Kali - The Deadly Art of the Philippines
Author: Allen Owen
Date Posted: August 30, 2008
The Filipino martial art of Kali, also known as arnis and escrima
is one of the most beautiful and equally deadly arts in the world.
It is mainly a weapons-based system of fighting with the use of
knives, swords and fire-hardened wooden baton-length sticks made
of rattan- a light yet sturdy wood from a vine abundant in the Philippines.
For this reason, Kali is also referred to as Filipino stick-fighting
and practitioners use single or double sticks to disarm and take
down opponents. The term is hardly used in the Philippines where
locals call the art arnis, arnis de mano or escrima. The term Kali
is mainly used outside the country in the U.S. or Europe.
From tradition, basic training in Kali and the Filipino martial
arts are simplified for easy instruction of large groups and for
this reason, are mistakenly referred to as 'simple' martial arts.
On the contrary, training past the basic levels is relatively complicated
and takes several years to master. Both men and women participated
in Kali martial arts training. Filipino women have always been known
to participate in wars and battles throughout Philippine history.
The famous explorer Ferdinand Magellan along with his Spanish conquistadores
were said to have been defeated by tribal Filipinos skilled in the
art of Kali. Sword and stick-wielding natives led by Lapu-lapu were
able to route the invading forces despite the latter having the
advantage of guns and protective armor.
Although the Filipino people take pride in Kali being a martial
art with purely Philippine origins, it does have influences from
China, India, Arab missionaries and Spain. An offense-based fighting
system, it uses the "good offense is the best defense" principle
and are categorized into two types of training: stick training for
fighting with swords and sword training for fighting with sticks.
Basic training usually employs the use either double sticks or one
stick in one hand and a knife in the other- espada y daga or 'sword
and dagger'. The most basic move in Kali training is the San Miguel
or right overhead forehand strike. It is named after Saint Michael
the Archangel since paintings of him depict him brandishing a sword
in this position. Other moves are the Abaniko or fan, the Redondo
or roundabout strike, the punyo or butt-strike (with the weapon,
not someone's rear-end), and the hakbang paiwas (footwork to avoid)
and hakbang tatsulok (triangular footwork).
Kali differs from other martial arts training in that it teaches
unarmed empty-handed techniques in the advanced levels of training
instead of in the basic stages. The concept behind this is that
weapons are only an extension of the body and the same movement
and footwork are used in both armed and unarmed combat. Starting-out
with weapons in the early stages of training therefore automatically
conditions the body for unarmed combat as well.
In the mid 1940's after the second world war, Filipino Kali masters
migrated to the States and it was only a few years after that Kali
and the Filipino Martial Arts (FMA) were taught to foreigners.
About The Author
Allen Owen has been practicing martial arts of one form or another
since he was in grammar school. Check out his eBay store at: http://stores.ebay.com/The-Sublime-Tao-Martial-Arts-Supply
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Kali articles.
Write
an online review and share your thoughts with other readers! |