Archangel Gym is martial arts school located in Belgrade, Serbia. We compete in MMA, kyokushin karate, muay thai, wushu sanda, grappling and kickboxing.
One of my students, Vukan Roganović, has just won a bronze medal at the Senshi World Championship.
He secured his medal with a spectacular knockout victory in the quarterfinals and then narrowly lost the semifinal by decision against a strong opponent.
This is also the reason there was no new history video last Saturday—I was in Bulgaria, coaching at the championship.
I'm incredibly proud of Vukan's performance, his dedication, and the work our team has put in.
You can watch his quarterfinal fight here. I'd love to hear what you think! 🥋👊
New video is out. For the first time on Archangel Dojo, I’m covering Taekwondo — its roots, its evolution, and how it became one of the most recognizable martial arts in the world.
As a karateka, this was a very interesting topic to explore, because the deeper I went, the clearer it became that Taekwondo has a much richer and more complex history than most people realize.
Shorinji Kempo is often overshadowed by more widely known martial arts, but behind it lies a very distinct system that blends technique, discipline, and inner development into one unified philosophy.
In this new video, I explore exactly that: what Shorinji Kempo is, how it developed, and why it stands apart from the “traditional” understanding of karate and other Japanese martial systems.
This is not just about techniques — it’s about the way of thinking behind them.
If you’re interested in the deeper context of martial arts, their history, and the philosophy that shapes them, this is a video worth watching to the end.
📘 Some of these ideas, and a broader reflection on martial arts as a way of life, are also explored in my book, where I go even deeper into the connection between training, character, and everyday life.
Link is in the description.
Let me know in the comments what you think about Shorinji Kempo — do you see it more as a fighting system, or as a philosophical path?
This was one of the most requested videos on the channel, so I wanted to do it properly — not only Ed Parker, Elvis and Hollywood, but also the deeper Hawaiian Kenpo line through James Mitose and William Kwai Sun Chow.
American Kenpo is often remembered for fast hands, self-defense combinations, and its Hollywood image.
But behind that, there is a much bigger story:
Hawaii. Mitose. Chow. Parker. Elvis. Hollywood. And the question of whether American Kenpo was a brilliant modern self-defense system — or whether it became too complex and too choreographed.
The video is already online for channel members — 48 hours before everyone else.
Tomorrow at 15:00, it goes public.
This was one of the most requested videos on the channel, and I wanted to do it properly: James Mitose, William Chow, Ed Parker, Elvis, Hollywood, fast hands, self-defense, and the big question behind the system:
Was American Kenpo a brilliant modern martial art — or did it become too complex and too choreographed?
Members will continue to get early access to future long-form videos before public release.
This chapter follows Kimura’s return to Tokyo after Brazil — and a quiet conversation with Mas Oyama about reputation, karate, Japan, and how a legend can cross the ocean before the man himself.
Thank you to everyone supporting the channel and the upcoming book.
And for everyone else:
This Saturday — deep dive into American Kenpo. Ed Parker, Hawaii, the evolution of Kenpo, and how one system became one of the most recognizable martial arts exports of the modern era.
After Nippon Kempo and Hawaiian Kempo/Kajukenbo, we are going further back — to Okinawa.
This episode is not just about one “Kenpo style.”
It is about the space between China, Okinawa, and Japan: the place where Chinese martial methods, local Okinawan fighting traditions, and later Japanese karate began to overlap.
Before karate became Japanese, it was Okinawan. And before it became the “empty hand,” it still carried the memory of the “Chinese hand.”
Okinawan Kenpo may be one of the most important missing links between Kung Fu and Karate.
Before the UFC. Before Kudo. Before modern MMA had a name.
Japan already had a fighting system built around punches, kicks, throws, joint locks and full resistance under protective armour.
That system was Nippon Kempo.
In this documentary, we explore how Muneomi Sawayama created one of Japan’s most overlooked full-contact fighting systems — and why Nippon Kempo was already asking a question that MMA would later force every martial art to answer:
What survives when the opponent is allowed to fight back?
