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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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are launched from very low stances, deep crouches, or even creeping positions.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se stances are regarded as “signatures” of silat.<br />

Most sources contend that silat originated on the Indonesian island of<br />

Sumatra, located just across the Strait of Malacca from the Malaysian<br />

peninsula. <strong>The</strong> art originated in Sumatra during the period of the<br />

Menangkabu Empire. <strong>The</strong> art developed and proliferated from the seventh<br />

to the sixteenth centuries, becoming a network of systematized arts by<br />

about the fourteenth century. <strong>The</strong> art was exported to Malaysia to the<br />

Malaccan court and undoubtedly influenced bersilat, which enters<br />

recorded history in about the fourteenth century.<br />

Silat is an amalgam of indigenous Indonesian martial traditions and<br />

imported traditions from India, China, and the Middle East. In contemporary<br />

Indonesia the Japanese arts (e.g., jûdô and karate) and weapons (e.g.,<br />

the katana, the classic Japanese single-edged, curved sword) have exerted<br />

an influence on some schools. <strong>The</strong> earliest non-Indonesian influences are<br />

likely to have been introduced in the area of the Sumatran seaport of<br />

Palembang during the period of the Mahayana Buddhist Srivijaya Empire<br />

(seventh to twelfth century A.D.) by Indians and Chinese who landed at the<br />

seaport. In noting the variety of influences on silat from abroad, Donn<br />

Draeger asserts, “In pentjak-silat can be found Nepalese music, Hindu<br />

weapons and combative styles, Siamese costumes, Arabian weapons, and<br />

Chinese weapons and combative tactics” (1972, 32). From Chinese wushu,<br />

silat derived its circular movement patterns, weapon names (e.g., pisau, a<br />

type of knife), and probably the use of animal forms in its various styles;<br />

Draeger and Robert Smith contend that both wushu and silat animal forms<br />

were inspired by early Indian combatives, however. Hindu culture can be<br />

seen in silat’s grappling tactics, and the prototype of the tjabang (a short<br />

metal truncheon roughly in the shape of a blunt trident, resembling the<br />

Okinawan sai) is probably the Indian trisula. With the arrival of Islam in<br />

the archipelago, the Arab jambia probably provided the prototype for<br />

many Muslim pentjak silat blades. In the twentieth century, contemporary<br />

Japanese martial arts influenced modern silat tactics, techniques, weapons,<br />

and belt ranking (Draeger and Smith 1980, 32–33).<br />

On the other hand, the most common oral traditions attribute the origins<br />

of the art to a native Indonesian inventor. Legend claims that a western<br />

Sumatran woman created the art after watching a fight between a<br />

snake and a bird or, another variant states, a large bird and a tiger. This is<br />

a legend that silat holds in common with other non-Indonesian martial arts<br />

such as taijiquan (tai chi ch’uan). If not of independent origin, this narrative<br />

may have been passed along with the animal styles common to the various<br />

systems of silat as an element of the Chinese heritage. This borrowing<br />

would be consistent with Draeger and Smith’s arguments noted above.<br />

Silat 525

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