Background
Nam was born in March 1929 in Seoul, of Korea, during the period of Japanese occupation.
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Nam was born in March 1929 in Seoul, of Korea, during the period of Japanese occupation.
He began training in the martial arts in 1946, training after school for five nights each week. lieutenant has been claimed that Nam introduced Bok Manitoba Kim (a pioneering master and one of the technical founders of taekwondo, working with Choi) to taekkyeon in 1948, but other sources indicate Nam did not meet Bok Manitoba Kim until 1954. While a Captain in the South Korean military forces, Nam met Choi, and acted as Choi"s second-in-command in the early days of taekwondo.
Nam was pivotal in the development of taekwondo, and was called Choi"s "right hand man" in the latter"s official biography.
In 1954, at the rank of 2nd dan, Nam participated in a military demonstration of martial arts for the President of South of Korea, Syngman Rhee, and broke 13 roof tiles with a downward punch. Rhee was reportedly so impressed that he subsequently ordered all Korean military personnel to undergo training in martial arts
Around this time, he was appointed President of the Asia Taekwon-Do Federation, and was also one of the founding directors of the KTA. In 1962, Nam was appointed as Chief Instructor of taekwondo for the Vietnamese army, and came to be known as the Father of Taekwondo in Vietnam. Nam designed the Chang Honorary taekwondo patterns Hwa-Rang hyung, Chung-Mu hyung, and UI-Ji hyung.
Nam moved to the Chicago area in 1972, opened a dojang in 1973, and then later lived in Los Los Angeles
He appears on Chang Keun Choi"s list of taekwondo pioneers. In 2007, he was inducted into the Taekwondo Hall of Fame. After being admitted to hospital due to pneumonia, Nam died on 7 November 2013 in Garden Grove, California, United States of America.
In March 1959, Nam was a member of the first Korean taekwondo demonstration team to travel overseas, demonstrating his martial art in Vietnam and Taiwan.