Dancing hankido enables people to practice the 12 basic self defence techniques of hankido in a peacefull and relaxed way. This way moo yae do bup makes hankido extremely accesible to virtually everyone. Movements can be preformed slowly and there is no need for falling.
Third principle
A little known fact to many people is that moo yae do bup was primary developed to enable the practioners to gain deeper insight into the third principle of hankido, 'Harmony of movement and hearth'. When practicing moo yae do bup together you should focus your mind and movements on this principle. Move together and sense the movements of eachother. This counts not only for the defender, but for the attacker as well. Without attention for the principles, the techniques become empty and without soul.
Elegance
Not shows the elegance of HKD better then a well preformed HKD dancing technique. Moo Yae Do Bup was developed by the late grandmaster Myung Jae Nam as part of the complete hankido curriculum.
The intention was indeed to make hankido techniques widely accesible to everyone and to enable families to practice self defence together.
