Originally posted by John Bishop
jazkiljok:
You know, honestly I don't remember when or why I included Carroll Shumacher on the kenpo tree. If there is some reason you feel his subsystem should not be on the tree feel free to tell me.
Originally I started this family tree to help myself and others find out what their Kenpo roots were. In my research I started running into so many variations of Kenpo that I started conecting the lines.
In 1990, I did a article on William Chow for "Inside Karate". I included this tree in the article. After that I started getting letters from around the country from people telling me that they had never knew their roots.
Example; In 1962 George Pesare started teaching Kenpo on the east coast. From his lines came Nick Cerio, Don Rodriguez, Fred Vallari, Charles Mattera, Roger Carpenter, etc. George learned his Kenpo in Burbank, Calif from Victor Sonny Gascon. George moved to Rhode Island, Victor moved back to Hawaii, and they lost contact with each other. Victor never talked about who his instructor was (Sijo Emperado), they just trained. When my kenpo tree was published everyone on the east coast finally found their roots. And 10 years later in 2000, they brought Sonny Gascon to the east coast to meet the generations of Kajukenbo/Kenpo people that had come from his lines.
I'm sure some of these subsystems have very minor changes from their root system, and some have major changes.
Back to Limalama. Dan Guzman told me that after the organization was founded his 2 students (Richard Nunez, Saul Esquival) that were involved in the founding invited him to visit their classes. He said after watching their workouts the only way he could describe it was "like someone had moved around all the furniture in their house and then tried to tell you it was a differant house". In other words they were doing Kajukenbo/Kenpo with a few changes.
I guess what I'm trying to say about the tree is that it is NOT meant to be a certification of the legitimacy of a subsystem, but as a tool for instructors and students to trace the roots of a subsystem. More importantly it is to give credit to men like William Chow, Adriano Emperado, and Edmund Parker, whose teachings have contributed so much to the spread of American/Hawaiian martial arts in the world.