Suh In-Hyuk and foundations of Kuk Sool Won Suh In-Hyuk claims that he was trained by his grandfather, a supposed master-instructor to the Korean Royal Court named Suh Myung-Deuk, and followed a family tradition of martial arts that stretched back sixteen generations. After the death of his grandfather during the
Korean War, he travelled throughout the Far East visiting various Buddhist monasteries and other esteemed martial arts masters as research for developing his own system. His younger brother, Seo In-Sun, took lessons from the founder of
Hapkido,
Choi Yong-sool, and would later show what he was taught to his two older brothers. A lawsuit revealed allegations that Suh In-Hyuk’s narrative was fabricated, and that his grandfather was not a member of the Korean Royal Court. Suh In-Hyuk's first wife claims that he started martial arts because he had been severely beaten and wanted revenge on his attackers. In her opinion, Suh In-Hyuk lied about his history due to the belief that it would be harder to disprove it in the United States. A bare-bones curriculum for the system was developed in 1958 and later, the
Kuk Sool Won was founded in 1961 (the initial syllabus continuing to be fleshed out and modified as the years went on). Suh fled South Korea in 1974 and decided to introduce his system to the United States in 1975.
Spread In 1991, Kuk Sool Won was selected as an extracurricular activity for the
U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and, in 1992, Suh In-Hyuk was presented with the Commander's Sword at
West Point. In the Netherlands, Kuk Sool Won is practiced in six schools. The highest rank instructor in the Netherlands is Robbin Baly (6th dan), who teaches a group of approximately 200 students in
Amsterdam and elsewhere. Kuk Sool Won was imported to Iran in 1980 by engineer Dariush Ghaffari, who lived in the United States prior. He first started teaching the art at the "Tehran Fire Club". There have been multiple allegations raised in a lawsuit against the organization recently. The federal court lawsuit includes claims of financial mismanagement, contract disputes, wrongful termination, and defamatory actions against former high-ranking members. == Technique ==