The year was 1945, and the armies of the world
were hurtling themselves across continents. The Nazi and Japanese empires
were fighting out their last desperate gasps. World events were moving
fast..much too fast to notice the birth of Joon Pyo Choi in the mountains
of North Korea. Born amidst the howling November winds that streaked down
the north-south mountain ranges and chilled Heung Nam City, the child had
to be rugged to survive the frigid Korean winter. A few years later brother
Young Pyo joined the family and the two youngsters blossomed in the peaceful
years following World War II.
In 1956, a few years after the brutal Korean War,
Joon Pyo, eleven, began martial art training in Tae Kwon Do with his uncle,
a black belt. The family believed this to be a positive step for their
young son because Joon Pyo was small for his age and shy. Fortunately his
smallness and shyness combined to build in him a strong determination and
persistence that stood Joon Pyo in good stead when the family later moved
to Seoul. There the future master entered the Song Moo Kwan school of Martial
Arts under its grandmaster and founder, Byung Jik Ro.
Renaissance Man Beginnings
The year was 1963 when Joon Pyo Choi first
became a martial art instructor for the Korean Boy Scouts in the capital
city. It was the beginning of the only profession Joon Pyo Choi longed
for even though he entered Pusan Fisheries National College in 1965 as
a business major. The college had no Tae Kwon Do club; a problem Joon Pyo
soon solved. He became the head instructor of the college's new club. At
this time he also entered the Song Hak Institute of Oriental Medicine
to study acupuncture and accupressure, earning his certification as an
acupuncture specialist.
To provide some balance in his life, Joon Pyo began
to study an ancient Korean musical instrument, Ga Ya Geum, Da Geum, and
in 1967 he won second place in the National Collegiate Traditional Musical
Instrument Contest. He was well on his way to becoming the Renaissance
man he is today.
During these years he took to the countryside whenever
possible, visiting different martial arts schools and learning about various
religions. He was always fascinated with the comparisons of the various
arts, religions, and philosophies.
Life began to move faster for the young man after
college. He entered the Korean Navy and there began his career as a martial
arts competitor, capturing regional and national championships in 1967
in his weight classification. During this time he became the instructor
of the Korean Navy ROTC, and earned numerous awards for outstanding leadership
and athletics.
Invitation to America
Then it was 1971 and the martial arts rage was flourishing
in America. Joon Pyo had a big decision to make about his future. He had
received an invitation from a place halfway around the world, the Martial
Arts Academy of Madison, Indiana, USA, where they needed a master instructor.
He decided to accept the offer and to continue his search for his true
self as the complete martial artist in America. So, in that same year,
he landed in America with one suitcase holding two Tae Kwon Do uniforms,
$25 in cash, and his beloved Korean instrument. The job went well, but
when his contract expired he decided to move on and see more of this huge
country. His next stop was Gallatin, Tennessee, where he opened his first
school, The Oriental Martial Arts College. One year later, still searching,
he moved northward to bustling Columbus, Ohio, where he opened the Oriental
Martial Arts College. After a time, he decided to put down new roots.
In the years that followed it was always onward
and upward as the school flourished and Master Choi's personal recognition
soared. It was his outstanding demonstrations that brought him the admiration
of his fellow martial artists and the applause of the general public. There
are few martial arts events in the United States that have not seen one
of his famous demonstrations. It is rare for him not to receive a standing
ovation. He has been the recipient of countless "Best Demonstration" awards
from such prestigious events as the Canadian Open, the All American Open
at Madison Square Garden, as well as from the venerable Smithsonian Institute.
Besides becoming a master of Tae Kwon Do, Joon Pyo
Choi has mastered Karate, Kung-fu, and weaponry. Young Pyo Choi, his brother
who has his own Martial Arts College in Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana,
is also a recognized Kung-fu and weapons expert. In their joint demonstrations,
Young Pyo demonstrates his Kung-fu and knowledge of weapons, such as the
bo staff, and Chinese broad sword.
Grandmaster Choi's credentials as a teacher are
not only impressive, they are mind boggling. Somehow, some way, this diminutive
master has found the secret to turning out national and International champions.
He has produced more of them than any other master instructor in the United
States. In one year alone, 1988, five of his students qualified for the
Olympic Team Trials in Colorado Springs. That same year, three of them
won gold medals at the USTU National Championships. Master Choi has served
as the head coach for five international games for the United States Tae
Kwon Do team. In the Third World Championships held in Chicago, he coached
the U.S. team to a third place finish from among the 62 natuions entered.
In 1978 he was appointed National Chairman of the AAU Tae Kwon Do tournament
Committee and Chairman of the Ohio AAU Tae Kwon Do Association. In 1979
he was selected as Coach of the Year by the AAU. That same year he founded
the United Martial Arts Federation and became its first president. In Columbus,
Ohio, his tournament, The Battle of Columbus, has grown to the largest
in Ohio as well as one of the largest in the Eastern United States.
What's his magic? I believe it's a hands on, on
the floor teaching technique.
In talking to Master Choi and watching him operate,
it is apparent that the martial arts are his whole life and that he has
given much study to the perfection of his own life through the arts. Besides
the masters in his own Oriental Martial Arts College, this man is able
to bring to Columbus other masters from across the country; people such
as Master Moo Yong Kang of San Diego, Ho Boum Kim of Chicago, and Hyung
Chul Kim of Toronto, Canada, who continue to train with Grandmaster Choi
even though they are masters within their own schools.
Two things stood out in my observation of Grandmaster
Choi: First, he has a frank openness to other styles which he believes
has widened his horizons, his understanding of himself and of our universe.
He feels this has opened his thinking and he firmly believes that all martial
arts must recognize the worth and virtue of other styles and abandon the
pretense that theirs is "the only way." Furthermore, he has knowledge and
proficiency in so many various aspects of different arts, martial and otherwise.
He is a true Renaissance Man.
As a martial arts writer, I do have one major complaint
with this master--he moves too fast. He covers so much ground it's impossible
to keep up with him. His philosophy in the making of a "Master" would in
itself fill a magazine. He has traveled world-wide, walked the Great Wall
of China, visited the Shaolin Temple, demonstrated there and dedicated
a memorial at the temple site. All his life he has dissected his beloved
art of Song Moo Kwan, studied, pieced together, took apart again and examined,
experimented and tried to find new and better ways. Always placing loyalty
and reliability first, he has developed a method of teaching that he has
gleaned and refined from all of the martial arts that he calls Moo Gong.
Moo Gong, also, would require another whole magazine, or perhaps a book,
to present.
Pursuit of Excellence
As to the personal philosophy of this great martial
artist, let me quote his own words:
"In my life, in the process of training to become
a good martial artist, I have made lots of mistakes. At times I may have
hurt others without intention. I apologize to all of them with all my humbleness
and sincerity. I am doing my best to reach the last stage of the martial
arts and I wish to build a good system that provides an opportunity for
others to grow in the martial arts. I want to provide a training place
where students can discipline their minds and bodies to find truth in the
martial arts and their personal lives. My training place or temple is a
place where they can rest their souls and bodies and die with the dignity
of a master of the martial arts as well as a contented human being."
What more can one say?