
There are five men credited as co-creators of Kajukenbo, and it is from their respective arts that Kajukenbo draws it's name.
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KAJUKENBO: |
KA |
JU |
KEN |
BO |
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Art: |
Karate |
Judo |
Jujitsu |
Kenpo |
Chinese Boxing |
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Style: |
Tang Soo Do |
Se Keino Ryu |
Kodenkan Danzan Ryu |
Kosho Ryu |
Chu'an Fa Kung-Fu |
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Contributing Founder: |
Peter Young Yil Choo |
Frank Ordonez |
Joe Holck |
Adriano Emperado |
Clarence Chang |
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Chinese Character: |
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Meaning: |
"Long life" |
"Happiness" |
"Fist" |
"Style" |
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Philosophical Meaning of Kajukenbo: "Through this fist style one gains long life and happiness." |
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Kenpo emerged as the core around which this new art was built. Although uncreditted by name, other influences included American Boxing (Choo was Hawaiian Welterweight Champion) and Escrima (Emperado also studied Kali and Arnis Escrima).
In the late 1940's, Palama Settlement was a community center in a violent area of
The emphasis during training was on realism - so much so that students routinely broke bones, fainted from exhaustion, or were knocked unconcious. Nevertheless, the reputation of this tough new art drew more students and Emperado opened a second school at the nearby Kaimuki YMCA. Soon Emperado had 12 Kajukenbo schools in