The
push for “Karate” to be in the Olympics started in the 1970’s with Jacques
Delcourt working on building a format and political structure to house this
ambition. It is often pointed at as the first attempts to get Karate int o the Olympics,
however I argue that “Karate” has been in the Olympics already, and for a much
longer time. And I have proof.
First
off I have to discuss the Karate that is going into the Olympics is not “traditional”
or “Style based” Karate, it’s an amalgamation of several styles. The Kumite is
a stylised system that is very different than the Shobu Ippon system that most Karate
systems use. The Katas are all merged too, and until recently the system was
limited to several Kata, now the door is wide open. This is the WKF or World
Karate Federations system of Karate. Nothing wrong with it, its just not
traditional Karate, it’s a game. Both can exist equally and I am not blasting
WKF or “modern” Karate, I just am not a proponent of it. Now back to the
Olympics.
A
year or so far back the WKF and the Olympic committee announced that the Olympics
would be using the WKF style at the 2020 Olympics and the world of Modern
Karate blew up with excitement. However shortly after the world found out it
was a one and done. I have spoken with a lot of friends who do WKF style Karate
and they are very upset about this turn, some were so upset that they said it
was a slap in the face, but they are missing two main points….first off the WOC
(World Olympic committee) never ever said it was going to be a permanent position,
they said from the start that it would a trial or demonstration event!
Secondly, we have sort of had “Karate” in the Olympics for YEARS and its not
coming out….keep up with me here please.
Around
1945 several schools or “Kwans” opened up in Seoul. These schools were
established by Martial artists who trained in a specific Japanese Martial art. That
Martial Art….Shotokan Karate. The founders were men like General Choi Hong Hi
and others who he trained with in Japan. The idea was to create a more “Korean”
version of Karate that could be presented as a national martial art. Out of
these Kwans came different styles of the original system. They added more head
level kicking, jumping and spinning kicks and sped up a great deal of the
techniques by removing focus from the training.
The
original system was established and a organization called the Korean Taekwondo
Association or KTA was formed by 1959. These merged and changed into different
organizations. The ITF or International TKD Federation, led by Choi Hong Hi and
the World TKD Federation. The systems were set up to create a sport over
martial art, it was a focused system that build its business plan around creating
a strong sport-oriented system for the students. The traditional aspects were
bleached out and replaced with more flash, the sporting rules were introduced
and safety gear created to make sparring safer and more exciting. Hand
movements, blocking and most art strikes were removed from the system
completely. This created a much more dynamic and exciting game of tag that used
the legs 80% of the time. Again, not knocking it! If you watch a good Tae Kwon
Do match it will get your heart pounding and you will enjoy the explosiveness
in training.
In
2000 after a short period of pushing the Olympic Tae Kwon Do committee formed
and the sport was introduced to the Olympics. So, why did they get in so fast,
and how did they manage to stay in……they organized and they are ONE system! In
1945 the Korean government got involved in the organization of TKD, they
ensured that even with sub systems, off shoot organizations…they are all one
style essentially. They created a back story about how “Traditional Korean”
arts merged with Shotokan……but the truth is its 90% Karate and 10% innovation. In
1952 President Syngman Rhee watched Choi Hong Hi and Nam Tae Hi do a
demonstration, both were with the military. He was told that the system being
presented was Taekyon, a traditional system of Korean Karate. The president
then pushed for the art to be introduced to the Korean military as a defence
system. In 1955 the leaders of the schools began to create a unified Korean
martial art. The name Tae Kwon Do was used to describe the unified system. When
the military picked up the system the public became more interested and the key
here is that it was a UNIFIED system.
Tae
Kwon do, essentially a altered system of Karate was created to be a national
system of fighting for the military forces and when they realized that the
system could be made bigger and create a national system the Korean government
and Korean public jumped onboard. The competition and system changes made this
Korean off shoot of Karate was made to be much more sport oriented over the traditional
roots in Karate. The changed to be more about scoring points than one kill shot
like Traditional Karate. The points included; one point for a kick to the Hogo,
two for a turning kick, three for a back kick and four for a spinning kick to
the head. Punching to the body earns you
a single point and kicking often two or more. Olympic TKD will give you 5 full
points for a clean kick to the head. Complex rules for sure, but very focused
on kicking to garner points. They split the divisions into weight and gender as
well.
