You are partially correct. Joe Foster was a personal student of Ed Parker and his representative for Canada when he was alive. After Ed Parker's death, Joe Foster was the IKKA Canadian Regional Director for many years. Kenjute does apply many American Kenpo self-defence concepts and principles in its striking techniques - although Kenjute's striking self-defences are different. Also different from American Kenpo: Kenjute also teaches "manipulation" self-defences including ground skills (great for security and police work); many different hand-held weapons; different types of sparring; and different forms. Thanks for your comment.
The Founder of Kenjute is Joe Foster. He was a personal student of Ed Parker and was his representative for Canada. Thus, there is definitely a Kenpo influence in Kenjute. Kenjute also applies many fighting principles from other martial arts too - the goal of which is to expose students to a broad-based martial arts education. Kenjute has its own curriculum. To view this go to www.kenjuteinternational.com Thanks for your comment.
Kenjute self-defences are taught in the "ideal phase" of learning. Applying these techniques can also be broken down into altered smaller pieces to match the situation and threat level. The fact is, the majority of people who engage in altercations are not "trained resisting opponents". Over the decades police officers and security guards (especially the ones working in bars), who have been exposed to some Kenjute training, have successfully applied these skills to both untrained and "trained" fighters. I've seen it and done it. So I will have to politely disagree with your inference. Thank you for your comment and contribution. It is appreciated.
This is like American kenpo with a more modern inclusion of the weapons and tactics 🔥🔥🔥🔥
You are partially correct. Joe Foster was a personal student of Ed Parker and his representative for Canada when he was alive. After Ed Parker's death, Joe Foster was the IKKA Canadian Regional Director for many years. Kenjute does apply many American Kenpo self-defence concepts and principles in its striking techniques - although Kenjute's striking self-defences are different. Also different from American Kenpo: Kenjute also teaches "manipulation" self-defences including ground skills (great for security and police work); many different hand-held weapons; different types of sparring; and different forms. Thanks for your comment.
Wow!
It looks very Kempo!
And that is awesome! 😎
The Founder of Kenjute is Joe Foster. He was a personal student of Ed Parker and was his representative for Canada. Thus, there is definitely a Kenpo influence in Kenjute. Kenjute also applies many fighting principles from other martial arts too - the goal of which is to expose students to a broad-based martial arts education. Kenjute has its own curriculum. To view this go to www.kenjuteinternational.com Thanks for your comment.
That flaming stick work is like fire bending!
We apply our double-stick self-defence techniques in a form (kata) using fire for interest and a challenge. Thanks for your comment.
Nice video, clearly a lot of work went into putting everything together and cataloging all the techniques.
Thank you. What city are you in?
Try this on trained resisting opponents and see what happens
Kenjute self-defences are taught in the "ideal phase" of learning. Applying these techniques can also be broken down into altered smaller pieces to match the situation and threat level. The fact is, the majority of people who engage in altercations are not "trained resisting opponents". Over the decades police officers and security guards (especially the ones working in bars), who have been exposed to some Kenjute training, have successfully applied these skills to both untrained and "trained" fighters. I've seen it and done it. So I will have to politely disagree with your inference. Thank you for your comment and contribution. It is appreciated.
From NZ
All Done In A
Lighted Hall
With Mat's
WTF
Looks like fun
Yes it is...and educational too! Thanks for your comment.
@@kenjuteinternational3940 Np, cant wait to come check it out