Movements - 32
Ready Posture - CLOSED READY STANCE B |
1. |
Step to Left Back Stance to 9 o'clock and
Left Knifehand Block. |
2. |
Left Snap Kick. |
3. |
Step to Right Cat Stance while Right Hand
Pressing Up. |
4. |
Step to Right Back Stance to 3 o'clock and
Right Knifehand Block. |
5. |
Right Snap Kick. |
6. |
Step to Left Cat Stance while Left Hand Pressing
Up. |
7. |
Left Check to 12 o'clock. |
8. |
Shift to Right Front Stance, Right Elbow Up.
|
9. |
Right Check to 12 o'clock. |
10. |
Shift to Left Front Stance, Left Elbow Up.
|
11. |
Step to Left Forward Stance and Double Vertical
Punch. |
12. |
Chamber Hands, Step to Right Forward Stance,
Double Upward Punch. |
13. |
Step around to Left Forward Stance to 6 o'clock.
High X-Block. |
14. |
Step to Left Back Stance to 3 o'clock, Left
Back Knuckle. |
15. |
Shift to Left Forward Stance, Left Inward
Block. |
16. |
Right Punch. |
17. |
Step to Right Back Stance to 9 o'clock, Right
Back Knuckle. |
18. |
Shift to Right Forward Stance, Right Inward
Block. |
19. |
Left Punch. |
20. |
Step to Left Forward Stance to 6 o'clock,
Left Reinforced Block. |
21. |
Right Aim, Left Punch, shifting to Box Stance.
|
22. |
Right Side Kick to 6 o'clock. |
23. |
Land in Right Forward Stance to 6 o'clock,
Right Reinforced Block. |
24. |
Left Aim, Right Punch, shifting to Box Stance.
|
25. |
Left Side Kick to 6 o'clock. |
26. |
Land in Left Back Stance to 6 o'clock, Closed
Fist Check. |
27. |
Shift to Left Forward Stance.
Twin Palm Pressing Block. |
28. |
Step to Right Back Stance to 6 o'clock, Closed
Fist Check. |
29. |
Shift to Right Forward Stance.
Twin Palm Pressing Block. |
30. |
Step Right to Left Foot, Chamber on Left.
|
31. |
Step to Right Back Stance to 3 o'clock, U
Shape Block. |
32. |
Shift Hands, Shuffle to Left Back Stance to
9 o'clock, U Shape Block. |
END: Bring the left foot back to a ready posture. |
JOONG-GUN is named after the patriot Ahn Joong-Gun
who assassinated Hiro-Bumi Ito, the first Japanese governor-general
of Korea, known as the man who played the leading part in the
Korea-Japan merger. There are 32 movements in this pattern to
represent Mr. Ahn's age when he was executed in a Lui-Shung
prison (1910).
An Joong-Gun - en meget anerkjent patriot.
Very little is recorded about An Joong-Gun's life. He stepped
in the spotlight of Korean history only briefly, but left his
mark as one of Korea's most revered patriots. His story is best
understood in the context of the turbulent political climate
of the times. An Joong-Gun was born in 1879 in the town of Hae-Ju
in Hwang-Hae Province. An's family moved to the town of Sin-Chun
in Pyong-An Province when he was about ten years old. He
became a well known educator and established his own school
called the Sam-Heung (Three Success) School. His school, like
others at that time, was destined for hardships under the Japanese
military Occupation of Korea became enmeshed in a Japanese power
play by virtue of its location. In 1895 the Japanese government
was determined to create a large empire that would include Manchuria
and China. Korea was obviously necessary as a stepping stone
for creating this empire. However, the Korean government the
time was under the indirect control of the Russian government.
The pressure created by this political situation caused considerable
unrest in Korea. Rising tension resulted in several meetings
from 1896 to l898 among neighboring countries as well as foreign
powers concerned about Korea's future. These meetings, which
included Japan, China, Russia, England, and the United States,
resolved very little.
