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Hapkido Essentials DVD Preview

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Uploaded by on Oct 11, 2006

Highlights of Hapkido Essentials by the Korean Hapkido Federation in Korea, produced by http://www.TurtlePress.com. See more Korean Hapkido videos on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=1C550A18F237C508

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Sports

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  • つーか、韓国の武術はみんな名前に「道」がついているじゃないで­すか?

    これってどう考えても日帝の影響でしょ?

    私が唯一知っている朝鮮独自の武術「テッキョン」にしたって、中­国の武術にしたって「道」なんてつかないでしょ。香港のジークン­ドー(截拳道)はブルースリーが中国拳法と日本武道をミックスさ­せたものだし。

    どう考えても韓国の「道」がついている文化は日帝がもたらした文­化でしょ。それか日本風の呼び名じゃないと受け入れてもらえない­っていう詐欺師的発想か?

    それなのに起源を言い出す韓国人ってホント、ねじがどっかに飛ん­じゃったとしか思えないよね~

  • This is the method of KOREAN NATIONALISM.

    They disguise other country’s distinctive cultures as they were originated in Korea, and put it on Web sites. They just want to show off their culture’s superiority.

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  • totally useless shite

  • shameless 

  • @ExposeChosunNinja

    I agree, I was joking. Oyama did not invent karate, after all :-) Although he was Korean, to my knowledge there is no other connection between KSK and Korea.

  • @grozde I believe even Mas Oyama learned Karate in Okinawa and then developed his own style based on what he learned from several sources. Albeit a very effective fighting style, I think it a bit presumptuous to imply that his Korean heritage had a lot to do with that. I think it was more his natural strength combined with the years of training he received. His style certainly did not come 100% from Korea!

  • @ExposeChosunNinja

    From China - (almost) always.

    Through Korea - sometimes, yes.

    By Koreans? Rarely, I guess...

    On the other hand, there was one Masutatsu Oyama... :-)

    Look, I know that Koreans tend to claims other nations' achievements as their own. But I'm not sure this is the clearest case. The "yudo" to me is much more obvious fraud.

  • @grozde From China, in some cases yes. Through the Korean Peninsula, in some cases yes, but not necessarily by Koreans.

  • @ExposeChosunNinja

    And the "Japanese budo" can have it's roots traced to... That's right: China ;-)

    Isn't it funny, that both Korea and Japan have martial arts called "唐手道", but the Japanese decided to change the first character out of nationalism (which I'm not really criticizing)?

    Also, there are people who would claim that many Japanese MAs were entered there through Korea... 

  • Why do they put "DO" in their martial arts? because of the influence of Imperial Japan. Names of their martial arts prove it. "DO" is not Chinese idea, it's born in Japan. They lie about it , but it's something Koreans didn't know. They thought "DO" was Chinese idea. WRONG. Ninjutsu... Is Japanese word. Ninja also is Japanese word, how can you claim something that is already JAPANESE, to be Korean? Their way of thinking is not logical at all.

  • @kohanjin Hen hao, Si-Fu!88!

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