Kombat Klub Mixed Martial Arts Philippines
MMA , Kenpo , Boxing, , Muay Thai, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and self defense. Certified instructors.
14/05/2026
Sijo Adriano D. Emperado was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, on June 15, 1926. He was born to Filipino-Hawaiian parents in the poor Palama section of Honolulu. He started his self defense training at the age of 8. At this time in his life both his father and uncle were professional boxers, so of course he was taught how to box. His next training came at the age of 11 while he was living with his older brother in Kauai. There he learned the basic 12 strikes of escrima. At age 14 he found himself back in his old Palama neighborhood. There he trained in judo under Sensei Taneo at the Palama Settlement Gym. A few years later at the age of 20 Emperado undertook the serious study of kenpo at the Catholic Youth Organization in Honolulu. These classes were taught by the legendary Professor William K.S. Chow. Professor Chow had been a student of kenpo jiu jitsu instructor James Mitose, and also held a 5th degree black belt in judo. Emperado trained daily with Chow and soon became his first black belt. Emperado spent years with Professor Chow becoming his Chief Instructor and attaining the rank of 5th degree black belt. During the developmental years of Kajukenbo Emperado would train with the 4 other co-founders during the day and then teach classes for Chow in the evenings. After the other 4 went off to war, Emperado started the first Kajukenbo school at the Palama Settlement Gym in 1950. The workouts that took place there are legendary for their brutality. Emperado has been quoted as saying that a workout wasn't over until there was blood on the floor. He felt "that you have to experience pain before you can give it. You have to know what your technique can do. "We lost a lot of students in those days, but we also got a lot from other schools, including black belts. He then described how his first black belt Marino Tiwanak joined his class after being soundly defeated by him in response to Tiwanak's challenge. What makes this such a astonishing story is the fact that Marino Tiwanak was the flyweight boxing champion of Hawaii at the time of the challenge. With the success of the Palama Settlement school Emperado started expanding. He left the teaching at the Palama school to his brother Joe while he started classes at the Kaimuki Y.M.C.A. and the Wahiwa Y.M.C.A.. Soon the Kajukenbo Self Defense Institute of Hawaii, Inc. was the largest chain of karate schools in Hawaii. Emperado also became instrumental in the development of tournament karate in Hawaii. He sat on the Hawaii Karate Rules Board, which established standards for competition used throughout the islands. A lot of Emperado's knowledge of street fighting came from his many years in law enforcement. He had spent 14 years as a harbor policeman for the Hawaii Department of a Transportation, and a year with the Hawaii Attorney General's Office. While with the Attorney General's Office he served as a body guard to the governor. He then entered the private sector as the security director for a large company. He worked in the corporate security field until he suffered a heart attack in 1982. All of his life Emperado has studied various martial arts. In his 30s he expanded his knowledge of escrima by training with his step father Alfredo Peralta. Peralta taught him a method using the single stick. Emperado described how they would take 2x4s and taper down handles and then train with them. He said that "after a workout with the 2x4 you could make a rattan stick go like lighting". About the same time he started a serious study of various kung fu systems. He studied under Professor Lau Bun of the Choy Li Fut system and Professor Wong of the Northern Shaolin system. Several years later these professors and the Hawaii Chinese Physical Culture Association awarded Emperado the title Professor 10th degree. Also at this time he was awarded a certificate by Grandmaster Ho Gau of Hong Kong appointing him as a advisor and representative of the Choy Li Fut system. This certificate was signed by Grandmaster Ho Gau, Professor Cheuk Tse, and the directors of the Hawaii Chinese Physical Culture Association. This was truly an accolade when one considers that the Hawaii Chinese Physical Culture Association was the first kung fu school outside of China. Because he had been exposed to many fighting