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.

510 Sambo<br />

<strong>The</strong> development of sambo was an attempt to create a native fighting<br />

system for the new nation. Although it did not supplant the native styles<br />

from which it emerged, sambo did provide a unified system of grappling<br />

that enabled all citizens of the USSR to have a common ground on which<br />

to compete. In addition, military sambo and self-defense techniques gave<br />

the military and police forces a tool that they could use in their respective<br />

professions.<br />

<strong>The</strong> creators of sambo were successful in creating an effective martial<br />

art that was able to cut across the ethnic barriers that affected all levels of<br />

Soviet life. Today, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union and emergence<br />

of the Russian Federation, sambo is recognized as a Russian art that was<br />

developed during Soviet times.<br />

Russians have a long and distinguished wrestling tradition, and<br />

sambo is an outgrowth of this dedication. Its development was a way for<br />

Soviet authorities to have both a true “native” sport as well as an effective<br />

means of self-defense. Sambo was promoted during the Soviet period as the<br />

“official” self-defense art of the USSR, and for a time was the only martial<br />

art that could be practiced legally, with the exception of jûdô. This suppression<br />

was due to the paranoid fears of the Soviet government that Asian<br />

martial arts would expose Soviet citizens to Asian religions and philosophies<br />

in an officially atheist state. In addition, there was concern that the<br />

youth of the nation would study unsupervised unarmed combat and become<br />

a menace to the society. Although jûdô was considered a non-Soviet<br />

martial art, its practice was allowed because jûdô was an Olympic event<br />

and the Soviet government was hungry for medals. With the fall of the<br />

USSR, martial arts of all styles were once again allowed into the Russian<br />

Federation. At the present time, martial arts of all styles are freely practiced<br />

in the Federation and the now independent former republics, but sambo<br />

still is very popular and continues to be practiced in all areas of these nations.<br />

Although jûdô was considered a non-Soviet martial art, its practice<br />

was allowed because jûdô was an Olympic event and the Soviet government<br />

was hungry for medals. With the fall of the USSR, martial arts of all<br />

styles were once again allowed into the Russian Federation. At the present<br />

time, martial arts of all styles are freely practiced in the Federation and the<br />

now-independent former republics, but sambo still is very popular and continues<br />

to be practiced in all areas of these nations in three forms: military<br />

sambo, self-defense sambo, and sport sambo.<br />

Military sambo is the branch of the art that was taught to select army<br />

units and agents of the former KGB and GRU. <strong>The</strong> notorious KGB (Komititet<br />

Gosudarstvenoj Bezopasnosti; Committee for State Security) was the<br />

Soviet secret police responsible for both foreign espionage and internal repression<br />

of Soviet citizens. <strong>The</strong> GRU (Gosudarstvenije Razvedivatelnije

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!