Mission

Thousand Waves Martial Arts & Self-Defense Center, NFP promotes personal safety and non-violent conflict resolution, and fosters a healthy mind and body through violence prevention, self-defense and traditional martial arts programs for adults and children of all ages.

Our members apply the skills they learn at Thousand Waves to transform their lives at home, school, work, and in public spaces. This creates a powerful community spirit of civility, self-worth, and compassion in action. Through partnerships with schools, other non-profits, and government agencies, we also bring the tools of violence prevention and personal empowerment to diverse communities.

We encourage everyone's participation regardless of racial or ethnic background, religion, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, or fitness level.


History

In 1984, Nancy Lanoue and her partner Jeannette Pappas moved to Chicago with a crazy dream—to create a safe and beautiful place for women to explore their physical selves, get stronger, and feel more empowered. Lanoue, still one of the Center’s executive directors, came to Chicago with a new black belt in Seido karate and a decade of experience in the feminist self-defense movement in New York.

In Chicago, Lanoue and Pappas started the Women’s Gym, a feminist health club that offered training in Seido karate and was the forerunner of Thousand Waves. Pappas died in 1989, and in 1991, Sarah Ludden, the center’s other executive director, moved to Chicago and joined Thousand Waves, studying Seido karate and teaching a second martial art, Kajukenbo kung fu. The school had 50 women and 20 children students.

That number doubled by 1995, when Thousand Waves began offering mixed gender programming, so that men and women, boys and girls could train together, and heal from violence as allies, and Thousand Waves could become a more welcoming and diverse community. That same year, the school moved to its present location at 1220 W. Belmont. By 2000, the school had 200 members.

Thousand Waves had always functioned as if it were a non-profit organization, striving for diversity and equal access to its services, providing scholarships (over $100,000 to date), and developing a spirit of volunteerism. In 2001, it incorporated as a 501 (c) 3 not-for-profit. Now in its 23rd year, its seventh as a non-profit, Thousand Waves continues to be sustained by volunteer efforts that enable the expansion of anti-violence and empowerment programs reaching many more adults and children both within the school and in the greater Chicago area.

The school now has over 400 active martial arts and fitness/yoga members. It has also expanded its commitment to teaching self-defense and supporting communities outside of the school and its local neighborhood. More than “just” a karate school, Thousand Waves is the realization of that crazy dream of 20 years ago: a safe and beautiful place, setting waves of self-empowerment and violence prevention in motion.

Current Board of Directors

Patricia Broughton, Chair
Matt Birnholz
Denise Coleman
Shelly Fried
Kristen Kleckler
Tony Laden
Diane Miller
Jean Peterson
Ayse Sahin
Margarita Saona
Katie Speth
Andrea Wenzel

Administrative Staff

Co-Executive Directors
Nancy Lanoue
Sarah Ludden

Director of Violence Prevention Programs
Marie O’Brien

Associate Director of Violence Prevention Programs
Kate Webster

Development Manager
Rebecca Epstein

Information Technology Manager
John Pappas

Member Billing and Retail Manager
Vada Woods

Office Manager
Rebecca Angevine

Front Desk / Staff Instructors
Triston Alvarez
Alan Miller