HISTORY OF SIL LUM KUNG FU
Courtesy
of The Chung-Hua Institute
Sil Lum (or Shaolin in the Mandarin dialect) Kung-Fu
is the most well known of the Chinese martial arts.
Born in China's Hebei province on Songshan, the
Sil Lum arts were originally a fusion of Indian yogic and martial
practices from Kalarippayat and indigenous Chinese fighting techniques
that were supposedly developed by watching animals. The patriarch
of the Sil Lum temple was an Indian monk, named Da Mo, and his teachings
formed the basis of the Ch'an sect of Mahayana Buddhism, which the
Japanese would later develop into Zen Buddhism.
Throughout China's history, the Sil Lum Temple would be a site for
controversy. Similar to western Christian traditions, many outlaws,
bandits, and subversive elements sought refuge in the holy grounds
of the temple, along with career soldiers forgiveness for their killings
on the battlefield. In each case, these men with their varied backgrounds
brought new techniques, weaponry, and fighting skills into the hallowed
walls of Sil Lum Temple, and as the years passed, the curriculum evolved.
Many times, the imperial court tried to suppress the temple's activities,
or altogether destroy it, but the temple and its followers always managed
to hold on until the Ching Dynasty. The temple was burned down, and
some of the elder monks fled south to supposedly create a new Sil Lum
temple.
During this era of instability, many new schools
of martial art blossomed, each claiming
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Grandmaster Arthur Lee
& Sifu Mark Cheng |
descent
from the Sil Lum temple. Northern Sil Lum, Choy Lay
Fut, Hung Ga, Wing Chun, Ngor Chor (from Fukien),
and Mi Jong Law Hon are just a few of the styles
who trace their ancestry to the southern Sil Lum
temple. Not too long after the fall of the Ching
Dynasty, another great tragedy would befall the
Sil Lum Temple, when Chairman Mao Zedong's Red
Guards initiated their Cultural Revolution. During
the fearful years of the Cultural Revolution, anyone
who didn't enthusiastically embrace communism or who was caught preserving
a traditional way of life was branded as "counter-revolutionary" and
either tortured, imprisoned, or killed outright.
Many of China's great martial artists lost their
lives during this time, and Sil Lum suffered on two
accounts - both as a martial arts training center and as a religious
institution.
In
the years following the Cultural Revolution, the mainland Chinese
government found that the Sil Lum Temple was a popular tourist attraction,
and worked to rebuild it, while gradually relaxing religious restrictions.
The martial arts curriculum was no longer the original fighting art,
however. Contemporary Wushu, a demonstration sport-oriented version
of the traditional arts, became the government sanctioned curriculum.
The new format allowed the government to promote a standardized form
of martial art that could be popularized throughout the world in
tournaments and demonstrations. The birthplace of Kung-Fu, the Sil
Lum Temple, was not immune to this edict, and the temple had to either
change with the times or perish.
Nowadays, the strongholds of Sil Lum martial arts
may be found more in the schools of expatriate Chinese,
than in the Sil Lum Temple itself. While the temple
undoubtedly still harbors a few old dragons within
its walls, the majority of the monks there lack the
same understanding of the original fighting arts
as their pre-Cultural Revolution predecessors did.
During China's Communist Revolution, many Chinese
fled to neighboring areas, such as Hong Kong, Macao,
Malaysia, Korea, the Philippines, Hawai'i, and the
United States. Because of this diaspora, many Chinatowns
sprang up around the world, and inevitably there'd
be one or two accomplished martial art masters who
would begin teaching a hand-picked group of students.
MODERN EVOLUTION - SIL LUM FUT GA
One such master was Lum Tai-Yong, a priest who fled his home in southern
China for Hawai'  i in the early part of the 20th century. He was well
versed in the art of Sil Lum Fut Ga (Shaolin Buddha style) and the healing
arts as well. Highly regarded as a spiritual master and expert martial
artist, Lum was respected as a Sun Kung Sifu (master with supernatural
powers). His system of Sil Lum Fut Ga was born of the kind of legend
that makes Chinese martial history so colorful and inspiring.