“The Man Who Crossed the Sea” follows Masahiko Kimura after the Helio Gracie fight, as the story moves away from arenas and into forgotten courtyards, old Japanese communities in Brazil, and the quiet training methods hidden behind closed doors.
This chapter explores Kimura’s encounter with Ogawa, the philosophy of Sanchin, and the realization that martial arts are not only about victory — but about what survives after the fight is over.
🥋 Tonight at 20:00 CET, a new full documentary premieres on the channel.
And if you want to support the project and explore the deeper history behind these stories:
Archangel Dojo
🥉 Proud coach moment.
One of my students, Vukan Roganović, has just won a bronze medal at the Senshi World Championship.
He secured his medal with a spectacular knockout victory in the quarterfinals and then narrowly lost the semifinal by decision against a strong opponent.
This is also the reason there was no new history video last Saturday—I was in Bulgaria, coaching at the championship.
I'm incredibly proud of Vukan's performance, his dedication, and the work our team has put in.
You can watch his quarterfinal fight here. I'd love to hear what you think! 🥋👊
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1trcu...
2 days ago | [YT] | 55
View 0 replies
Archangel Dojo
New video is out.
For the first time on Archangel Dojo, I’m covering Taekwondo — its roots, its evolution, and how it became one of the most recognizable martial arts in the world.
As a karateka, this was a very interesting topic to explore, because the deeper I went, the clearer it became that Taekwondo has a much richer and more complex history than most people realize.
Watch here:
https://youtu.be/wnJ4C9bibiQ
My book, Way of the Empty Hand, is also available here:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
If this video does well, I may turn this into a full Taekwondo / Korean martial arts series.
1 week ago | [YT] | 98
View 8 replies
Archangel Dojo
Way of the empty hand book:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
Shorinji Kempo is often overshadowed by more widely known martial arts, but behind it lies a very distinct system that blends technique, discipline, and inner development into one unified philosophy.
In this new video, I explore exactly that: what Shorinji Kempo is, how it developed, and why it stands apart from the “traditional” understanding of karate and other Japanese martial systems.
This is not just about techniques — it’s about the way of thinking behind them.
If you’re interested in the deeper context of martial arts, their history, and the philosophy that shapes them, this is a video worth watching to the end.
📘 Some of these ideas, and a broader reflection on martial arts as a way of life, are also explored in my book, where I go even deeper into the connection between training, character, and everyday life.
Link is in the description.
Let me know in the comments what you think about Shorinji Kempo — do you see it more as a fighting system, or as a philosophical path?
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 124
View 0 replies
Archangel Dojo
American Kenpo is finally public.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eu9Qo...
This was one of the most requested videos on the channel, so I wanted to do it properly — not only Ed Parker, Elvis and Hollywood, but also the deeper Hawaiian Kenpo line through James Mitose and William Kwai Sun Chow.
American Kenpo is often remembered for fast hands, self-defense combinations, and its Hollywood image.
But behind that, there is a much bigger story:
Hawaii.
Mitose.
Chow.
Parker.
Elvis.
Hollywood.
And the question of whether American Kenpo was a brilliant modern self-defense system — or whether it became too complex and too choreographed.
The full video is now available on the channel.
My book Way of the Empty Hand is available on Amazon:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
Follow Archangel Dojo:
Instagram: www.instagram.com/archangel_dojo/
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@archangel_gym
Patreon: www.patreon.com/c/ArchangelDojo
Oss.
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 111
View 2 replies
Archangel Dojo
American Kenpo: From Hawaii to Hollywood.
The video is already online for channel members — 48 hours before everyone else.
Tomorrow at 15:00, it goes public.
This was one of the most requested videos on the channel, and I wanted to do it properly: James Mitose, William Chow, Ed Parker, Elvis, Hollywood, fast hands, self-defense, and the big question behind the system:
Was American Kenpo a brilliant modern martial art — or did it become too complex and too choreographed?
