Suvarna Garge (Editor)

American Kenpo

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Focus
  
Hybrid

Olympic sport
  
No

Creator
  
Ed Parker

American Kenpo

Country of origin
  
United States of America

Famous practitioners
  
Stephen Thompson, Zane Frazier, Keith Hackney, Chuck Liddell, Frank Mir, K.J. Noons, Elvis Presley, Patrick Smith, Jeff Speakman, Don Jeffcoat, Gil Hibben, Sami Ibrahim, Mike Pick, Larry Tatum, Paul Mills, Richard Huk Planas, Frank Trejo

Parenthood
  
Kara-ho Kenpo, Shaolin Chu'an Fa, Judo

American Kenpo /ˈkɛmp/, pronounced KeMpo, is a martial art characterized by the use of quick and powerful strikes delivered from all of the body's natural weapons, powered by rapid stance transitions. The beginner is introduced to numerous basics that comprise the system taught through the vehicle of scripted ideal scenarios that give instructors a platform from which to introduce the concepts and principles that Ed Parker emphasized in his teachings of American Kenpo. The purpose of training in this manner is to increase coordination and continuity with linear and circular motion, each basic movement when executed correctly loads the next move, keeping the adversaries dimensional zones in check, limiting their ability to retaliate. If the adversary does not react as the technique sequence anticipates, the skilled Kenpo practitioner is able to seamlessly transition into an appropriate action drawn spontaneously from the subconscious state.

Contents

Founded and codified by Ed Parker, American Kenpo is primarily a self-defense combat system. Senior Grand Master Parker made significant modifications to the original art of Kenpo that he learned in Hawaii, throughout his life, introducing or changing principles, theories, and concepts of motion, as well as terminology. By the time of his passing in December 1990 He had created the forms: Short Form 1, Long Form 1, Short Form 2, Long Form 2, Short Form 3, Long Form 3, Long Form 4, Long Form 5, Long Form 6, Long Form 7 (Twin Clubs), Long Form 8 (Twin Knives), 154 named (ideal phase) technique sequences with 96 extensions, taught in three phases (Ideal, What-if and Formulation Phases) and He emphasized tailoring Kenpo to the individual and encouraged his students to explore those martial areas not yet fully explored. He left behind a large number of instructors who honor his teachings by teach many different versions of American Kenpo, as Senior Grand Master Parker decided not to name a single successor to his art, leaving each of his senior students to carry on his teachings in their own way.

Etymology and nomenclature

The word kenpō is a Japanese translation of the Chinese word "quán fǎ". Its widespread, cross-cultural adaptation has led to many divergent definitions of its exact meaning. The character for Quan means Fist and Fa means Method, Principle or Law. Kenpo is usually understood to mean Fist Law or Fist Method

American Kenpo is often seen written as "American KeNpo", leading to some confusion over the term's pronunciation. However, it is pronounced as if they had an "m". Kenpo is an example of romanization, while kempo results either because of straightforward anglicization or as a result of applying Traditional Hepburn romanization, but failing to use a macron to indicate the long vowel.

History

The modern history of American Kenpo began in the 1940s, with James Mitose (1916–1981) who was only one of the many people that Ed Parker's Kenpo Instructor William Chow worked with. William Chow known as Professor Chow aka Thunderbolt Chow was already an accomplished practitioner of the Martial Arts and already taught students before joining up with Thomas Young and James Mitose. Professor Chow and Thomas Young handled the teaching of the Martial Arts and James Mitose worked at advertising the club and setting up shows where Professor Chow would demonstrate his skill but Professor Chow soon realized that James Mitose was in his own words "a con-artist who was all talk" and went off to teach on his own. Mitose was never a teacher of Ed Parker and thus he had no part in American Kenpo.

William K. S. Chow studied multiple Martial Arts in Hawaii to include, Chinese Kenpo from his father. Chow eventually taught an art, which he called Kenpo Karate, which had a blend of linear and circular motion and emphasized practical fighting techniques designed to overcome the various martial arts in the melting pot of Hawaii. Chow experimented and modified his art, adapting it to meet the needs of American students.

The legendary Ed Parker dubbed "The Magician of Motion" started his martial arts training in Judo earning a black belt. He then studied western boxing from his father, a boxing commissioner in Hawaii, before eventually training and earning a black belt from William Chow in Kenpo Karate, he was eventually promoted to 3rd degree black belt in Kenpo Karate by Chow while teaching in the United States. After Ed Parker moved to California he cross referenced his Martial Arts knowledge with Chinese Martial Arts Masters in the China towns and hosted the largest Martial Arts Tournament the Long Beach Internationals, where he used his analytical mind to study the attending Martial Artists and improved his own system, eventually founding American Kenpo. Ed Parker founded his own Kenpo association after his students started teaching his art in other countries, The International Kenpo Karate Association (IKKA) Al Tracy claims that Chow promoted Parker to sandan (3rd-degree black belt) in December 1961.

