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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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632 Thaing<br />

stop guerrilla warfare; this included prohibiting training with swords and<br />

spears. Thus the British occupation started a progressive decline in the<br />

Burmese fighting arts.<br />

Ironically, however, in 1933 the British-supervised Ghurka Rifles attempted<br />

to revive unarmed systems of Burmese traditional fighting. Forming<br />

the Military Athletic Club, nine Gurkha officers combined knowledge<br />

of the Burmese arts with what they knew of the Indian, Tibetan, Chinese,<br />

and Nepalese martial arts (i.e., the native arts of the countries from which<br />

the Ghurkas were recruited into the British army). <strong>The</strong> result was called<br />

bandô.<br />

During <strong>World</strong> War II, the Japanese occupied southern Burma, but the<br />

British and Indians continued to fight in the mountains using Chinese military<br />

and American logistical assistance. (This area was home to Claire<br />

Chennault’s Flying Tigers in 1941, and subsequently the famous “Burma<br />

Road.”) During the war, the mountain tribes were generally loyal to the Allies,<br />

and in the process demonstrated formidable military skills. <strong>The</strong> Jinghpaw,<br />

for example, who fought with American troops during the war, in<br />

spite of retaining hostility toward the British, cooperated with them out of<br />

a greater hatred for the Japanese occupation forces.<br />

<strong>The</strong> role played by the Jinghpaw (still known to the Allies as Kachin)<br />

is representative of that played by the hill tribes. OSS Detachment 101<br />

worked with a force of 11,000 Kachin tribesmen who reportedly killed<br />

10,000 Japanese at a loss of only 206 of their own. U.S. military personnel<br />

came to appreciate the Kachins as natural guerrilla fighters. So great was<br />

their skill (developed, in part, through practice of thaing), that the Kachin<br />

method of attack and ambush came to be emulated in the tactics of U.S.<br />

special forces teams such as the SEALs and Green Berets.<br />

In 1946, nine survivors of the Military Athletic Club formed the National<br />

Bandô Association (NBA) in Burma. <strong>The</strong>ir eclectic background is indicated<br />

by the ethnicity noted following their names: Abehananda (Indian),<br />

C. C. Chu (Chinese), Has. K. Khan (Pakistani), U Zaw Min (Burmese),<br />

G. Bahadur (Ghurkan), U Ba Saw (Karen), Duwa Maung (Lisu), Boji Mein<br />

His (Arakanais), and U Ba Than [Gyi] (Burmese). As the senior military officer,<br />

U Ba Than (1883–1968) was elected president.<br />

In 1948 the British granted independence to Burma. <strong>The</strong> new government<br />

refused to join the Commonwealth, and shortly afterwards both<br />

Karens and Communists led rebellions. Although it was at first a close contest,<br />

the central government retained power. Nevertheless student unrest in<br />

the cities and guerrilla warfare in the countryside have continued into the<br />

present. Given this ongoing turmoil, reliable information on the state of<br />

thaing in Myanmar in general and among the Kachins and Karens in particular<br />

is difficult to obtain.

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