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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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634 Thaing<br />

Lethwei is the Burmese boxing system. Its repertoire includes all manner<br />

of unarmed techniques, and practitioners claim that it is a more complete<br />

system than the similar Muay Thai. Weapons include elbow and fist<br />

strikes; foot, leg, and knee blows; head-butts; and trips, sweeps, throws,<br />

and ground strikes.<br />

Although Muay Thai converted to boxing gloves during the 1930s,<br />

hand wraps continue to be used in lethwei. Tradition plays a role in this.<br />

For example, among the Kachin the fighters’ hands are traditionally bound<br />

in hemp cloth wraps used to wrap deceased relatives.<br />

Lethwei contests are often associated with festivals and generally are<br />

accompanied by music. Matches are decided by a competitor’s being<br />

knocked out or submitting, or by the referee stopping the match. <strong>The</strong> rules<br />

have remained very much the same since the eighteenth century.<br />

Suppressed during British rule, lethwei experienced a renaissance in<br />

the 1990s. Not simply a sport, lethwei has practical defense applications<br />

and is used to develop a foundation for thaing.<br />

Naban is the Burmese grappling system. It utilizes palm and foot<br />

strikes along with grappling techniques (including joint locks, pressure<br />

points, and chokes) to control and thus render an adversary unable to continue<br />

fighting. Commentators have characterized naban as practical in its<br />

tactics and strategies because it stresses compliance and eventual submission.<br />

Attacks are allowed to any part of the body, and there are no illegal<br />

targets in naban.<br />

Thaing contests traditionally allow any strike or submission technique,<br />

with the exception of biting (this was probably because of the rate of death<br />

due to infection from bites), and matches have ended in death or disability.<br />

Contemporary Developments<br />

Two traditional styles of thaing survive in Myanmar—the Karen “School<br />

of Seven <strong>Arts</strong>” and the Mon “School of Nine <strong>Arts</strong>.” With government approval,<br />

tournaments and exhibitions have been held regularly since the<br />

1990s. National student sports festivals, along with European and Asian<br />

imports such as boxing, karate, and taekwondo, regularly include thaing,<br />

with both men’s and women’s divisions. Information on the nature of these<br />

competitions is not readily available, but it is likely that the style is based<br />

in the eclectic NBA system.<br />

In addition, lethwei was resurrected in Yangon (Rangoon) in the<br />

1970s. Described as a “vicious combination of wrestling, boxing, jûdô,<br />

karate and gymnastics with its most deadly technique being the high kick”<br />

(“Burmese Boxing . . .”), its matches are nonetheless accompanied by music.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore these events probably resemble Muay Thai matches, without<br />

the formalities of rounds or weight classes.

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