It is said that Fut Ga was created by five monks
in the southern Sil Lum Temple who mastered the five
Ga, or family styles, which were taught in the temple
- Choy Ga, Hung Ga, Lau Ga, Lee Ga, and Mok Ga. The
best techniques from each of those styles was:
The Fut Ga system traditionally has 3 empty hand
sets and 9 weapons. The empty hand sets are:
Hu Dip Jeong - The Butterfly Palm
Sup Ji Kuen - Cross Fist
Dai Ga Lu - Great Family Set
The nine original weapons are the staff, spear, straight
sword, broadsword, butterfly swords, kwan do, tiger
fork, three-sectional staff, and the monk's spade.
Taken to create a new hybrid which would become
the new standard curriculum for the monastery.
Thus, Fut Ga is sometimes called by another name,
Ng Dai Ga, which means Five Great Families style
in Cantonese.
 Lum Tai-Yong's top student was a young man named
Arthur Yau Sung Lee. As a boy, Arthur Lee was stricken with severe
asthma, and his parents enrolled him in a Hung Ga class under Professor
Lau You-Cho. Professor Lau's lessons laid the foundation for young
Lee, and Lau introduced him to Lum Tai-Yong a few years later. Training
diligently under his master, Sifu Arthur Lee grew out of his childhood
affliction into a powerful man and noble man. He grew to embody a strong
sense of righteousness, dignity, courage, and class. Upon Lum's passing,
he was handed the mantle of leadership to the school christened Gee
Yung, which means "go
forth, be brave" in Cantonese. The Gee Yung Chinese Physical Culture
Institute blossomed slowly until the early 1990's,
when one of Grandmaster Arthur Lee's students, Andrew K.H. Ching, became
active with the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Chinese Martial Arts Division
in an effort to promote the system to the public and create a larger
following for his teacher. Sifu Harlan Lee, the younger son of Grandmaster
Arthur Lee, became active around that same time, participating in and
winning a string of tournaments and ending up on the covers of Inside
Kung-Fu, Martial Arts Training, and Wushu-Kungfu magazines.
Andrew Ching was responsible for introducing a young
Mark Cheng to the Lee family in 1991, and spent many
hours tutoring him in some of the finer points and
lore of the Fut Ga system. Always one to look after
Cheng like an older brother would, he often flew
Cheng up to the San Francisco Bay area to stay with
him and train, many times when Sifu Arthur Lee was
in visiting from Hawai'i. In December of 1999, Sifu
Harlan Lee and Andrew Ching arranged for Sifu Mark
Cheng to make his first pilgrimage to Honolulu and
teach intensive Shuai-Chiao and Combat Tai-Chi seminars
at the invitation of the Gee Yung Institute.
During his week-long stay, Sifu Cheng was invited to stay at his teacher's
home and spent hours
with Grandmaster Arthur Lee and his family. Cheng paid his respects at
the grave of Lum Tai-Yong, and spent long hours sharing the Shuai-Chiao
system with his Fut Ga brothers and sisters. During one morning while
Sifu Arthur Lee was teaching him the Sup Ji Kuen in his living room,
he told Cheng to teach the Fut Ga to his student, Fong Sam. This marked
the first time that Cheng was given permission to teach the Sil Lum Fut
Ga system.
Sifu Cheng continues his training in Sil Lum Fut Ga with the
Lee family on their visits to the US mainland and
holds an open invitation to train and teach at Gee Yung - Hawaii.
He also continues his study with Sifu Rick Der, the chief instructor
of Gee Yung - San Francisco.
The Chung Hua Institute is honored to present the teachings of Grandmaster
Arthur Lee and rare Gee Yung Sil Lum Fut Ga system.
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