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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Beginning in 1415, after the Portuguese established their foothold in<br />

North Africa, Europeans introduced firearms in West Africa in exchange<br />

for slaves. <strong>The</strong>refore, with the beginning of the slave trade, the nature of<br />

war in West Africa became Europeanized, although wrestling and stickfighting<br />

persisted in local festivals.<br />

European influence was not, however, the only threat to the traditional<br />

martial arts in Africa. Prior to the European incursions, most of sub-Saharan<br />

Africa had been infiltrated by Islam, which spread along trade routes<br />

both inland and on the coast. In exchange for gold, ivory, and slaves, the<br />

African kingdoms received goods from North Africa, many of whose rulers<br />

accepted Islam in order to improve trade relations with Muslim merchants.<br />

At first Islam’s influence on sub-Saharan Africa was limited. <strong>The</strong> nineteenth<br />

century, however, brought a wave of Islamic revitalization to non-Arab<br />

Africa. Calling for reform, the establishment of Islamic states, and the<br />

crushing of pagan practices through the agency of jihad (holy war against<br />

heretics and unbelievers), these revitalization movements sought to crush<br />

traditional martial arts such as wrestling and stickfighting, which were elements<br />

of the ceremonies of those religions the jihadists so vigorously opposed.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se arts survived the movements that sought to crush them.<br />

Ironically, the European colonialist policies that proved destructive to<br />

many African peoples provided an agency for preserving and spreading at<br />

least modified elements of African culture. During much of the sixteenth<br />

century (1530–1600) the Portuguese, who were the major European slave<br />

power at that time, transported over a thousand slaves from West Africa to<br />

the Americas monthly. Captured Africans brought many of their native traditions<br />

with them as they were forcibly relocated to the New <strong>World</strong>. Some<br />

of these traditions included martial arts, which were sometimes transported<br />

in a disguised or hidden version. Because of this dispersion, some of the<br />

martial traditions of Africa (particularly of sub-Saharan Africa, from which<br />

many of the slaves were drawn) still survive and live in altered form.<br />

Given the Portuguese role in the transport of Africans to the New<br />

<strong>World</strong>, it should not be surprising that the Portuguese colony of Brazil became<br />

a focal point of African fighting arts (as well as for many other<br />

Africanisms, such as the religion of Candomblé) in the Americas.<br />

Brazilian capoeira is undoubtedly the most well known and widely<br />

disseminated of a complex of New <strong>World</strong> martial arts that rely primarily<br />

on kicks and head-butts as weapons and that are usually practiced to musical<br />

accompaniment. <strong>The</strong> origins of capoeira are recorded only in the traditional<br />

legends of the art, which invariably focus on African influence.<br />

Considerable debate exists among practitioners and historians as to<br />

whether capoeira is the New <strong>World</strong> development of an African martial art<br />

or a system originating in the New <strong>World</strong> with African influences ranging<br />

Africa and African America 7

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