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Hmmm...So TKD and Hapkido are one and the same, not the Olympic stuff but TKD as an art?If this is the Hanmudo of Dr. He Young Kimm, he does have ranking in both TKD and Hapkido. He is a well-known early expert in Kuk Sool before leaving to start his own thing.
I've read more than once from hapkido people on the net that say that there is nothing in taekwondo that is not also in hapkido. And if we accept that statement, then the sparring we see in those videos IS hapkido, only with a rule set that causes the players to emphasize certain techniques and strategies.
Hmmm...So TKD and Hapkido are one and the same, not the Olympic stuff but TKD as an art?
Or did another art such as Kuk Sool or Subak just split and become two arts? And did these two arts simply keep some flavor of each other?
I know that in my TKD school we learn a lot of Hapkido type locks and throws at Black Belt level. I also see many Hapkido artist that kick fairly well and look like they have taken some TKD, some have and some have not.
So are the two arts based on the same things but with each emphasizing the focus of each in opposite order? TKD's focus being strikes with kicking and punching and the grappling being second, and Hapkido's focus being the grappling, with the kicks and punches being secondary.
So now is this Han Moo Do a blending of the two arts splitting the focus equally? Or simply bringing the one single art back to where it may have been at one time, or is this just Hapkido?
Neither, though from what I can see, it is closer to hapkido. Kimm studied yudo, hapkido, ksw, and I believe TSD and TKD.Han Moo Do or Hanmudo, is this really just Hapkido and TKD, or something different?