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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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For nearly 900 years following the deeds of the thirteen monks, there<br />

is not a single reference to martial arts practice in Shaolin Monastery. Not<br />

that martial arts were not practiced there, just that, if they were, they were<br />

likely nothing out of the ordinary—at most a security force from the<br />

monastic ranks. During the same period, there are sparsely scattered references<br />

to individual monks, not necessarily from Shaolin Monastery, who<br />

were involved in military activities. Two of these appear during the Song period<br />

when China was invaded by Jurched tribes, who founded the Jin dynasty<br />

(1122–1234). One, Zhen Bao, on orders from Emperor Qin Zong<br />

(1126), formed an army and fought to the death defending the monasteries<br />

on Mount Wutai in Shanxi. Another, Wan An, is recorded as having said,<br />

“In time of peril I perform as a general, when peace is restored I become a<br />

monk again.” In both these cases, one can see that the leadership role, as<br />

with the incident involving the thirteen monks of Shaolin Monastery, was<br />

of primary importance. Monks might provide disciplined leadership when<br />

needed in perilous times. In addition, the larger monasteries such as Shaolin<br />

and those on Mount Wutai were, more often than not, the objects of imperial<br />

patronage, and one of their roles would have been to pray for national<br />

peace and prosperity, and to support political authority.<br />

<strong>The</strong> high tide of Shaolin Monastery’s martial arts fame came in the<br />

mid-sixteenth century at a time of serious disruption in China’s coastal<br />

provinces as a result of large-scale Japanese pirate operations. Two hundred<br />

years earlier, in 1368, the monastery had suffered a major catastrophe<br />

when over half of its buildings were burnt to the ground and its residents<br />

were temporarily scattered to neighboring provinces in the wake of the Red<br />

Turban uprising against Mongol rule. This traumatic experience apparently<br />

inspired the returning monks to take their security duties and martial arts<br />

practice more seriously from then on. In 1517, well after the monastery<br />

was restored, a stone tablet was erected that ignored the story of the<br />

monastery’s destruction. It claimed that the monastery had actually been<br />

spared because a monk with kitchen duties had miraculously transformed<br />

himself into a fearful giant with a fire poker for his staff, who ran out and<br />

scared off the Red Turbans. Regardless of the mythical aspects of this story,<br />

which may have been designed to remind the monks of their responsibilities<br />

as well as warn away transgressors, the monks actually had become<br />

known for their staff-fighting prowess, and a form of staff fighting was<br />

named after the monastery.<br />

Observations by visitors to the monastery during the sixteenth century<br />

reveal that popular forms of boxing, such as Monkey Boxing, were also<br />

practiced by some of the monks, but none of these forms were named after<br />

the monastery. Cheng Zongyou, who claimed to have spent a decade studying<br />

staff fighting there, tells us that some of the residents were concentrat-<br />

Religion and Spiritual Development: China 459

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