About
our Art
The
History of the
New
England Chinese Karate Federation
The
historical information of the Chinese Karate Federation (CKF) was
verified through Mr. Lee Wedlake,
the initial founder of the CKF.
This
history of our group actually predates the founding of the CKF.
In the mid ‘60s
through the early 70’s, Kenpo in New England consisted largely
of a version of Kenpo
Karate initially taught by Mr. George Pesare in Providence, RI.
This version of Kenpo was
in part composed of five “Kenpo Kata”, punch techniques, and
Kenpo combinations. One of
Mr. Pesare’s first Black Belt students was Mr. Nick Cerio, who
opened his first Kenpo Karate school
in the late ‘60s. One of Mr. Cerio’s first Black Belt students
was Mr. Fred Villari, who took
the Pesare-Cerio system of Kenpo and blanketed New England with
franchised studios of self-defense.
Until the early 1980’s most of the Kenpo Black Belts in New
England stemmed from
the Pesare-Cerio-Villari lineage.
Then
in the early ‘80s several of these Kenpo Black Belts contacted
Mr. Ed Parker, Founder of American
Parker Kenpo, and became members of Mr. Parker’s International
Kenpo Karate Association
(IKKA). It should be noted that membership in the IKKA was open to
any “Kenpo based”
martial artist. It did not consist solely of Parker Kenpo
students.
Through
their association with the IKKA, several New England studio
directors were given training
tapes by Mr. Parker to begin learning the Parker Kenpo system, and
then to convert their
original system of Kenpo to Parker Kenpo. During this time of
initial training and conversion
Mr. Steve White, a Black Belt student in the Pesare-Cerio-Villari
lineage, joined the group.
After a period of training with these individuals and with the
training tapes, Mr. White contacted
Mr. Lee Wedlake, then of Chicago, IL, a 1st generation Black Belt
student of Mr. Parker.
He told Mr. Wedlake of the New England Kenpo group’s goal of
learning the Parker Kenpo
system, and Mr. Wedlake invited him to Chicago to learn the system
directly from him.
This
began several years of traveling and training, during which Mr.
White learned the complete Parker
Kenpo system. Also during this time Mr. White brought Mr. Wedlake
to New England to conduct
seminars for studio directors to further enhance the state of
Parker Kenpo in New England.
Mr. White also brought Mr. Parker to his Manchester studio several
times to provide his
students with direct instruction from the Kenpo founder.
When
Mr. Wedlake saw that Mr. White was well-grounded in the
foundational aspects of Parker Kenpo,
he referred Mr. White to Mr. Richard “Huk” Planas, also a 1st
generation Black Belt student
of Mr. Parker, for a thorough mechanical review of all the
material. Mr. Planas was instrumental
in the formation of the original Kenpo basics, forms, and
techniques taught in the Ed
Parker franchise studios, and was known as the “last word” in
the mechanical basics and principles
underlying these forms and techniques.
Mr. White's training
relationship with Mr. Planas
lasted for 15 years. Through co-training with Mr. Planas and Mr.
Wedlake, Mr. White obtained
a full understanding of the mechanics, and underlying principles
that Mr. Parker had intentionally
placed in his system of Kenpo. Mr. Wedlake, impressed with Mr.
White’s technical understanding
of the system, asked Mr. Parker to make Mr. White the Technical
Advisor for the New
England Region of the IKKA. Mr. Parker assigned this position to
Mr. White at a public gathering
of New England Kenpoists in 1986.
Then, in 1989 Mr. White became
the first New England
studio director to have students complete the IKKA requirements
for promotion to 1st Degree
Black Belt. That year, under the supervision of Mr. Parker, Mr.
White promoted five students
to the rank of 1st Degree Black Belt in the Parker Kenpo system.
Following
Mr. Parker’s passing in December of 1990, the Kenpo community
underwent many changes.
An initial change was the Parker family’s reorganization of the
IKKA. Some of Mr. Parker’s
senior students, high ranking officials in Mr. Parker’s
organization, were not given a voice
in the restructured IKKA. This led to many of them leaving the
IKKA to start their own Kenpo
organizations, creating a splintering that is still felt in the
Kenpo community today.
During
this time, Mr. White decided to remain out of the political
systems which were becoming mainstream
in Kenpo to develop a sound curriculum that would bring a student
from White Belt to
advanced Black Belt. He sought assistance in this project from one
of his 1st generation Black
Belt students, Dr. Len Brassard. Dr. Brassard held a Ph.D. in
Clinical Psychology and had
extensive experience teaching in universities in Mississippi,
Arkansas, and Massachusetts.
Using
the academic model, as Mr. Parker did in the formulation of his
original Kenpo concepts, Mr.