Members will continue to get early access to future long-form videos before public release.
My book Way of the Empty Hand is available on Amazon:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
Oss.
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 81
View 1 reply
Archangel Dojo
Way of the Empty Hand II — Chapter 6: The Legend Crosses the Sea is now available for channel members.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpChK...
This chapter follows Kimura’s return to Tokyo after Brazil — and a quiet conversation with Mas Oyama about reputation, karate, Japan, and how a legend can cross the ocean before the man himself.
Thank you to everyone supporting the channel and the upcoming book.
And for everyone else:
This Saturday — deep dive into American Kenpo.
Ed Parker, Hawaii, the evolution of Kenpo, and how one system became one of the most recognizable martial arts exports of the modern era.
4 weeks ago | [YT] | 16
View 0 replies
Archangel Dojo
New video today at 15:00 CET on Archangel Dojo 🥋
After Nippon Kempo and Hawaiian Kempo/Kajukenbo, we are going further back — to Okinawa.
This episode is not just about one “Kenpo style.”
It is about the space between China, Okinawa, and Japan:
the place where Chinese martial methods, local Okinawan fighting traditions, and later Japanese karate began to overlap.
Before karate became Japanese, it was Okinawan.
And before it became the “empty hand,” it still carried the memory of the “Chinese hand.”
Okinawan Kenpo may be one of the most important missing links between Kung Fu and Karate.
Coming today at 15:00 CET.
1 month ago | [YT] | 143
View 1 reply
Archangel Dojo
Most people hear the word “Kempo” and think they know what it means.
But Kempo is not one single story.
In the last video, we explored Nippon Kempo — Japan’s forgotten full-contact fighting system.
Now we follow another path.
Hawaii.
Kajukenbo.
Hawaiian Kempo.
John Hackleman.
The Pit.
And eventually — Chuck Liddell.
This is not the same lineage.
Not the same culture.
Not the same martial art.
But it comes from the same question:
What actually works when the opponent is allowed to fight back?
New documentary coming soon on Archangel Dojo:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F0Oky...
The Other Kempo — Hawaii’s Forgotten Hybrid Martial Art
Would you like to see more videos about the different Kempo/Kenpo systems around the world?
1 month ago | [YT] | 160
View 2 replies
Archangel Dojo
New video is out now.
Before the UFC.
Before Kudo.
Before modern MMA had a name.
Japan already had a fighting system built around punches, kicks, throws, joint locks and full resistance under protective armour.
That system was Nippon Kempo.
In this documentary, we explore how Muneomi Sawayama created one of Japan’s most overlooked full-contact fighting systems — and why Nippon Kempo was already asking a question that MMA would later force every martial art to answer:
What survives when the opponent is allowed to fight back?
Watch the video here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=413lH...
Also, if you want to go deeper into the history and transformation of karate, my book Way of the Empty Hand is available on Amazon:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
And one more question:
Would you like the next documentary to explore the other Kempo — from Hawaii, Kajukenbo and John Hackleman to Chuck Liddell and the UFC?
Let me know in the comments.
1 month ago | [YT] | 159
View 7 replies
Archangel Dojo
Chapter V of Way of the Empty Hand II is now live!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzSaU...
“The Man Who Crossed the Sea” follows Masahiko Kimura after the Helio Gracie fight, as the story moves away from arenas and into forgotten courtyards, old Japanese communities in Brazil, and the quiet training methods hidden behind closed doors.
This chapter explores Kimura’s encounter with Ogawa, the philosophy of Sanchin, and the realization that martial arts are not only about victory — but about what survives after the fight is over.
🥋 Tonight at 20:00 CET, a new full documentary premieres on the channel.
And if you want to support the project and explore the deeper history behind these stories:
📖 Way of the Empty Hand:
www.amazon.com/dp/B0GS1LXGZV
Thank you to everyone supporting the channel, the books, and this journey through the hidden history of karate.
1 month ago | [YT] | 113
View 1 reply
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