about james sunhwan chung

Career
Korea National Champion — 1965
Asain Champion — 1966
TKD & Self Defense Professor

  • WMU 1977-1997

  • Kellogg Community College 1971-1984

  • KVCC 1977-1989

  • Hackett H.S Phys. Ed. 1983-1985

  • Kalamazoo College TKD Self Defense Class 1977-Present

  • Montessori School 1990-1999

Internationally Certified Martial Arts Expert

International Referee 1st Class

  • U.S Olympic Committee, N.G.B

  • U.S TKD Union of Michigan State President 1982-1987

U.S Moo Duk Kwan Federation President 1992-1994

 
 

Grand Master Chung

Grand Mast Sunhwan Chung is a 9th Degree Black Belt who has been teaching the art of Tae Kwon Do and Hap Ki Do in the Kalamazoo area for over 40 years.

Early life and the Moo Duk Kwan

Sun-hwan Chung was born in Hiroshima, Japan and emigrated as a child to Korea. He began training in the martial arts when he was eight years old under Moo Duk Kwan founder Hwang Kee, and instructors Chang-young Chong (dan #15), Jong-soo Hong (dan #16), and Jae-joon Kim (dan #38).

He earned his first "black" belt (actually midnight blue) from Hwang Kee at age nine. For three years (1963-1965) Chung won the Korean Tae Kwon Do National Championships. In 1966, he won the Asian Championship. From 1966 to 1969, Chung managed Hwang Kee’s main training dojang, located near Seoul Station (Jong Gu section of Dongja-dong) in downtown Seoul, Korea. Chung became proficient in several martial arts, studying Tang Soo DoHapkido, and Taekwondo. He created one of the essential poomse training forms for Tang Soo Do; Kicho Hyeong Sa Bu(Basic Form 4) as well as several others specific to Moo Sool Do.

During the 1970s, he was a martial arts combat instructor for the Republic of Korea Armed Forces and active duty United States soldiers in Vietnam. In addition, he was a self-defense instructor to the Korean civilian police force and provided security services for the Korean national railroad system.

Among the Earliest U.S. Masters

Chung was sent by Hwang Kee, in the fourth wave of Korean martial arts masters, to the United States on June 1st 1969. His American sponsor was Dale Drouillard, the first American to be recognized as a Cho Dan by Hwang. As a new arrival to the United States, Chung instructed at (Jae-joon) Kim’s Karate School in Grand River, Michigan. As representative of the dojang, he traveled the country and sparred with early legends Mariano Estioko (the second American to become a Cho Dan in the Moo Duk Kwan), David Praim, Russell Hanke, Pat E. Johnson, and hundreds of others, without losing a match. In addition to building a tremendous reputation worldwide as a ruthless fighter, Chung gained renown for his mental toughness, often performing demonstrations such as lifting large buckets of water using needles pierced in his arms and neck - while standing on broken glass, or having a car drive onto his chest. As his reputation grew, he gained many friendships with martial arts pioneers in the United States during the 1970s, including Sang Kyu Shim, Kang Uk Lee, Bong-soo HanJhoon RheeMike Stone, and Chuck Norris.

Development of the System

In October 1973, Chung moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan where he opened a dojang, teaching his own form of mixed martial arts - combining TaekwondoTang Soo DoHapkido, Moo Sool Gi, and Ki Gon - entitled Moo Sool Do (Martial Arts United). He has authored and published several training books in the Moo Sool Do system, and has continued to teach in Kalamazoo, as well as through other satellite dojangs, for more than forty years.

Chung was the third grandmaster to introduce TaekwondoHapkido, and Tang Soo Do to Bermuda in the early 1970s, through one of his students, David Avery. In addition, Chung teaches Moo Sool Do martial arts physical education classes at both Western Michigan University and Kalamazoo College.

He has served as vice president of the Michigan Tae Kwon Do Association, as a certified (Level 7) International Referee with both the World Taekwondo Federation and the United States Taekwondo Union, and as a member of the U.S.A.T. (Olympic National Governing Body) Martial Arts Commission. He has also been named Master Instructor of the Year several times by the Pan American Moo Duk Kwan Society. As one of the highest-ranking black belts in the United States, Chung was selected to serve on the testing panel and present Chuck Norris with his 9th dan black belt. He founded and has sponsored for 25 years, the Michigan Cup International Martial Arts Championships, a competitive forms and sparring tournament held annually in Kalamazoo, Michigan.

 
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