Master Jay S. Penfil said:
In general, Korean “Karate” systems did not teach any weapons in their curriculum in the beginning. These systems began to adopt weapons into their curriculum over the past 20 years due to the necessity to “keep up with the (Japanese, Okinawa and Chinese) Jones’s”.
The problems that have arisen from this “adoption” of weapon from other systems is that the foundation of the weapons training is missing. When I watch the vast majority of Tang Soo Do and Tae Kwon Do practitioners performing Bo/Bong Kata/Hyung I have to refer to what they are doing as “Kicho-Hyung with a stick and a kick” because all that they are doing is just that!!! An “H” of “I” pattern form with some lame techniques and a kick here and there…
As a practitioner that has been raised in Okinawan and Japanese martial arts as well as in Tang Soo Do, I can tell you that the stances that are used in traditional Okinawan Bo kata are different then the Tang Soo Do Chun Gul Jahsee (Front stance), because you need to work with a posture that allows you to move with the weapon in a smooth fashion. The front stance keeps the Bo off of your own center, and to your side, making it, for the most part, ineffective. I have several black belts training with me who came to me from the ITF (C.S. Kim’s organization). They learned Bong Hyung with ITF, and when I taught them “Toko Mini No Koon” (the first Bo kata in the Isshinryu System), with all of the proper stances and hand positions they couldn’t get over how much more effective the techniques were.
When you are training with a weapon, you aren’t supposed to be using all kinds of fancy kicks, or letting go of the weapon to do some unrelated hand technique in the middle of the “WEAPONS” Hyung/Kata… You should be training and demonstrating the techniques of the weapon in hand…
I have seen many practitioners pick up KamaÂ’s, NunchukÂ’s, TonfaÂ’s and BoÂ’s, as well as KatanaÂ’s and other assorted weapons that were never a part of their systems original history and present what they called a Hyung/Kata with their weapon of choice in tournaments. It is embarrassing to see what they will come up withÂ… I was at a tournament a couple of months ago where a 2nd Dan from a local Tang Soo Do school stepped into the ring with a pair of NunchukÂ’s and proceeded to move from side to side, holding his NunchukÂ’s almost by the strings and twirled them around like a baton twirler in a high school marching band. The sad part of it was that he placed 1st in his division and we had to see him do it again for the weapons grand championship.
When I was competing in the 70Â’s, we had to present our weapons to the center referee. He/she would inspect them to see if they were really a weapon or just a look-a-like. If the weapon wasnÂ’t real, we could not compete with it. If we demonstrated movements that could not be used in a real fight, we would receive extremely low scoresÂ… Today, competitors go out on the floor with balsawood BoÂ’s and twirl them around with NO-Martial integrity at all, and think that they did somethingÂ… If you want to learn how to use a specific weapon, find an instructor who has been trained extensively in the use of that weapon and have him/her teach it to you. Keep in mind that you have to establish an understanding of the systems principles, concepts and philosophies of movement in order to perform with that weapon. It isnÂ’t enough to memorize the sequence of moves, and use improper stances and body mechanics. You must take on the character of the system in order to do it justice.
Your thoughtsÂ…
Yours in Tang Soo Do,
Master Jay S. Penfil
TANG SOO!!!