# Ron “The Black Dragon” Van Clief: Unveiling a Hidden Past

Ron Van Clief, known as “The Black Dragon,” is a martial arts legend and pioneering Black action star who shaped cinema and urban storytelling in the late 20th century.

Behind his fierce persona, however, lay a lifetime of buried secrets—racial horrors, war trauma, addiction, and family pain—that have only recently surfaced, revealing the raw, human struggles of a cultural icon.

Where are they now? The Black Dragon: Ron Van Clief

Born in 1950s Brooklyn, Van Clief grew up amid poverty and violence, with a father scarred by World War II and heroin addiction, and a mother who left early. At 17, he joined the US Navy, finding discipline and martial arts as salvation in Okinawa and the Philippines. Later, as a New York City police officer and nightclub bouncer, he honed his survival skills in real fights.

His prowess led to five world championships in karate and kung fu, earning him the nickname “Black Dragon” from Bruce Lee himself during a 1966 Hong Kong exhibition.

Van Clief’s Hollywood breakthrough came in 1974 with *The Black Dragon*, making him the first Black action star in Hong Kong cinema. Films like *Way of the Black Dragon* captivated audiences, while he founded the Chinese Goju-Ryu karate system, training even the US Secret Service.

Ron Van Clief - IMDb

At 51, he became the oldest UFC competitor at UFC 4 in 1994, facing Royce Gracie and earning a standing ovation despite defeat. Even at 80, in 2023, he earned a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, embodying a spirit that never ages.

Yet, his darkest secrets remained hidden for decades. In the 1960s, during military training in North Carolina, a 17-year-old Van Clief was brutally attacked by Ku Klux Klan extremists, beaten, and hanged from a tree. Miraculously surviving after being clinically dead for minutes, he spent months recovering from neck and spine injuries, haunted by PTSD nightmares.

He kept this horror private until the 2020 documentary *The Hanged Man* exposed it. Vietnam brought further trauma; in 1964, his helicopter crashed under enemy fire, leaving him with broken bones and metal shards in his body. The loss of his brother Pete to a landmine in Vietnam drove him to heroin to numb the pain, a struggle he later overcame through martial arts.

Ron Van Clief Chinese Goju System | USAdojo.com

Van Clief also battled personal demons, admitting to fighting under the influence of LSD in a 1969 championship, still winning despite the haze. Family losses—his father’s overdose and fractured relationships from eight marriages—added invisible wounds. Fame, which he resented, became another prison; after UFC, he retreated to Hawaii, seeking silence over spotlight. At 80, Van Clief, now just “Ron,” embodies resilience, proving that even from the deepest darkness—lynching, war, addiction—a legend can rise, reborn through endurance and raw humanity.