Senior Grand Master Ed Parker called his art Kenpo Karate. He started teaching other Hawaiian Islanders attending Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah in 1954. By 1956, he was teaching commercially in Provo. Late in 1956, he opened a studio in Pasadena, California. He published a book about his early system in 1960. This has been characterized as having a very Japanese influence, including the use of linear and circular movements, "focused" techniques and jujutsu-style locks, holds, and throws. When Parker increased the Chinese arts content of his system, he began to refer to his art as "Chinese Kenpo". Based on this influence he wrote Secrets of Chinese Karate, published in 1963, only very shortly after Kenpo Karate.

The system which came to be known as American Kenpo was developed by Parker as his Specific System, and featured Parker's revisions of older methods to work in more modern fighting scenarios. He developed new or heavily restructured American Kenpo's forms and techniques during this period. He moved away from methods that were recognizably descended from other arts (such as forms that were familiar within Hung Gar) and established a more definitive relationship between forms and the self-defense technique curriculum of American Kenpo. Parker also eschewed esoteric Eastern concepts and sought instead to express the art in terms of Western scientific principles and metaphors. During this time Ed Parker also dropped most Asian language elements and altered traditions in favor of American English.

Ed Parker continually developed his art, students learned different curriculum interpretations and arrangements depending on the time period in which they studied with him. Since many instructors had gone their own ways but didn't continue with his continual "updating", consequently Kenpo today has several differing "versions" of technique examples or arrangements, none are wrong as long as they work for the individual practitioner. This is what set Ed Parker apart from many traditionalists who wanted to make students into cookie cutter replicas of their instructors, American Kenpo would be tailored to fit each individual student by a competent instructor. While Ed Parker was labeled a rebel when he first introduced his revolutionary ideas, they have since been tested and proven by members of the Military, Law Enforcement and Civilians who have successfully survived violent situations due to the training they received in American Kenpo.

One of the best-known students of Ed Parker was Elvis Presley.

Features

American Kenpo emphasizes lightening fast techniques to destroy an attacker in seconds. Kicks are less common, and usually directed at the lower body because high kicks are slower to execute and potentially compromise the practitioner's balance, higher kicks are taught to more advanced and capable practitioners. American Kenpo contains more kicks than Tae Kwon Do and more punches than Western Boxing, More throws than Judo, More Elbow and Knee Strikes than Muay Thai, more neck cranks and Joint dislocations than Jujutsu and Sambo combined and more knife and stick (club) combat techniques than Silat and Kali combined but the caveat is that no practitioner is expected to know and use it all, the mountain of motion and principles are available but after learning the basics students specialize in whatever areas fit their needs and desires. A Soldier may emphasize knife techniques, a Police officer may emphasize locks and stick techniques, a civilian interested in competition may emphasize the less lethal options while some specialize in the more lethal aspects of the system.

Physically, American Kenpo develops environmental awareness, structural stability, balance, coordination, flow, speed, power and timing in that order as the student progresses through a step by step curriculum. Memorization of the system is not necessary to gain functional skill and is primarily for future instructors but all American Kenpo students are taught not only how to execute each basic in the system but also when and when not to execute each basic and why. Senior Grand Master Ed Parker placed emphasis on concepts and principles over sequences of motion. He did not want his students to mimic him but rather to tailor his American Kenpo system to their own circumstances and needs. Thus American Kenpo is not a traditional art but a combat science that is designed to evolve as the practitioners understanding improves. This also placed the burden of effectiveness on the individual practitioner, it was up to them to make their American Kenpo applications effective by correctly applying the taught concepts and principles to the instructor's ideal phase techniques. To examine all possible what-ifs that could occur while examining how to survive an initial attack during the what-if phase and formulating a logical sequence of action that removed the dangers of those what-ifs, effectively turning a what-if problem to an even-if solution. Every American Kenpo black belt will have their own unique and tailored style but when teaching American Kenpo Ed Parker published minimum requirements for each belt rank that instructors in his association the IKKA were to follow. However, if a Kenpo Instructor starts his own association he or she is free to select his or her student's base curriculum as they see fit.