White and Dr. Brassard began creating an entire system for
teaching and learning the art of Parker
Kenpo. Their first project was the development of an etiquette
manual outlining proper martial
arts behavior both inside and outside the training studio. As
partial requirements for promotion
to Black Belt, each Black Belt candidate was required to study
this manual and pass a
written test.
Their
second project was the development of a teaching hierarchy with
written manuals detailing the
specific requirements for each stage. Three levels of teaching
were chosen, with each level having
three stages. Promotion from one teaching stage to another
required specific classroom experience
and passing a written exam based on the manual required for that
stage. With several
years of tweaking, Mr. White’s group was producing Instructors
who were both skillful
and
knowledgeable in Parker Kenpo.
With
the creation of a proficient teaching staff underway, Mr. White
and Dr. Brassard then began
detailing a day-by-day classroom curriculum for the study of
Parker Kenpo. Their goal was
to develop specific requirements for each rank in the Kenpo
system. Within one year a classroom
curriculum was developed leading to a Black Belt promotion. When
students trained in
this curriculum were preparing for Black Belt, Mr. White brought
Mr. Wedlake to New England to
observe the Black Belt exams and provide feedback on the students’
performance. Changes were
made until the proficiency of the 1st Degree Black Belts became
consistent.
Then
in the mid ‘90s, with the urging of his senior students, Mr.
Wedlake formed a nonpolitical association
comprised of students in his martial arts lineage. He chose the
name Chinese Karate
Federation (CKF), and it originally consisted of groups in
Florida, New England, and the Midwest.
Mr. White was recognized as the Director of the New England Region
of the CKF.
Unlike
many of its political counterparts, the CKF did not collect dues
from its member studios or students,
nor did it issue rank. Rather, membership required a sincere
commitment to train in the
Parker Kenpo system under a qualified Instructor. To satisfy this
requirement, a “qualified” Instructor
had to be at least a 3rd Degree Black Belt who had also met the
teaching requirements
necessary to hold the title of Full Instructor. “Training”
could only occur through a single
systematic training curriculum developed by a qualified
Instructor, and maintaining membership
in the CKF required a certain number of training hours each year.
Based on Mr. White’s
suggestion, CKF members were given log books to track their
training experiences.
As
the CKF membership began to grow, Mr. Wedlake wanted to have the
manuals and curriculum
created by Mr. White & Dr. Brassard to become the standard for
the CKF studios. In 1996,
to show their appreciation for the work Mr. White and Dr. Brassard
were doing in creating this
standard Mr. Wedlake and Mr. Sean Kelley, along with other CKF
studio directors, presented
the two with specialty knives designed by master knife maker Gil
Hibben. Mr. Hibben originally
designed the 'Kenpo Knife' - also known as the 'Parker Knife' in
1968 for his Black Belt thesis
on knife fighting using motion and concepts from the Kenpo system.
In
1998 Mr. Wedlake's priorities turned towards the development of
his studio in Fort Meyers, Fl.
Subsequently he chose to resign from the CKF. In his final letter
to the CKF member studios
he indicated a desire to see the CKF continue under the direction
of Mr. White and Mr. Sean
Kelley. While Mr. Kelley took over the reins of the Florida region
of the CKF, Mr. White chose
to continue the projects he started in the early ‘90s, the
development of training methods for
the professional Kenpo Instructor.
Mr.
White has reorganized his New England group under the banner: “New
England Chinese Karate
Federation” and he continues to be a student and close personal
friend of Mr. Wedlake; a
friendship that has spanned almost 20 years. Along with Mr.
Wedlake’s input, Mr. White has remained
steadfast to the original philosophy of the CKF. That true growth
in the Parker Kenpo system
can only be achieved by a sincere commitment to further one’s
skill and knowledge in a systematic
training curriculum created and taught by a qualified Instructor.
While Kenpo seminars
and camps are a wonderful vehicle for exposing students to the
many facets of American
Parker Kenpo, they have not yet provided a systematic
standardization of the Kenpo forms
and techniques, from Delayed Sword thru Form #6, that a studio
owner can introduce into the
classroom.
The
goal of the New England Chinese Karate Federation and this website
is threefold: (1) to provide
the professional Parker Kenpo Instructor with a thorough
understanding of the mechanics
and underlying principles contained in the Kenpo forms and
techniques, (2) to provide
day-by-day classroom curriculum from White Belt through 9th Degree
Black Belt; curriculum
that includes warm-up exercises, techniques and forms information,
and drills designed
to further develop a students Kenpo skill, and (3) to provide
business management and
marketing techniques to help Instructors operate professional and
successful studios.
Thanks
to Dr. Len Brassard.
For
more information:
New England Chinese Karate
Federation
Dr.
Len Brassard's Family Martial Arts Center
Steve White's Manchester
Karate Studio
Mount Vernon Karate Studio
Lee Wedlake's Karate Studio
Chinese Karate
Federation
Some
Kenpo Clips
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