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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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440 Political Conflict and the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

mareans was attributed to the skills of “King” Zumbi, reputedly a capoeira<br />

master. Even as the art exists in the twentieth century among the urban underclasses,<br />

there is a strong identification with the slave experience—even<br />

down to the typical attire of some modern capoeiristas, which is said to be<br />

patterned on the dress of slaves during the colonial period. <strong>The</strong> esotericism<br />

noted for the other arts emerges in the dedication of some capoeiristas to<br />

specific orixás (divinities) of the African Brazilian syncretic religion Candomble<br />

who aid and even possess the fighter from time to time. A contemporary<br />

master, Mestre Nô, speaks of a mystic leap he takes, describing it as<br />

an attitude similar to the “no-mind” state of Asian Zen-based martial traditions.<br />

A further, linguistic, connection is provided by the synonym for<br />

capoeirista, mandigueiro (sorcerer). Not surprisingly, capoeira tradition<br />

claims that invulnerability, labeled corpo fechado (closed body), may be ritually<br />

attained by practitioners. <strong>The</strong> practice of the art continues to have nationalistic<br />

significance and especially, in the style called Capoeira Angola,<br />

serves as a source of ethnic pride and a link to African heritage. Lewis notes<br />

the power of this martial art as a means of both real and symbolic empowerment<br />

for economic and political underclasses.<br />

<strong>Martial</strong> arts connect to political conflict in a less mystical but equally<br />

crucial way as well. In colonial situations in twentieth-century Asia, martial<br />

arts have been utilized by threatened cultures, not only according to the<br />

Indonesian and Malaysian patterns discussed above, but as vehicles for<br />

modern nationalism. <strong>The</strong> cases of Korean taekwondo and Vietnamese<br />

Vovinam-Viet Vo Dao are representative.<br />

Taekwondo is a Korean martial art synthesized in the latter half of the<br />

twentieth century from native styles (primarily t’aek’kyŏn and subak,<br />

which had survived a Japanese occupation of almost fifty years) and elements<br />

of both Chinese and Japanese combat arts. In 1945, the end of<br />

Japanese occupation served as the catalyst for Korean nationalism, which<br />

was signaled in part by the opening of the Chung Do Kwan (“School,”<br />

from the Chinese guan) for instruction in Korean martial arts. <strong>The</strong> formation<br />

of the Korean Armed Forces (1945) and the ensuing Korean Conflict<br />

(1950) further fueled the fires of nationalism and, not incidentally, provided<br />

the rationale for the study of martial skills. While no existing kwan<br />

(or kwon) had attained dominance, t’aek’kyŏn was introduced into some<br />

military training programs as early as 1946. In 1952, a half-hour martial<br />

arts demonstration attended by South Korean president Syngmann Rhee<br />

led to the official recognition of the Korean arts by means of Rhee’s order<br />

for all Korean troops to be trained in these arts. Although t’aek’kyŏn was<br />

formally introduced into Korean military training by the end of the war<br />

(1953), the unification of various kwan into what eventually became modern<br />

taekwondo did not occur until 1955. Tradition maintains that the name

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