

The first evidence of regularly practiced martial arts in Korea date back to 3 BC. Mural paintings from the Koguryo dynasty show people sparring. In the Silla kingdom during roughly the same time period, Taekkyon (an ancestor of Taekwondo) was a part of Hwarangdo, the education of the male youth of the nobility. During the Koryo period (starting in 918 AD), Subak (another ancestor of Taekwondo) was very popular and was a spectator sport in addition to being a martial art. Subak reached the zenith of its popularity during the reign of King Uijong (1147-1170 AD).

During the Japanese occupation in the first half of the 20th century, martial arts training was forbidden in Korea. Practitioners still continued training in secret, though, preserving the distinctive style of Korean martial arts.

In the years following the liberation of Korea at the end of WWII, a schism developed that would eventually lead to the two major Taekwondo organizations we now see in the world: the International Taekwondo Federation and the World Taekwondo Federation.

The ITF views General Choi Hong Hi as the founder of modern Taekwondo. When he was young, Choi was taught Taekkyon by his calligraphy teacher. In 1937, he went to Japan. While he was there, he studied Karate and achieved the rank of first-degree black belt. In January of 1946, he became a second lieutenant in the Korean Army, and used that as a gateway to spread his mixture of Taekkyon and Karate. By the end of the Korean War, Choi had climbed the ranks until he was in command of the entire 5th infantry division. In 1955, Taekwondo was formally recognized by the Korean government. In 1961, Gen. Choi made Taekwondo required study for all soldiers and police officers in Korea. Since then, the International Taekwondo Federation has spread Gen. Choi’s style of Taekwondo worldwide.

In 1961, the Korean Taekwondo Association was formed. The KTA does not view Gen. Choi as the creator of Taekwondo, instead presenting the martial art as the result of a long progression of Korean martial arts. In 1973, the KTA formed the World Taekwondo Federation. The WTF was instrumental in the worldwide spread of the popularity of the sport element of Taekwondo. In 1988, WTF Taekwondo was a demonstration event in at the Seoul Olympic Games. It was once again a demonstration sport in 1992 in Barcelona. In 1994, the International Olympic Committee approved WTF Taekwondo as a full medal sport for the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

Nowadays, both ITF and WTF Taekwondo are popular martial arts. Generally speaking, the ITF has more intricate forms and the WTF has a greater focus on sparring. At Tufts Taekwondo, we do not get involved in the politics of Taekwondo. We practice the ITF forms, but also place an emphasis on WTF-rules sparring.

All historical information is from the Korean Taekwondo Association (www.koreataekwondo.org) and the International Taekwondo Federation (www.itf-taekwondo.com).

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Tufts Taekwondo Presidents and Head Instructors:


Year

Club President

Head Instructor

2007-08 Erica La Magna Mike Harb, 5th dan
2006-07 Sarah Lawson Mike Harb, 5th dan
2005-06 Corey Hopp Augustine Pyo, 2nd dan
2004-05 Jake Terry Blake Gaither, 1st dan
2003-04 Kevin Keating Sean Bjerke, 3rd dan ITF
2002-03 Chen Wu Sean Bjerke, 3rd dan ITF
2001-02 Eric Mitton / Chen Wu Jed Fowler, 1st dan WTF
2000-01 AJ Bettencourt / Eric Mitton Matt Berlin, 2nd dan WTF
1999-2000 AJ Bettencourt Neha Vibhakar
1998-99 Matt Richard Neha Vibhakar, 1st dan WTF
1997-98 Alex Lehman / Matt Richard Paul Bamba, 1st dan ITF
1996-97 Jason Didden / Alex Lehman Joe Specter
1995-96 Jon Baxter / Jason Didden Joe Specter / Mark Orlove *
1994-95 Jon Baxter Joe Specter, 2nd dan ITF
1993-94 Mark Cafazzo / Jon Baxter Young Kim
1992-93 Kevin Ballou / Mark Cafazzo Young Kim
1991-92 Kevin Ballou Young Kim
1990-91 Kevin Ballou Young Kim, 3rd dan ITF

Other Tufts Taekwondo Instructors through the years:

Victor Seto, 1st dan ITF
Noah Golden, 1st dan WTF
Henry Parker **, 3rd dan ITF

* There are many club members who would like to see Mark Orlove’s name left off of this list, but I have included it so that the club does not make the same mistake in the future. In 1995, the Taekwondo club was worried about the lack of continuity that could be caused by the potentially rapid turnover of student instructors. The decision was made to bring in an outside instructor, and Mark Orlove, a WTF 4th dan who was the head instructor for Boston University Taekwondo, was hired. While Mr. Orlove was a competent instructor, he was dismissed the following May, and the club decided it was best off with student instructors who cared about and understood Tufts Taekwondo.

** While Henry Parker has never regularly taught classes at Tufts, he has coached us in more than a few tournaments, and has been a friend of the club for so many years that not mentioning him would be a gross oversight.

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