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Shotokan of England Karate Union : ウィキペディア英語版 | Shotokan of England Karate Union
The Shotokan of England Karate Union (SEKU), founded in 1982 is a federation of Shotokan karate clubs in southern England, with about thirty clubs from Helston in Cornwall to Bromley in Greater London. The federation is led by Mick Dewey, 8th dan, who was a student of the late Keinosuke Enoeda. ==History== The ''Shotokan of England Karate Union'' was founded in 1982 by a group of clubs affiliated to the KUGB.〔(The Shotokan Way Magazine )〕 Originally named the ''South of England Karate Union'', a change to ''Shotokan of England Karate Union'' was necessary when northern English clubs joined. In 1984, due to the Unions growth, Mick Dewey invited his friend Dave Hazard (Hazard was a regular visiting instructor at ''Brighton Shotokan'') to join as technical director of the SEKU. Brighton Shotokan was founded in June 1974 by Mick Dewey and Phil Elliott at the Sussex Sports Centre, Queens Square, Brighton. Phil Elliott stopped training around 1978/9 and Mick Dewey continued running the club then around 1980 he handed the responsibilities to club members Greg Wedekind,Will Davies, John Cave and Paul Bonnet, they continued running the club until the arrival of Dave Hazard. At the invitation by Mick Dewey and the agreement of the four instructors, Dave Hazard was offered the full-time teaching position at the Brighton club.〔For SEKU, to be a grading examiner, Hazard had to be running his own club so this fulfilled two goals, high quality regular instruction in Brighton and a Grading Examiner.〕 Dave Hazard moved to Brighton in 1985 and built the club into an elite training ground for adults, mainly black and brown belts. Dave Hazard worked within SEKU until 2003 when he left to found the Academy of Shotokan Karate.
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