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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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An advertisement for Burmese boxing found in Sagaing, Myanmar (Burma), in November 1996 illustrates the revival<br />

of interest in traditional martial arts. (Michael Freeman/Corbis)<br />

Lethwei/lethawae (Burmese “boxing”) shares many characteristics<br />

with Muay Thai (Thailand). As in Muay Thai, kicks, including knees, are<br />

used along with hand and elbow strikes. Unlike Muay Thai, however, competitors<br />

fight without gloves, using only hand wraps as protection for the<br />

fists; head-butts and grappling are permitted. A sport form of the system<br />

has existed since at least the eighteenth century. Currently there are<br />

matches divided into four rounds, judges, rankings from youth to professional<br />

grades, and even a national governing body. Matches traditionally<br />

have been associated with festivals and held in sandpits. Musical accompaniment<br />

is sometimes used; in fact, in the past at least, the Shan dance<br />

called Lai Ka (fight dance, or defense-offense) was a form of training for<br />

bare-knuckle fighting. According to Faubion Bowers the assumption is that<br />

dancing and fighting are so closely related that ability in one entails ability<br />

in the other. Boxing was popular among the hill tribes: the Kachin, Karen,<br />

Shan, and Wa.<br />

Rather than existing as a separate art, Burmese wrestling, called naban<br />

(grappling), is integrated into other combatives. Grappling is most developed<br />

among the Chin and Kachin tribes, who are Himalayan in origin,<br />

and is said to have been derived from Indian wrestling rather than from<br />

Chinese grappling.<br />

Southeast Asia 545

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