
MASTER JOHN DARCY
7TH DEGREE
A.I.M.A.A EUROPEAN
DIRECTOR
INTERNATIONAL
INSTRUCTOR
OVER 35 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
A.I.M.A.A IRELAND
CHIEF INSTRUCTOR
SENIOR STUDENT OF
GRANDMASTER HEE IL CHO
INTERNATIONAL
REFEREE
CERTIFIED R.A.P.E TM
DEFENCE INSTRUCTOR
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Master John Darcy Interviewed
“Mixed Martial Arts is ruining
Tae Kwon Do!”
When
I first began my Tae Kwon Do
training in 1987 the name on everybody’s lips at the time was a
certain, then Master, Hee II Cho. This continued through out the
next six or seven years and only when I reached the grade of
Black Tags in 1993 did I finally get to train alongside this
true martial arts legend in one of his many international
seminars. The venue at the time was the famous Kelvin Hall in
Glasgow. Every last inch of flooring in the International
athletics venue was filled with eager martial artists, buzzing
at the thought of training alongside a man who; to many of them,
had been a huge, and in some cases only true inspiration behind
their martial arts progress.
I was
young at the time, still a junior in fact, but when Grandmaster
Cho exploded with his first technique it opened my eyes to the
true degree of what is possible if you dedicate your whole life
to your chosen art. I was exceptionally lucky the following year
to grade for the Black belt under Grandmaster Hee II Cho when he
held a testing in Gloucestershire, England. I’m sure, like many
of those who stood beside me on that day, that the black belt we
received for attaining the grade is cherished above all of our
other martial arts achievements.
Thousands of people have trained with the Grandmaster since that
day but only a privileged few have the honour of being able to
not only call Hee II Cho their Grandmaster but also a dear
friend and to a large extent - “a second father” figure. I
recently had the pleasure of discussing many a martial arts
subject with one of these people, sixth Degree Master and AIMAA
(Grandmaster Cho’s International Association) European Director,
John Darcy. Of course there was only one place to start as
Master Darcy elaborates -
“It was 1982 at
the time and I was
part of the A/TA
(Irish Tae Kwon Do Assoc), Grandmaster Cho would come over each
year to do our testings and then a seminar. That is how
I
first met
Grandmaster Cho.”
“Around 1984 there was
a meeting called and the Chairman of the AITA at the time said
that he thought we had the experience in Ireland and didn’t need
Grandmaster Cho anymore.
I knew this was wrong so I stood up at the
meeting, I was the only one out of maybe one
hundred, and said that my loyalty was with Grandmaster Cho and I
would
be staying with him. At that stage I decided to walk out of the
meeting and since then
I
have dedicated my Tae Kwon Do life to the AIMAA and Grandmaster
Cho. Soon after this I traveled to Los Angeles
where Grandmaster Cho had his school at the time. Whilst there I witnessed how he had installed the proper discipline,
respect and attitude into his school and it was then I decided I
would return and change the
face of The Kwon Do in Ireland”.
“Up until this point
I had only seen a fraction of what the man had to offer.
That trip helped me understand the true nature of the man. He is
special, there is nobody in the world like Grandmaster Cho,
physically, mentally and spiritually. He is a one off. There has
never been anyone
like him and there never will be”.
Many things have
changed in the martial arts since then. Many of which have been
negative changes he thought of the changes in martial arts
today, “ I
think that mixed martial arts is ruining Tae Kwon Do today, and
not just Tae Kwon Do but all true martial arts. Everybody wants
the quick fix. They don’t want to put in the work. They forget
about tradition.
I
firmly believe that you need to know where you come from to know
where you’re going. People have forgotten that, people have
forgotten their roots. They learn a bit of grappling, a bit of
boxing, a bit of kickboxing and everything becomes diluted.
What I have learnt from
Grandmaster Cho is that, yes we must incorporate the grappling,
boxing and kickboxing but this must be added onto our
traditional Tae Kwon Do base. We cannot forget where we came
from. It was Grandmaster Cho who first incorporated boxing into
Tae Kwon Do and this, alongside our grappling techniques,
ensures we have the complete system. I was actually the first
instructor to introduce grappling into Ireland. The martial arts
are not meant to be diluted.”
So does this mean that
the martial arts world is losing its loyalty and dedication?
Surely someone who has dedicated nearly forty years of their
life to the martial arts and to one Grandmaster is qualified to
answer.
“I’ll give you an example,” he says.
“Young
people today, they go to college and in many cases they gain a
better education than their mother and father. Does this mean
they don’t need their mother and father any more? It’s the same
way that we as martial artist need our masters and our
grandmasters.”
