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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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408 Pacific Islands<br />

Hawaiians included one-handed spears (ihe), a dagger made from wood<br />

(pahoa), a short club (newa), a two-handed club (la-au-palau), the sling<br />

(maa), and a cord that was used for strangulation (kaane). Lua could therefore<br />

be considered a complete martial arts system, covering both weaponry<br />

and unarmed combat.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re also existed sportive forms of Hawaiian martial arts that were<br />

presented before crowds of onlookers, unlike Lua. Hawaiian-style boxing,<br />

known as mokomoko (from the verb moko, “to fight with the fists”), was<br />

practiced and demonstrated during religious festivals. From descriptions of<br />

the art, mokomoko was apparently a form of bare-fist fighting where the<br />

closed fist was used as the exclusive offensive weapon. This Hawaiian boxing<br />

differed profoundly from Western styles.<br />

From accounts given by eyewitnesses, the participants were not allowed<br />

to block their opponents’ punches with anything other than their<br />

own closed fist. This type of deflection is not used in Western or Asian martial<br />

arts. In addition, mokomoko combatants would evade their opponents’<br />

blows by either retreating or moving the body out of the way. All blows<br />

were aimed for the face, and the person who was the first to fall to the<br />

ground was the loser. It was a contest that was designed to test the abilities<br />

of the contestants to persevere despite extreme consequences.<br />

It is also important to note that these boxing matches occurred during<br />

the season of Makahiki, the Hawaiian New Year. <strong>The</strong> Hawaiian pantheon<br />

contained a multitude of deities, and during this time of the year the god<br />

Makahiki was worshipped. <strong>The</strong>refore, these Hawaiian sporting events may<br />

be considered analogous to other combinations of ritual with sport, such as<br />

the Olympic games of the ancient Greeks, who organized those games to<br />

honor Zeus, the father of the gods who dwelt on Mount Olympus.<br />

Reports of the outcome of mokomoko contests state that the combat<br />

was brutal and the competitors could expect no mercy. Those who did fall<br />

to the ground after being defeated were screamed at by the spectators,<br />

shouting the phrase, “Eat chicken shit!” Western observers noted that even<br />

the winners of matches would have bloody and broken noses, bruises<br />

around the eye sockets, and bloody lips. It was not uncommon for teeth to<br />

be lost. Participants who excelled in the sport would probably have hands<br />

that had become callused and hardened from the repeated blows they inflicted<br />

and had inflicted on them. <strong>The</strong> danger of developing arthritis in the<br />

hands, of course, also proportionally increased.<br />

Hawaiians practiced other types of martial disciplines as well. An example<br />

is the art of wrestling, hakoko, mentioned earlier. <strong>The</strong> exact parameters<br />

of this wrestling style, or styles, are unknown. From the few remaining<br />

descriptions of the art, it seems to have been a sportive as well as<br />

combative form of wresting. For the sport variant, the opponent would sig-

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