Although each American Kenpo school will differ somewhat, some common elements are:

  • Basic Principles, concepts and theories such as "Marriage of Gravity" — settling one's body weight in order to increase striking force, and many others out lined in his Infinite Insights Books (5).
  • Every block is a strike, every strike is a block — a block should be hard and directed enough to injure an opponent, decreasing their ability to continue an attack. Every strike should counter an opponent's movement, decreasing their ability to mount an attack.
  • Point of Origin — refers to moving any natural weapon from wherever it originates rather than cocking it before deploying it. This helps to eliminate telegraphing of moves.
  • Economy of Motion — Choose the best available target, Choose the best available weapon, Choose the best available angle, in the least amount of time, to get the desired result.
  • Personalization — Parker always suggested that once a student learned the lesson embodied in the "ideal phase" of the technique, they should then search for some aspect that can be tailored to their own personal needs and strengths.
  • Crest

    The design of the International Kenpo Karate Association crest was completed in 1958 when the art of American Kenpo was gaining international notoriety. The crest design was meant to symbolically represent the art's modernized form while simultaneously acknowledging the roots of American Kenpo in traditional Chinese and Japanese martial arts.

    Tiger
    Represents bravery, power, and physical strength. It is the early stage of a martial artist's learning. It is important to work on the basics (e.g., to have a good horse stance) to prepare the body for later advancement. Also, the Tiger in Chinese culture represent the celestial guardian of the West cardinal direction. The yin aspect of individual.
    Dragon
    Represents quintessence, fluidity, and agility, but also spiritual strength and the later stage of a martial artist's training. The dragon is placed above the tiger in the crest to symbolize the importance of mental/spiritual strength over physical strength. This does not mean that physical strength is unimportant. What it does imply is that martial artists need to have a good moral to guide their physical action. Also, the Dragon in Chinese culture represent the celestial guardian of the East cardinal direction. The yang aspect of individual.
    Circle
    The circle represents continuity.
    Dividing Lines
    The lines within the circle represent the original methods of attack first learned by ancient practitioners of the Chinese martial arts. They also demonstrate the pathways which an object could travel by.
    Colors
    The colors are representations of proficiency within the art alluding to the colored belt ranking system. The white represents the beginning stages and progresses through to black (expert level) and then red (professorship).
    Chinese Characters
    The writing acknowledges the art's Eastern roots. The characters on the right of the crest translate to "Law of the Fist, "Tang/Chinese Hand (唐手)" or "Empty Hand"(空手)" a.k.a. "Kenpo Karate". The characters on the left translate to "Spirit of the Dragon and the Tiger."
    Shape
    The shape of the crest represents the structure of a house. The walls and roof are curved to keep evil from intruding. The ax at the bottom of the crest is a solemn reminder that should a martial artist tarnish the reputation of the organization they will be "cut off" completely.

    Belt rankings

    American Kenpo has a graded colored belt system consisting of white, yellow, orange, purple, blue, green, 3rd degree brown, 2nd degree brown, 1st degree brown and 1st through 10th degree black. Different Kenpo organizations and schools may have different belt systems. The black belt ranks are indicated by half-inch red 'strips' up to the 4th degree, then a 5-inch 'block' for 5th. Thereafter, additional half-inch stripes are added up to the 9th degree. For 10th degree black belt, two 5-inch 'blocks' separated by a half-inch space are used. In some styles, an increasing number of stripes on both sides of the belt can indicate black belt ranks.

    Syllabus

    There are different requirements per belt depending on the school. Parker's IKKA schools stayed with the 24 techniques-per-belt syllabus, though some schools today have adopted a 16-20-24 technique syllabus as their standard. The 24 and the 16-20-24 technique syllabuses contain exactly the same techniques, but the latter groups them differently so fewer techniques are found at lower belt levels, and there are more belt levels to be found. In addition to self-defense techniques, Parker set specific criteria required for proficiency at each level. The criteria included basics categorized by stances, blocks, parries, punches, strikes, finger techniques, kicks, and foot maneuvers as well as the much neglected Specialized Moves and Methods category which includes joint dislocations, chokes, take-downs, throws and other grappling components. Beyond proficiency, a student's character and attitude can also be analyzed as a major consideration in the promotion to a new rank. Promotion after 3rd degree black belt had more to do with contributions made back to the art such as teaching or other great works of exploration. For example, a third degree black belt who further explores knife violence and brings that knowledge back to the benefit of other practitioners may be promoted for his excellent contributions.

    References

    American Kenpo Wikipedia