Many events led up to the formation of the current
martial art system known as Kuk Sool WonT, But
perhaps the best place to begin would be 1910,
with the dissolution of the Korean Royal Court
by the occupying Japanese forces. During this
period of foreign rule (from 1910 until the
end of World War II), the Japanese attempted
to suppress virtually every aspect of Korean
culture and replace it with their own. They
even suppressed Hangul (the Korean language)
making Japanese the official spoken language.
Needless to say, the traditional martial arts
of Korea were also banned.
As
a result, many prominent martial art instructors
were forced into hiding, including Myung-duk
Suh. But before Japan took over, Suh was well-noted
for teaching three types of Korean martial arts;
kwun sool: a kicking and hard punching style,
yoo sool: a soft style with emphasis on joint-locking
and throwing techniques, and yoo-kwun sool:
a combination of the two which could be either
hard or soft but never used force against force.
Many of the martial art techniques
native to Korea were jealously guarded and therefore
had always been taught in a secretive manner.
This aspect became greatly intensified due to
the fact that practice of any Korean martial
art was strictly forbidden by the Japanese government.
In fact, anyone caught teaching them faced severe
punishment under an extremely harsh legal system.
Because of the severity of this repression,
very few Koreans actually participated in martial
art activities for fear of reprisal.
Master Instructor Suh Myung-duk
was one such patriot, who refused to be intimidated
from honoring a family tradition that stretched
back sixteen generations. He returned to his
hometown near Taegu in Kyung Sang province and
set about the task of preserving his vast martial
art knowledge. He continued practicing martial
arts, teaching his techniques in the strictest
privacy to immediate family members. Finally,
the time had come to pass along the heritage
of the previous 16 generations. Myung-duk Suh
carefully selected one child to whom he would
give the entire scope of his knowledge. That
child was his grandson, In-hyuk Suh, the future
founder of Kuk Sool WonT.
A
serious martial arts education began for the
young Suh when he was only five years old and
his training continued uninterrupted until the
middle of the Korean conflict, when his grandfather
was fatally wounded by North Korean soldiers.
It then continued through arrangements made
by his grandfather*s foresight. Letters of introduction,
plus his grandfather*s reputation as a master
instructor of the Korean Royal Court, opened
many doors that otherwise would have remained
firmly shut. Now the heir to the Suh family*s
martial legacy began to visit and to learn from
many different instructors, and by the time
he was 20 years old, In-hyuk Suh had traveled
to hundreds of Buddhist temples and private
martial art teachers.
Studying the many aspects of Korean
martial arts was no easy task. Buddhist temples
are no longer used as martial training grounds,
but serve instead as repositories where libraries
of many ancient training books lay hidden away.
Kept safe in the neutral holy temples, the Japanese
were prevented from confiscating or destroying
these valuable texts, but Suh had to search
out and find volumes that in some cases had
been totally forgotten about.
The martial art masters also proved
to be somewhat of a challenge. Sometimes a teacher
had a wealth of information to impart and yet
others might yield only a single but important
technique. For instance, Suh learned an important
joint locking angle from an old man who was
the last descendant of a famous martial arts
family. This old man was reputed to use just
his thumb in order to break the long Korean
smoking pipes made of steel. But he refused
to teach the technique, preferring to take it
with him to the grave. Suh tried persuading
him for nearly an hour before he realized the
old man had been holding just such a pipe in
one particular position, with his elbow at the
same exact angle the entire time. Suddenly,
he became aware that the old man had been testing
his wisdom and that the secret technique was
the elbow angle itself.
During this intensive training
period, Suh met an old Buddhist monk named Hae
Dong Seu Nim (Great Monk of the East Sea). This
monk became Suh*s second most influential teacher,
disclosing special breathing skills, meditation
techniques and esoteric knowledge about internal
power or ki.
It was now the late 1950's and
In-hyuk Suh had begun the monumental task to
organize and formulate the many scattered martial
art techniques of Korea into a single system,
which he named Kuk Sool. Officially founded
as Kuk Sool WonT in 1961, it is now Korea*s
largest organized martial art (while Tae Kwon
Do is larger, it is considered by the Korean
Government and the World Tae Kwon Do Federation
to be a sport based on martial art and not an
actual martial art system).
In contrast to other popular martial
arts in modern-day Korea, Kuk Sool WonT uses
radically different spinning techniques and
low stances. So it took the public some time
to adjust, but eventually its popularity grew
to epic proportions. Then in 1974, when Kuk
Sool WonT was highly esteemed by the public,
In-hyuk Suh took his martial art out of Korea
to the United States, forming the World Kuk
Sool AssociationY in 1975.

Originally headquartered at San
Francisco, California, the demands of an expanding
global presence dictated moving to a more central
location, and in 1991 the World Kuk Sool AssociationY
was relocated to Houston, Texas. Presently located
in Tomball, an outlying district of Houston,
the WKSAY headquarters is equipped with traditional
training grounds covering over 20 acres of land.
The facilities include a spacious
dojang (training hall), outdoor training area,
knife-throwing & sword-cutting areas, three
different archery ranges, a meditation center,
as well as the capability to practice some of
the aforementioned skills from horseback.
For more information about Grandmaster
In Hyuk Suh or the organization he founded,
please visit the Founder's Section.