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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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544 Southeast Asia<br />

Malay and Indonesian weapons such as the kris. Modern bersilat, however,<br />

exists in two forms: silat pulut, a dancelike performance that may have derived<br />

from kuntao, and silat buah, a combat form not publicly displayed,<br />

which was probably influenced by Menangkabu pentjak silat, according to<br />

the small body of scholarship devoted to the art.<br />

Myanmar (Burma)<br />

<strong>The</strong> primary combative arts of this area, beyond certain modifications required<br />

to enable practitioners to survive practice sessions, have retained<br />

their martial character rather than having been converted to sports or martial<br />

“ways” for achieving self-improvement. <strong>The</strong> systems are not discrete,<br />

but actually are elements of thaing (generic for “defense” or “all-out fighting”)<br />

rather than separate disciplines. Grappling and striking, even techniques<br />

disallowed in other martial arts (e.g., biting and eye-gouging), are<br />

incorporated into thaing.<br />

Bandô may be loosely translated as “way of steel discipline” (Dunlap<br />

2000). <strong>The</strong> term commonly is used to refer to unarmed fighting arts. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

are nine primary styles of bandô, each associated with a major ethnic<br />

group: Burmese, Chin, Chinese, Indian, Kachin (or Jinghpaw), Karen,<br />

Mon, Shan, and Talaing.<br />

<strong>The</strong> styles are composed of animal systems or forms. Generally twelve<br />

animals are incorporated into the style, but there are exceptions, such as<br />

the Kachin system, which uses sixteen. Each system incorporates both<br />

striking and grappling developed in imitation of the characteristics of the<br />

animal that inspired the system. <strong>The</strong> tactics of each animal may be used<br />

separately or fused, as called for in a given situation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> animism that is an important element of many of Burma’s religious<br />

systems (especially that of the Kachin) has been given as an explanation<br />

for the organization of combat techniques around animal characteristics.<br />

Given the long influence of both Indian and Chinese cultures on<br />

Burma, however, and the presence in both of animal forms of martial arts,<br />

there are alternative explanations.<br />

Banshay refers to traditional Burmese systems of weapons use. <strong>The</strong><br />

training embodies both unarmed techniques against weapons and the<br />

means of wielding weapons in combat. <strong>The</strong> most common weapons are<br />

stick, sword, and spear. <strong>The</strong> sources of banshay are said to be both India<br />

and China. Among the Shan, weapon systems appear as “fight dances”;<br />

one type uses a pair of Burmese swords and the other a stick with flaming<br />

ends. <strong>The</strong> latter is sometimes practiced in pairs. History records that in<br />

about 1549, Burmese soldiers practiced sword dances in their encampment<br />

while laying siege to the Thai forces at Ayuthia. <strong>The</strong> nature and purpose of<br />

the dances were not recorded, however.

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