Korea was pulled further into the conflicts when turmoil erupted
in China in 1900. Chinese patriots, fed up with colonial domination
of their country by foreign powers, incited the Chinese population
to a wave of violent riots known as the Boxer Rebellion. In
response to this rebellion, the colonial powers descended upon
tile region in force to protect their interests. Prompted by
the movement of Russian army units into neighboring Manchuria,
England established an Anglo-Japanese Alliance in 1902. A Russian
French Alliance was subsequently established in 1903 followed
by a movement of French and Russian in into northern Korea.
The Japanese "meanwhile' saw this action as a direct threat
to their claim of Korea and demand the removal of all Russian
troops from Korea. When Russia rejected her in 1904, Japan initiated
a naval attacked war Korea ea. of course, claimed neutrality
but was invaded nonetheless by Japan. By the autumn of 1905
Russia had surrendered and Japan was firmly established in Korea.
This invasion, however, was not viewed as an act of aggression
anywhere in the world, except in Korea.
Hirobumi Ito
The long-term occupation of Korea also involved the complex
takeover of the Korean government. One of Japan's leading elder
statesmen of the time, Hirobumi Ito, became involved in masterminding
a plan to complete the occupation and political takeover of
Korea. He was named the first Japanese resident general of Korea
in 1905. He was answerable only to the Japanese emperor and
had the power to control all the Korean foreign relations and
trade. To fulfill his duties and to keep order in the country.
He was given total access to all Japanese combat troops stationed
in Korea. While still in Japan, Ito pressured the weak Korean
government into signing the "Protectorate Treaty on November
19, 1905, which gave the Japanese the right to occupy Korea.
After signing the treaty as resident general, Ito made every
effort to keep it a secret from the Korean people. Following
the ratification of the treaty, 12 Japanese commissioners were
assigned to the various provinces in Korea, with one being stationed
in Seoul. Later, in March 1906, Ito arrived in Korea to take
tile reins of power. At this time he ordered all foreign delegations
in Korea to withdraw. This action left Korea at the mercy of
the Japanese. The new Japanese puppet government enacted laws
that allowed Korean land to be sold to Japanese, although land
generally was just taken.
Several small guerilla groups were formed
The Korean people were extremely irritated under these grim
circumstances. Word soon leaked out concerning
the protectorate Treaty, provoking a wave of anti-Japanese violence.
Several small guerilla groups were formed and attacked the Japanese
occupation forces. One such group in Chung Chong Province armed
themselves with 50 cannons and conducted a long campaign of
hit-and-run actions against the Japanese. They were finally
defeated, however, as most other groups were, when hunted down
by the much larger Japanese army. The general wave of unrest,
however, continued to spread very rapidly Violence pervaded
the general population, as many loyal Korean government officials
committed suicide and Korean government officials who had signed
the Protectorate Treaty were assassinated.
In the face of the oppression that accompanied this Japanese
annexation of Korea An Joong-Gun went into self-exile in southern
Manchuria. There he formed a small private guerilla army of
approximately 300 men, including his brother. This army conducted
sporadic raids across the Manchurian border into northern Korea,
keeping a relentless pressure on the Japanese in this region.
An Joong-Gun
The violent objection of the Korean population spread out of
the country as well as into the upper levels of the Korean government.
The Japanese government was unnerved by the vocal, patriotic
Korean organizations, particularly those that had formed within
the United States. Those in power wanted to quell these anti
Japanese sentiments to avoid having other countries interfere
with their control of Korea. With this in mind in March 1907,
the Japanese government sent an American citizen, D.W. Stevens,
to the United States on a mission to distribute pro-Japanese
propaganda to the American public. Stevens had originally been
hired by the Japanese to help set up the resident general's
government in Korea. While he was in San Francisco, Stevens
was assassinated by two outraged Korean patriots. Many other
political leaders were assassinated during this violent time,
including Yi Wan-Yong, the man lto had appointed as the premier
of Korea after he had forced the Korean emperor to install a
new pro-Japanese cabinet. In June of 1907, the Korean emperor,
Ko-Jong, in an effort to break loose of the Japanese control,
secretly sent an emissary to the Hague Peace Conference to expose
the Japanese aggressive policy in Korea to the world When Ito
found out, he forced Ko-Jong to abdicate the Korean throne on
July 19, 1907, and the Japanese officially took over the Government
of Korea. Severe rioting involving many Korean Army units broke
out all over Korea.
