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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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4 Africa and African America<br />

queen Nzinga Mbande, for example, trained in their combat techniques<br />

through dance accompanied by traditional percussion instruments.<br />

From the evidence that survives, which, unfortunately, is scarce, many<br />

scholars now believe that this type of training was central to the development<br />

of African martial arts systems. <strong>The</strong> enforcement of learning martial<br />

arts through the rhythm created by percussion instruments developed an<br />

innate sense of timing and effective movement for the practitioner. In addition,<br />

these movements developed effective footwork for the warriors. Although<br />

these training patterns have been dismissed as “war dances,” expressive<br />

movement rather than martial drills, they actually played a central<br />

role in the training of African warriors. In a nonliterate culture, this type<br />

of direct transmission through music allowed for consistent and uniform<br />

training without the need for written communication. This type of training<br />

is replicated today in the most popular of the African/African American<br />

martial arts, capoeira (see below).<br />

Among the weapons that were used extensively by the Africans, one<br />

of the most important was the stick. Stickfighting, which is practiced in<br />

many cultures the world over, has especially been practiced in sub-Saharan<br />

Africa. A variety of sticks continue to be used. For example, in addition to<br />

a knife and a spear, contemporary Nilotic men carry two sticks: a rungu<br />

(Swahili; a potentially deadly knobbed club) and a four-foot stick that is<br />

used for, among other things, fighting kin without causing serious injury.<br />

Stickfighting has existed in Africa as both a fighting sport and a martial<br />

art. In the sporting variant, competitors met for matches, and a match<br />

concluded when a certain number of blows were registered against one of<br />

the combatants. <strong>The</strong> number ranged from one to three, and the match<br />

would be halted to avoid serious injury. Blows against vital points of the<br />

body or against the head were forbidden in most cases. For the Zulu, as<br />

well as the Mpondo, who staged intergroup as well as intravillage stick<br />

fights, matches with neighboring polities often took on a deadly earnest<br />

quality. <strong>The</strong> head is reported to have been the preferred target.<br />

Thus, this type of martial arts activity fulfilled two functions for the<br />

African practitioners. First, this practice allowed participants to directly<br />

experience combat at a realistic level with weapons. Although the target areas<br />

were limited, the possibility of injury was very real. Participants had to<br />

have a high level of skill just to survive such a bout without injury. For this<br />

reason, this type of stickfighting was an excellent preparation for direct<br />

military combat.<br />

In addition, stickfighting provided a sporting (although “sport” does<br />

not translate well in many non-Western contexts) outlet for the competitors<br />

and the societies involved. <strong>The</strong> contests were a test not only of the competitors’<br />

ability, but also of the training mechanisms that were imparted to

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