It
was not always unified however. In the early formation of the Kwans the systems
that were taught at each of the clubs were slightly different from each other. Some
had a Judo influence; others had a stricter Karate influence. Systems like Moo
Duk Kwan and Tang Soo Do were formed and formulated their own systems. Some of
the clubs were also influenced by the Chinese martial arts as well. However,
the government pressured the main clubs to “merge” and this unification is what
made Korean Karate a solid and promotable art. In 1988 the Olympics were held
in Seoul south Korea. The government pushed hard for Tae Kwon Do to be in the
Summer Olympics. The Olympics saw a unified system of Martial arts and not the
same issues that Karate had. In 1992 Tae Kwon Do became a demonstration art in
the summer Olympics in Barcelona Spain. The unified rules and system meant that
the Olympics could draw from almost all countries to bring in Athletes. The
success drove TKD into becoming a permanent event at the 2000 Summer Olympics in
Sydney Australia.
So,
if the Olympics can accept TKD why cant they accept Karate? Well two major
reasons. First off…and most importantly …….that’s all on Karate, not the
Olympics! In the drive for acceptance Karate
actually created a system so similar to TKD that the arts are basically
presented as the same by anyone that does not know the systems. Basically,
Karate is being presented as a Kumite based art……like TKD……...with Kata…. Kata
is not as exciting to non-martial arts enthusiasts. So, the system, by being
more modern and a game of Tag, like TKD, is exactly the issue. The system and
style of Kumite takes so much from TKD that it’s the same thing.
The
other issue comes from the Styles as well. TKD has essentially one style with
several organizations that all train and participate with the same rules.
Karate however has many different systems or styles, that have different rules
and different forms. The problem with creating a generic system to “bring the
systems together” is you end up removing what makes the systems unique from Tae
Kwon Do. The very thing that makes Karate unique are now bleached out of the
training. Now we have a model for training that mimics TKD. Why in the world
would the IOC want to have two TKD’s?
So
to recap, the international push to put Karate into the Olympics was met with a
effort to create a generic system of Karate so Goju, Wado, Shotokan, Shotkai,
Isshin ryu and all the others could participate on equal footing. They changed
the traditional Shobu Ippon system to a more sport-oriented system and pushed
the “ideals” of one punch one kill out of the participation component and mimicked
TKD to the point…that its essentially the same thing for Kumite. Tae Kwon Do also
realized that their forms were not of interest to the general public so they
did not include them, we however insisted upon it.
So,
again why would we expect the IOC to want both Karate and TKD in the Olympics
other than our own Ego and thinking we are so different that we would be kept despite
being basically the same thing. As proof of this I offer that some of the
international level competitors on national WKF teams are actually TKD black
belts and not Karate black belts.
So,
what is the Answer? Well for me the
answer is to let it go, we need to move beyond this and figure out why sport
Karate is so much more important to some than traditional Karate. And the
Traditional Karate people should focus on marketing traditional Karate. We need
to get away from Olympic Karate. We need to push our focus away from the TKD mimicking
Karate system and build upon our traditional factors. Our focus needs to be on
the benefits of Traditional practice and we also need to push our own system of
Shobu Ippon Karate over sport minded WKF Karate to draw a line and be more
distinct. We need to get back to our
traditional systems, styles and focus on what makes us all different, not try
and build up a generic system that makes us all the same.
We
don’t have to worry about getting or keeping Karate in the Olympics because in essence
we already have a style of Karate in the Olympics, its Korean Karate and it’s a
system created from us, Tae Kwon Do is a form of Karate, even if it doesn’t want
to acknowledge it and we basically don’t as well. So, don’t be sad, while “Karate”
Is leaving the Olympics’ we still have our step child as a sport in the summer
games each year.
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