The spiritual path to Zen Buddhist monastic vows led through martial arts
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Josef Mádl was born on 23 February 1960 in Prague. His father Josef Mádl was imprisoned by the Nazis and escaped from the Mauthausen concentration camp. His mother Anna, née Zajíčková, was arrested in the 1950s for attempting to cross the border. Josef Mádl first trained as a grocery shop-assistant before graduating from secondary school with a degree in business administration. He wished to study natural sciences and repeatedly applied to law faculty, but failed because of his family’s political background. From an early age he was involved in various types of martial arts. In 1984 he became a pupil of the resistance fighter Vladimír Lorenz. Until 1989, he worked as an inspector at the Potraviny company management in the Central Bohemia Region. After the Velvet Revolution, he started his own business: he worked as a freelance bodyguard and organizer at cultural and commercial events, trained air marshals, and also earned money as a film actor or an extra and stuntman. He built the Avaloka Centre where he taught martial arts. In 2000, he was ordained as a Zen Buddhist monk and took the monastic name Kodo. In 2025 Josef Mádl lived in Vysočiuna, in the village of Babín, and taught martial and meditation techniques.