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Founder President:
Gen. Choi Hong Hi (1918-2002)
President:
Grand Master Choi Jung Hwa




(c) 2004-2008 All Rights Reserved with TAEKWONDO (ITF) NEPAL

 

:: Signification of Belt::

 

10th Kup White Belt

White signifies innocence, as that of the beginning student who has no previous knowledge of Taekwon-Do.

 

9th Kup Yellow Tag / 8th Kup Yellow Belt

Yellow signifies earth, from which a plant sprouts and takes root as Taekwon-Do foundation is being laid.

 

7th Kup Green Tag / 6th Kup Green Belt

Green signifies the plants growth as Taekwon-Do skills begin to develop.

 

5th Kup Blue Tag / 4th Kup Blue Belt

Blue signifies the heaven towards which the plant matures into a towering tree as training in Taekwon-Do progresses.

 

3rd Kup Red Tag / 2nd Kup Red Belt

Red signifies danger, cautioning the student to exercise control, and warning the opponent to stay away.

 

1st Kup Black Tag / Black Belt

Opposite to white, therefore signifying the maturity and proficiency in Taekwon-Do. Also indicates the wearers imperviousness to darkness and fear.

 

:: Taekwon-Do Patterns ::

 

Patterns are various fundamental movements, most of which represent either attack or defence techniques, set to a fixed and logical sequence. There are a total of twenty-four patterns in Taekwon-Do, they represent the twenty-four hours of the day. The name of the pattern, the number of movements, and the diagrammatic symbol of each pattern symbolises either heroic figures in Korean history or instances relating to historical events. The ancient law in the Orient was similar to the law of Hamurabi, "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth", and was rigorously enforced even if death was caused accidentally. In this type of environment, and since the present system of free sparring had not yet been developed, it was impossible for a student of the martial arts to practice or test their individual skill of attack and defence against actual moving opponents.

Individual advancement was certainly hindered untill an imaginative practitioner created the first patterns. Patterns are various fundamental movements, most of which represent either attack or defence techniques, set to a fixed and logical sequence. The student systematically deals with several imaginary opponents under various assumptions using every available attacking and blocking tools from different directions. Thus pattern practice enables the student to go through many fundamental movements in series, to develop sparring techniques, improve flexibility of movements, master body shifting, build muscles and breath control, develop fluid and smooth motions, and gain rythmical movements.

It also enables a student to acquire certain special techniques which cannot be obtained from either fundamental exercises or sparring. In short, pattern can be compared with a unit tactic or a word if fundamental movement is an individual soldier's training or alphabet. Accordingly pattern, the ledger of every movement, is a series of sparring, power test, feats and characteristic beauty. Though sparring may merely indicate that an opponent is more or less advanced, patterns are a more critical barometer in evaluating an individuals technique.

Saju Jirugi

 

10th Kup White Belt

Eui-Am Tul

 

2nd Degree Black Belt

Saju Makgi

 

10th Kup White Belt

Choong-Jang Tul

 

2nd Degree Black Belt

Chon-Ji Tul

 

9th Kup Yellow Tag

Juche Tul

 

2nd Degree Black Belt

Dan-Gun Tul

 

8th Kup Yellow Belt

Ko-Dang Tul

 

2nd Degree Black Belt

Do-San Tul

 

7th Kup Green Tag

Sam-Il Tul

 

3rd Degree Black Belt

Won-Hyo Tul

 

6th Kup Green Belt

Yoo-Sin Tul

 

3rd Degree Black Belt

Yul-Gok Tul

 

5th Kup Blue Tag

Choi-Yong Tul

 

3rd Degree Black Belt

Joong-Gun Tul

 

4th Kup Blue Belt

Yong-Ge Tul

 

4th Degree Black Belt

Toi-Gye Tul

 

3rd Kup Red Tag

Ul-Ji Tul

 

4th Degree Black Belt

Hwa-Rang Tul

 

2nd Kup Red Belt

Moon-Moo Tul

 

4th Degree Black Belt

Choong-Moo Tul

 

1st Kup Black Tag

So-San Tul

 

5th Degree Black Belt

Kwang-Gae Tul

 

1st Degree Black Belt

Se-Jong Tul

 

5th Degree Black Belt

Po-Eun Tul

 

1st Degree Black Belt

Tong-Il Tul

 

6th Degree Black Belt

Ge-Baek Tul

 

1st Degree Black Belt

 

 

 

 

The Reason for 24 Patterns

The life of a human being, perhaps 100 years, can be considered as a day when compared with eternity. Therefore, we mortals are no more than simple travelers who pass by the eternal years of an eon in a day. It is evident that no one can live more than a limited amount of time. Nevertheless, most people foolishly enslave themselves to materialism as if they could live for thousands of years. And some people strive to bequeath a good spiritual legacy for coming generations, in this way, gaining immortality. Obviously, the spirit is perpetual while material is not; therefore, what we can do to leave behind something for the welfare of mankind is, perhaps, the most important thing in our lives. Here I leave Taekwon-Do for mankind as a trace of man of the late 20th century. The 24 patterns represent 24 hours, one day, or all my life. The name of the pattern, the number of movements, and the diagrammatic symbol of each pattern symbolizes either heroic figures in Korean history or instances relating to historical events.

General Choi, Hong Hi