| My
name is Michael Dew and I hold a 7th degree black belt. I
studied judo as a youngster, but apart from that I haven’t
practiced any martial art other than tae kwon-do.
I began training in 1969 when
I was in Malaysia. It wasn’t something I planned to
do, it just happened. I was on secondment duties to the Malaysian
Air Force and began training under Master Nam Tai Hee, General
Choi’s right hand man.
When I returned to Britain
I was a brown belt (the equivalent grade is now a red belt)
and remained at that grade for five years. Teh Hok Aun, who
was then the instructor at the Glasgow Academy, took me under
his wing and gave me a lot of encouragement at that time.
I set up my first tae kwon-do
school in 1975 in Weston super Mare, on the RAF camp, and
it spread from there until there are now over 100 TAGB schools
in the area. So I suppose I have been responsible for the
expansion of tae kwon-do in the South West. I am now based
in Bristol and run the Academy
where our black belt gradings take place.
As Area Co-ordinator I hold
regular meetings with local instructors so everyone knows
exactly what is going on. The TAGB is very much an instructor’s
association. We know that instructors are the people who put
in the enthusiasm at ground level, that’s why we look
after them.
I am also the vice-chairman
of the TAGB, and I was
chairman of the British
Tae Kwon-Do Council. That takes up more and more of my
time because a large association needs a great deal of managing,
so our committee holds regular meetings.
Also the BTC is at long last beginning to make a difference
to tae kwon-do in this country so more time is taken up organising
BTC policies.
I would like to think that
I have been able to influence the TAGB for the better, although
I haven’t done that on my own. There are eight guys
on the committee and we all have pretty definite ideas. I
admire the way the members of the committee are all so very
different and yet pull together. There is no one person who
dominates the TAGB.
My greatest joy has been to
see the TAGB develop in the way it has this past twenty plus
years and I would like to see the TAGB continuing along its
present lines – progressing steadily and not expanding
too quickly.
Membership of the TAGB has
several benefits. On the tournament scene, those benefits
are obvious because the TAGB is the most internationally recognised
organisation for those who want to compete. We produce some
top fighters because we have such a depth of talent to choose
from – there are so many good tournament fighters who
are not yet in the team!
Another benefit of TAGB membership
is that being part of a large organisation means you can travel
all over Britain with your job or studies and still continue
to train in a TAGB dojang.
Finally, my personal message
to students out there is: if you are going to take up a martial
art, then the most important thing is to join a well-established
organisation with a good reputation, made up of schools which
are run properly. I think you will find that all TAGB schools
are run that way! So, if you want to join an organisation
that is still growing and an organisation that looks after
its students then the TAGB is for you.
This is not just my opinion,
over 20,000 current TAGB members agree with me!
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