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Park Yeon-hwan

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Template:Korean name

Park Yeon Hwan
Born1952 (age 71–72)
South Korea
StyleTaekwondo
Rank9th dan taekwondo
Korean name
Hangul
Revised RomanizationBak Yeon-hwan
McCune–ReischauerPak Yŏnhwan

Yeon Hwan Park (born June 29, 1952) is a South Korean master of taekwondo.[1] He currently has earned a ninth-degree black belt and holds the title kwan jang-nim (Grandmaster) under the direction of the Kukkiwon. Park was the undefeated Korean national champion of Tae Kwon Do from 1971 to 1975 and the former coach of the U.S. Olympic and Pan-American Tae Kwon Do team.[2]

Park trained in his native Korea from early childhood. He attended Korea University and served in the Republic of Korea Marine Corps before being dispatched by the South Korean government as an emissary to Africa, where he began teaching taekwondo in Lesotho.[1] In 1980 he settled in the United States, where he established himself as a prominent figure in taekwondo instruction. While worldwide study of the martial arts increased in popularity in the early 1970s, due in part to work of Bruce Lee,[3] taekwondo was still largely unknown outside of Korea. In 1983 Park established the goal of increasing the popularity of the sport in a concerted movement towards having taekwondo become recognized as an official Olympic Sport. In response to the work of Park and other taekwondo leaders the International Olympic Committee granted the sport Demonstration Sport status in the 1988 and 1992 games and as a full medal sport, commencing with the 2000 games in Sydney, Australia.[4]

He has also served as president of the New York State Tae Kwon Do Association and in 1993 he became the secretary-general of the United States Tae Kwon Do Union.[1] He is the former vice president of the United States Tae Kwon Do Union and the publisher of USA Taekwondo Review. In 2013 he was elected to the presidency of the Korea Youth Promotion Association of the USA, a non-profit organization sponsoring student exchanges with the South Korea, Japan and The United States.[5] Park has been an adjunct professor of Taekwondo at Long island University[6] and at the University of Bridgeport,[7] lecturer and has coauthored Black Belt Tae Kwon Do[8] and Tae Kwon Do, Third Edition, both for Checkmark Books, as well as 12 other books on the martial art. His latest book, Tae Kwon Do, My Life and Philosophy was published in 2009.[1]

A major influence in the spread of Tae Kwon Do throughout the United States, Park has been featured in the "New York Times" and "Newsday", on the cover of nearly every major martial arts magazine and on major television networks. In 2008 he was elected President of the United States TKD Union. In 2010 Park was named Coach of the Year by the United States Taekwondo Grandmaster's Society.[9]

Park currently teaches about fifteen classes a week, from beginner to black belt competition training in his Dojang, or training center, in Levittown, NY, which is one of a series of Tae Kwon Do learning academies opened under the YH Park name, in the United States since 1983, and is currently under the direction of his eldest son and fifth degree black belt, Edward Park. Park is also an advisor to the United States Taekwondo Education Foundation, a non profit organization whose mission statement is to spread Tae Kwon Do philosophies to public schools.[4][10]

The January 2014 issue of Tae Kwon Do Times Magazine featured Grandmaster Park and his sons, Edward and Elliott, in an article about the changing demographics of leadership in the United States Taekwondo community from its Korean School founders, which were largely Korean immigrants, to their children, who are largely first generation Americans.[11]

In 2014 Park was named a USA Taekwondo Regional membership Director.[12]

In January 2016 Park was named President of the Board of Tae Kwon Do Life Magazine, an international print and digital publication.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Park, Yeon Hwan; Jon Gerrard (2009). Taekwondo: My Life and Philosophy (Paperback) (First ed.). USA: Checkmark Books. ISBN 0816077975.
  2. ^ "YH PARK TKD ACADEM". Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  3. ^ Harrington, Richard (May 7, 1993). "Dragon The Bruce Lee Story Review". Washington Post. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  4. ^ a b "WTF". World Taekwondo Federation. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  5. ^ "Korea Youth Promotion Association of USA". KYPAUSA>ORG. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  6. ^ "Long Island University Website". Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  7. ^ "University of Bridgeport Website". Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  8. ^ Gerrard, Jon (2009). Black Belt Tae Kwon Do: The Ultimate Reference Guide to the World's Most Popular Black Belt Martial Art. USA: Facts on File. ISBN 0816074003.
  9. ^ "US Taekwondo Grandmasters Society". Hall of Fame. USTKDGMS. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  10. ^ "USTEF". USTEF. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  11. ^ Zirogiannis, Marc (January 2014). "Passing The Torch". Tae Kwon Do Times (January 2014): 36.
  12. ^ "USAT Announces Two Regional Membership Directors". www.teamusa.org. Retrieved 23 December 2014.