In 1959, Kim moved to the US permanently and began teaching
martial arts in
San Francisco, particularly at the Chinese YMCA. He traveled extensively throughout the United States, Canada, and
Europe, teaching wherever he went. He founded branches of the
Butoku Kai in the U.S., Canada, France and Germany. Kim wrote a monthly column for
Karate Illustrated magazine, and wrote a number of books including:
The Weaponless Warriors,
The Classical Man, and an instructional series on weaponry (
Kobudo). There has been some controversy surrounding
The Weaponless Warriors, published in 1974, as the bulk of the work appears taken, without acknowledgement, directly from
Eizo Shimabukuro's 1963 work
Old Grandmaster Stories, which was translated into English for the first time in 2003. Kim was named
Black Belt Magazine's "Karate Sensei of the Year", in 1967, and was later inducted into the
Black Belt Magazine Hall of Fame. Kim was the Director of the American Amateur Karate Federation, Vice-President for the
International Traditional Karate Federation (ITKF), and coaching staff for the 1980 U.S. National Karate Team. He continued to teach, lecture and lead martial arts activities until his death. Kim died on November 8, 2001. At his memorial service,
Hidetaka Nishiyama of the ITKF presented Kim with the rank of
Judan (10th degree black belt) posthumously. His teachings continue through a number of organizations founded by some of his senior students: the Zen Bei Butoku Kai International (
Brian Ricci and Frank Gaviola), the Kokusai Butokukai (
Jean Chalamon), the International Ryukyu Karate Research Society & Koryu Uchinadi (Patrick McCarthy), and the Bu Toku Do (Don Warrener). Dozens of dojos carry on the legacy of O’Sensei (Great Teacher) Kim, including in California, Michigan, Massachusetts, Canada, France, Germany and the Caribbean. ==Publications==