systems Emperado has always been one to welcome innovation. Unlike most of the traditional systems, his Kajukenbo evolves constantly. To date there are 4 systems within then kajukenbo style. The first of course is the Original Method, sometimes referred to as the kenpo karate branch. This is the system that Emperado, Holck, Choo, Ordonez, and Chang formulated between 1947 and 1949. The original method uses kenpo karate as a base and adds selected techniques from the tang soo do, judo, jujitsu, and sil-lum pai kung fu systems. The second system is the Tum Pai branch. This system was in development from 1959-1966 by Emperado, Al Dacascos, and Al De La Cruz. Development was suspended in 1966 when Dacascos moved to the mainland. Its development was then re-activated in 1984 by Jon Loren. The Tum Pai system incorporates the original kajukenbo techniques along with tai chi chuan elements. The third system is the Chuan Fa branch. This system started development in 1966. Again this was a collaboration of Emperado, Al Dacascos, and Al De La Cruz. This system incorporated the Northern and Southern styles of kung fu with the original method of kajukenbo. The result was a blend of soft and hard techniques. The Chuan Fa system also opened the door to the richness and unlimited techniques that the Chinese arts had to offer. The last system is the Won Hop Kuen Do (combination fist art) branch. This branch was the brain child of Al Dacascos. When he moved to the San Francisco area in the early 60s Dacascos supplemented his kajukenbo training with an extensive study of the Chinese and Filipino arts. In 1969 he saw that his kajukenbo was becoming a blend of the various systems that he was learning. This system that he named Won Hop Kuen Do contained the original kajukenbo forms and 25 exclusive fighting principles. Like all of the systems, Won Hop Kuen Do is in a constant state of evolution. Although kajukenbo has 4 systems Emperado has always stressed that no system is superior to another and that they are not improvements on the original method. They are just kajukenbo expressions that emphasize different techniques. In his lifetime Emperado has seen his kajukenbo style grow into a major martial art that is practiced all across the United States and in several countries. Sijo Emperado passed away on April 4, 2009.
13/05/2026
Was my pleasure.
"Sijo Adriano D. Emperado The Force Behind KAJUKENBO many branches only one sijo, Your legacy will remain within all of us. Much Love and Respect to all Brothers and Sister of Kajukenbo no matter what branch we are ONE. Sijo Adriano D Emperado! always in our Body, Mind and Spirit.. Kaju4eva." Sijo Lives On, Every Time One Of Us Puts On The Gi To Train. β£ we will carry on his legacy and honor his memory!
& the of Sijo Adriano ππ½ June 15, 1926 - April 4, 2009
Kajukenbo Ohana feel free to share βΊπ€πΌβ£
13/05/2026
This is either incredible or a hoax.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1ay1QNRL6z/
In 1980, a man named Minoru Yoshida reportedly completed an unbelievable 10,507 push-ups without stopping πͺπ³ Not spread across a day. Not with long rest breaks. Just continuous push-ups that pushed human endurance to an extreme level.
What fascinates many people isnβt only the physical strength required, but the mental discipline behind it. Most people struggle to imagine reaching even a fraction of that number before exhaustion, pain, or frustration forces them to quit. At some point, the challenge stops being about muscles and becomes entirely about mindset.
People online often point out that the hardest moments probably were not the beginning, but the thousands of repetitions afterward β when boredom, fatigue, and self-doubt become overwhelming. The achievement has become a symbol of mental endurance as much as physical ability π§ π₯
The story continues spreading online because it reminds people how quickly the mind tries to negotiate limits before the body has actually reached them. Whether or not someone could ever repeat such a feat, many viewers see the message behind it as powerful:
Human potential is often far greater than people believe when they refuse to give up π
Congrats Bob Part 14
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Asuncion Subd , 0386 East Emilio Aguinaldo Highway 411 Lalaan 2 Silang Cavite
Silang
4118
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| Monday | 5pm - 9pm |
| Tuesday | 5pm - 9pm |
| Thursday | 5pm - 9pm |
| Saturday | 8:30pm - 1:30pm |