• Up Front • ti x Class 4 Master Jay Penfil teaches an ancient art of self-defense at the Jewish Community Center. • LONNY GOLDSMITH Staff Writer A • • t 14 years old, Jay Penfil was training police officers in Highland Park to use nunchucks, a defense weapon comprised of two sticks held together by a chain. Just a year after the Clinton Junior High School student began his martial arts training, he landed his first teach- ing assignment. Now 39, Penfil is a sixth-degree black belt in Tang (pronounced "Tung") Soo Do, bears the title of Master, and runs the 79-student pro- gram at the Maple/Drake Jewish Community Center. "I began taking classes for self- defense reasons," he said. "There were a lot of bullies at school, and I needed to know how to defend myself. After a month, my instructor began teaching me to teach." Penfil, an Oak Park native, began training in 1975 under Master Harvey Schwartz at the JCC on Meyers and Curtis in Detroit. When the center opened in West Bloomfield, he earned his second-degree black belt and, in 1980, began teaching Tang Soo Do there. In 1988, Penfil earned his fourth-degree black belt and became a Master. A foray into the private sector was short-lived. In 1984, he and William Bigio opened the Berkley Tang Soo Do studio. It closed because the building owners wanted to expand their own business there. And, it wasn't the best of milieus in which to teach the art. "Most schools try and turn a profit, so there is another class every 55 min- utes," Penfil said. "Our philosophy is, and was, that multi-hour training is best. We couldn't turn over the floor enough to /hake money. It's the right way to teach, the wrong way to make a living." Bigio, a third-degree black belt, continues to teach with Penfil. Keeping kids on the floor longer is among the reasons Penfil enjoys teaching at the JCC. He runs classes on Sunday after- noons and from 4:30-9:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Students learn for as many days and hours as they want, but Penfil encourages them to take the maxi- Tang Soo Do as more practical for that reason. "[Penfil] teaches that Tang Soo Do is not something to hurt oth- ers with, but to defend yourself if nec- essary," said Sue Hoffman, the mother of Alex and Eric, both red belts. Eric, 11, is the most senior student in the class below a black belt. Alex, an 8-year-old third guep (a rank below black belt), plans on having his black MUM:- Top: Brothers Eric and Alex Hoffman practice kicking and blocking during class. Tang Soo Do is a Korean martial art that is more traditional than the familiar Tae Kwan Do, which is more sports-oriented. There is a slight varia- tion in the kicks and punches, but the basics are the same. "I'm more into the art than the sport," Penfil said. "Many students go to tournaments and do well, but my main concern is that they come home safe at night." A parent of two Penfil students sees Above: jay Penfil talks with Eric Hoffman after class. belt by the time he's 11. "During the summer, my sons want- ed to be here all the time," Hoffman said. "It's an approach you won't see at many other schools. You can't appreci- ate Jay unless you've seen others teach." David Singer, 19, trains four days a week, three to four hours a day. "Jay's enormously dedicated to the stu- dents," he said. "He's always on the floor with the students. It isn't like that at all places." Tang Soo Do is a family gathering for Penfil and his students. Penfil's ex- wife Helene, daughter Mara, fiancee Cheryl, and her daughter Shawna all learn with him. Many of his older students' children take classes, as well. Hoffman also appreciates the Judaic spin Penfil puts on his class, in addition to teaching his stu- dents heart, mind, and skill. "At the end of each class, the students tell me a mitzvah they did to help their parents or grandpar- ents," Penfil said. "It teaches the students to always be at their best when helping others." Penfil, with safety in mind, will begin teaching a women's self- defense class, a self-defense class for individuals who are wheelchair bound, and a class on the use of pepper spray. His approach remains the same for all his classes: to work with the stu- dents on a level they can understand. "I need to earn a student's respect," he said, "not demand it." CI The cost of the JCC's Tang Soo Do program starts at $50 for member's and $65 for non-members. 12/5 1997 25