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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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406 Pacific Islands<br />

was developed for self-defense by these ingenious peoples. For example,<br />

lacking metal to construct swords, the Pacific islanders nevertheless developed<br />

the tebutje. <strong>The</strong>se “swords” were made from long clubs inlaid with<br />

shark’s teeth. <strong>The</strong> teeth constituted excellent cutting edges against an opponent.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fighting arts for these weapons have since become extinct, but<br />

this leaves intriguing room to speculate on how they were used and how effective<br />

the tebutje was in combat.<br />

<strong>The</strong> combat systems of Polynesia were centered on these and similar<br />

weapons. <strong>The</strong>y also included a great deal of hand-to-hand combat. What<br />

few oral histories remain from these islands tell of warriors trained in striking<br />

with both the hands and feet and in wrestling, and possessing an impressive<br />

knowledge of human anatomy. <strong>The</strong> struggles and warfare between<br />

the islanders would have necessitated such a development in martial<br />

arts.<br />

Perhaps the most well-documented martial arts from these islands are<br />

from Hawaii. <strong>The</strong>y were among the last to be settled by the European colonizers,<br />

and to a great extent, the Hawaiians were able to keep their independence<br />

until 1893, longer than most other South Sea island nations. <strong>The</strong><br />

islands themselves were united only in the early 1800s by King Kamehameha<br />

I. Until this time, warfare between the Hawaiians was common,<br />

which led to the development and practice of both armed and unarmed<br />

combat. Unfortunately, once again because of the destruction of native<br />

Hawaiian culture, even descriptions of these martial arts are scarce.<br />

One of the best-known examples of Hawaiian martial arts is the unarmed<br />

combat art of Lua, which is close to extinction today. <strong>The</strong> word<br />

translates as “the art of bone-breaking.” It might be compared to the art of<br />

koppo in traditional Japanese martial arts. Due to the lack of written historical<br />

records among the Hawaiians, a preliterate people, there is no accurate<br />

way of dating just how long this fighting system existed.<br />

Lua was a hand-to-hand system of combat that emphasized the use of<br />

a knowledge of anatomy to strike the weak points of the human body. Expert<br />

practitioners were expected to have the ability to injure or even kill an<br />

opponent with such strikes. <strong>The</strong> techniques that were practiced included<br />

the arts of dislocating the fingers and toes, striking to nerve cavities, and<br />

hitting and kicking muscles in such a way as to inflict paralysis. Lua was<br />

intended as a self-defense art; in its purest form it was not to be considered<br />

a sport. Demonstrations of Lua to the general public were forbidden, as it<br />

was an art for warriors only.<br />

Among the arts encompassed by Lua were the specific art of bonebreaking,<br />

also known as hakihaki, kicking (peku), wrestling (hakoko), and<br />

combat with the bare hands (kui). Hawaiian warriors were expected to become<br />

proficient in all aspects of the art. In addition to these martial skills,

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