The Japanese responded by disbanding the Korean police force
and the army, except for the palace guard. The Korean Army troops
then retaliated by attacking the Japanese troops, but were quickly
defeated. All Koreans prisons, courts, and police units were
officially turned over to the Japanese government. Even after
the defeat of the Korean troops, resistance from the general
Korean public continued for many years with many guerilla groups
operating out of southeastern Manchuria. Small groups of patriots
attempted assassinating several Japanese leaders and members
of the Japanese-Korean government. Because of its proximity
to Manchuria, the town of Kendo is northern Korea became a hotbed
of such activity and Hiroburni Ito decided to set up a significant
Japanese military and police presence in the area. However,
20 percent of the 100,000 residents of Kando were Chinese. When
the Japanese began to crack down on the population of Kando,
these Chinese were caught in the violence. The situation caused
considerable conflict between the Japanese and Chinese.
Japanese and the Chinese.
"The last straw for many loyal Koreans such as An Joong-Gun
"
In response to the increased Japanese activity in the Kando
region, An Joong-Gun led his guerilla army on a raid there in
June 1909. The raid was a success, resulting in many Japanese
deaths. Despite such guerilla activities, the Japanese finally
arrived at an agreement with the Chinese. The treaty, signed
on September 4, 1909, allowed the Japanese to build a branch
line to the Southern Manchurian Railway in order to exploit
the rich mineral resources in Manchuria. In return, the Japanese
turned over to the Chinese the territorial rights to Kando.
This brazen act of selling Korean territory to another country
was the last straw for many loyal Koreans such as An Joong-Gun.
He set out for his base of operations in Vladivostok, Siberia,
to prepare for his assassination of Hirobumi Ito.
Russia was becoming very nervous at the level of Japanese activity
in the northern Korean area and Japan's obvious designs on Manchuria.
Ito, who had officially become the president of the Japanese
Senate (an aristocratic government body), arranged to meet with
Russian representatives at Harbin, Manchuria, to calm their
fears over the Japanese intentions to annex Manchuria and invade
China. The final plans for the meeting between Ito and General
Kokotseff, a minister-level Russian govermner1t official, were
set for October 26, 1909.
An Joong Gun shot Ito...
When Ito arrived at the Harbin train station at 9:00 a.m. on
October 26, 1909, An Joong-Gun was waiting for him. Knowing
full well that he would never escape alive, and that torture
awaited him if captured by the Japanese, An Joong Gun shot Ito
after he stepped off the train. Following the assassination,
An was captured by Japanese troops and imprisoned at Port Arthur.
While in Japanese prisons he suffered through five months of
extremely barbarous torture. Despite this unbelievable treatment,
it is said that his spirit never broke. On March 26, l9l0, at
10:00 a.m., An was executed at Lui-Shung prison.
Serve to fuel the fires...
The assassination of Hirobumi Ito, like so many other actions
by Korean patriots, seemed to only serve to fuel the fires of
Japanese oppression. In 1910 the office of resident general,
with Ito's successor now in charge, was changed to governor
general in order to allow a more dictatorial approach to the
total control of Korea. Akashi Genjiro was then named as the
commander of the Japanese military and police superintendent
in Korea. He launched an extremely harsh campaign to harass
the Korean population. He closed all newspapers, disbanded al
I patriotic organizations, arrested thousands of Korean leaders,
and enforced a strict military rule of the capital city of Seoul
by crack Japanese combat troops. This type of rule under the
Japanese continued in Korea until Japan surrendered at the end
of World War II.
"The Best Rivers and Mountains."
The
sacrifice of An Joong-Gun was one of many in this chaotic time
in Korean history. His attitude and that of his compatriots
symbolized the loyalty and dedication of the Korean people to
their country's independence and freedom. Mr. An's love for
his country was forever captured in the calligraphy he wrote
in his cell in Lui-Shung Prison prior to his execution. It simply
said, "The Best Rivers and Mountains." This implied
that he felt his country was the most beautiful on earth. Although
his roles spanned from educator to guerilla leader, he was,
above all, a great Korean patriot.
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Pattern and History - 8/15/02