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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Sven J. Jorgensen teaches Seattle police officers jûjutsu disarming tricks, November 23, 1927. (Seattle Post-Intelligencer<br />

Collection, Museum of History & Industry)<br />

rifles mounted with telescopic sights. <strong>The</strong> pedagogy seems to have been<br />

sound, too, as, unlike the Allies, the German and Austrian armies did not<br />

suffer mutinies until the collapse of the Western Front in 1918.<br />

Following the Armistice in 1918, training budgets shrank. <strong>Of</strong> course<br />

that didn’t stop professionals from conducting quiet experiments during<br />

colonial and civil wars, and as early as the Spanish Civil War the Germans<br />

had begun replacing bayonets with light machine guns supported by tanks,<br />

artillery, and dive-bombers. In other words, they replaced banzai with<br />

blitzkrieg, a method that the U.S. Marines perfected against the Japanese<br />

in the Pacific and the Chinese in Korea.<br />

In China, budgets were also slim. So in 1912, Feng Yuxiang, “the<br />

Christian general,” ordered his officers and men to run obstacle courses,<br />

lift weights, do forced marches with packs, and practice quanfa (Chinese<br />

boxing). In 1917, a Communist student leader named Mao Zedong also<br />

encouraged his followers to practice taijiquan. But in both cases, this was<br />

because they viewed the boxing as a gymnastic that took little space and no<br />

special equipment rather than as a practical battlefield combative. (As recently<br />

as 1976, Red Army generals asked about the value of quanfa said,<br />

“Amidst heavy gunfire, who would want to enjoy the dance posture of<br />

swordplay?” [P’an 1976, 2].)<br />

But outside military academies, fantasy ruled. Thus, during the 1920s<br />

86 Combatives: Military and Police <strong>Martial</strong> Art Training

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