A big problem that has
arisen in recent years is the devaluation of grades within the
martial arts. We now have people studying their art for less
than a decade and promoting themselves as “Master” this and
“Master” that. Surely that must be a point of concern.
“I know of one person
who was with me in Ireland up till 2002 and is now call ing
himself a master although I definitely do not regard him as
such.” says Master Darcy.
“When he left the AIMAA he was second
degree and now he is sixth degree. How can this be? It should
take eighteen years between the second degree and the masters
degree. He has ‘achieved’ this in only four. It means these
people have no integrity for themselves and no integrity for the
grade. The Masters is supposed to be an honourable degree. I
have also known that people buy these awards from the internet."
So what is the
reason behind this ever-increasing trend? Why are we witnessing
the martial arts diluted and why are we seeing instructor upon
instructor leave the founding Associations to set up on their
own? Master Darcy has one suggestion,
“It’s
greed, these people get to a certain grade, think they know it
all. Like I said before the loyalty is gone. They are lead away
by money. My fellow AIMAA Master, Philip Ameris (AIMAA Technical
Director based in the US, who has also stood beside Grandmaster
Cho for over thirty years) and I have discussed this on numerous
occasions.
Master Ameris is like a brother to me, he has also shown what a
true master of the martial arts is. We can only describe our
feelings by referring it to the meaning behind one of our Tae
Kwon Do Forms
-
Po Eun”- (In Tae Kwon Do each pattern is given a meaning,
derived from a historical character of importance in Korean
history). Master Darcy continues
“Po-Eun was a poet who wrote a poem ‘I
shall not serve a second master though I may be crucified one
hundred times’. That is how we feel about Grandmaster Cho. I
would rather cut my hand off than leave him”.
So what inspires this fierce dedication? Why
Grandmaster Hee II Cho, and why the AIMAA? Everyone within the
martial arts world knows Hee II Cho the movie star, the author
the martial arts legend but what about the true master? What is
it that makes this Grandmaster so special?
“Grandmaster Cho lives
and breathes his art".
I
notice at this point that Master Darcy becomes visibly inspired
when he reflects on the attributes that have created one of, if
not the, greatest martial artist in history. He continues,
“He
doesn’t sit behind his desk and say, yes I am the Grandmaster.
He has never asked any of his students to do anything that he
doesn’t do himself. He will train harder than any one of us and
in turn that is where we get it from. This work ethic is passed
down from Master to Master. That is the way it is in the AIMAA
today”
“Every time I think or talk about the man I get goose pimples.
Spiritually, mentally,
physically, he has it all. Every time I talk with Master Ameris
we talk about how lucky we are to have a Grandmaster like
Grandmaster Cho. I would honestly rather cut my hand off than
leave him".
As I neared
the end of my discussion with this true master of Tae Kwon Do I
allowed myself a moment to indulge my own interest in gaining an
in-site into the personal relationship these two men have
developed. I gathered from the time that I spent with Master
Darcy that the honour of gaining the friendship of such a man as
Hee II Cho was as equally rewarding as learning the ancient arts
was.
How about
favourite memories? I asked Master Darcy for one or two.
“I
have lots of memories” he said. I again notice the master’s
eyes light
up as
he struggles to pick just a few. “I remember we took a Christmas
vacation to the Bahamas and we were walking together when
someone approached us and got down on his knees in front of
Grandmaster Cho. He said ‘Sir, I have all your books and videos.
It is such an honour to meet you’, at that moment I had to pinch
myself to remember the company
I was in. Also, learning the pattern, Se-Jong, on the boardwalk
before going to swim with the dolphins. Those were the
highlights.”
It is very
clear from the first moment you meet Master Darcy that this is
an individual who is so passionate and dedicated to his chosen
art and Grandmaster. There are no gimmicks, with this particular
master, what you see is what you get. Master Darcy finished our
interview with a little story that sums up what he has cre ated
in Ireland, an undisputed loyalty and dedication to, as he puts
it, ‘the greatest martial artist living today’.
He continues,
“We have an instructor here in Ireland, Mr Finn, who built a
little Do-Jang in his back yard. He told me once that he
sometimes trains at one o’clock in the morning.” So I fired
a question at him and asked him what inspires him to keep
training.
“Well
sir, I have pictures
of Grandmaster Cho on the wall, along side one of me and you,
and one of me with Grandmaster Cho. Then I look down to the Cho
badge on my Do-bok and the AIMAA lettering on my belt. That is
the only inspiration I need.”
Surely as we continue through a period where people search for
the quick fix, in an area where there are no quick fixes, this
should be all the inspiration that any of us true martial
artists need.
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