24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Filipino armed combat is known variously as arnis, eskrima (fencing;<br />

Spanish, escrima), and kali. Arnis derives from the Spanish word arnes,<br />

meaning “armor.” Arnis, or “harness,” no doubt also refers to the battle<br />

harness worn by Filipino soldiers under Spanish command. Arnis-de-mano,<br />

or “harness of hand,” denotes the deft hand movements made by Filipino<br />

grooms working for Spanish officers. Lightning-quick hand movements<br />

were alleged to be native martial arts techniques in disguise. Forbidden by<br />

the Spanish to practice indigenous martial arts, defiant Filipinos purportedly<br />

retained their fighting skills in secret by hiding them inside dance<br />

forms called Santikan, Sayaw, and Moro-Moro. An alternative thesis proposes<br />

that FMA is classical fencing that evolved with incipient nationalism.<br />

Hence, FMA is the modern expression of fencing evolution.<br />

Other etymologies have been suggested for the names of the various<br />

Filipino arts. <strong>The</strong> Spanish term esgrima (skirmish) has entered the Pilipino<br />

language. Kali, according to some accounts, might be named after the<br />

Hindu goddess of destruction. Internationally recognized FMA master Dan<br />

Inosanto contends that Kali is the conjunction of the first syllables of two<br />

words from the Philippine Visayan language—kamot, meaning “hand,”<br />

and lihok, meaning “motion.” Thus, Kali means “hand motion.” An examination<br />

of the Pilipino language indicates otherwise. In the Hiligaynon<br />

dialect of the Western Visayas, the term kali means “to dig,” as with a<br />

shovel (pala). A shovel is a spade and the word for sword is espada. Kali<br />

probably derives from the Visayan word kalis, meaning “sword,” which<br />

was written in a shipboard chronicle of Magellan’s voyage in A.D. 1534.<br />

Unarmed combat is mano-mano (Spanish; hand-to-hand), but is also<br />

kuntao and silat. To describe the plethora of FMA styles, methods, and systems<br />

is arduous; some—Doce Pares, Lacoste, Modern Arnis, and Pekiti Tirsia—are<br />

publicized through seminars and are associated with particular instructors<br />

such as Ciriaco C. Canete, Dan Inosanto, Remy A. Presas, and<br />

Leo T. Gaje Jr., who spread the FMA in Australia, Canada, Germany, Great<br />

Britain, and the United States.<br />

Geographically situated at the crossroads of Southeast Asia, the<br />

Philippines are located near the equator above Borneo and below Taiwan.<br />

With a population estimated at 60 million, the Philippines are larger in area<br />

than Great Britain, but smaller than Japan. Those unfamiliar with the<br />

7,107 islands and three major regions of the Philippine Archipelago, Luzon<br />

(north), Visayas (central), and Mindanao (south), may be confused by the<br />

eighty-seven different dialects of Pilipino (Tagalong), the national language.<br />

English is the language of business and education, and Spanish is spoken to<br />

a lesser extent.<br />

Foreign languages are remnants of immigration to and colonization of<br />

the Philippine islands, which influenced native Filipino martial arts. It is of-<br />

Philippines 423

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!