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Master Bob Banham and
Master Instructor Nikki Banham
“Meeting Grandmaster Kimm was a breath of fresh air and Bob knew he had at last found the teacher that he had so long been searching for.” |
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Bob soon realised that Karate was what he wanted to learn most and when the opportunity arose, he began training in it full time. A short time later, a Korean instructor, Mr. Kwon Young-Woo who held a 3rd Dan Black Belt in the World Taekwondo Federation, began teaching Taekwondo in nearby Norwich. After watching one of Mr. Kwon’s demonstrations, both Bob and Mr. Cox began training in Taekwondo.
In 1972, Mr. Kwon, now a 6th Dan
returned to Korea leaving Mr. Cox, who had been awarded his 4th Dan, and Bob,
who had been awarded his 2nd Dan, in charge of the school. Later Richard Cox
began focusing his efforts towards full contact competition while Bob continued
teaching and studying traditional Taekwondo for the next twenty years. During this time, Bob began researching other styles and instructors and subsequently graded to 3rd and 4th Dan. He also pursued studies in shiatsu, acupuncture and herbal medicine and began a career in natural healing which he found to be totally compatible with his martial arts training. After spending seven years working at the largest acupuncture clinic in Norwich, Bob decided to go abroad for the purpose of studying martial arts and traditional healing systems. Bob spent six months training and studying in Thailand, The Philippines and Australia. After returning to Norwich, he re-established his Taekwondo school and married Nicola Millings, one of his students. Then, in 1992 an advertisement for Han Mu Do in Taekwondo Times re-ignited the spark that had started way back in 1967. Bob called the headquarters and was informed that he would be very welcome to attend a seminar to be held shortly in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Bob decided to attend the seminar and, together with his friend Henry Chaplin, went to Baton Rouge. Bob says that taking up that invitation was the single most important thing that had happened to him in his thirty years of studying the martial arts. Meeting Grandmaster Kimm was a breath of fresh air and Bob knew he had at last found the teacher that he had so long been searching for.” Since then:
At one of the seminars in Norwich, Mr. Banham and Grandmaster Kimm met a Dutch Taekwondo and Hapkido black belt named Frans van Boxtel. Mr. van Boxtel is now 5th Dan Hanmudo and is currently European director for WHA, taking over from Bob Banham in 1996. Subsequently, martial artists from all over Europe have attended seminars with Grandmaster Kimm in England and Holland and the European Hanmudo family has spread to Belgium, France, Switzerland, Spain, Germany and Italy. Not bad for a martial art which was founded in 1989 and introduced to Europe in 1992!
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