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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Practitioners of kendô, the Japanese Way of the Sword, practice their moves with bamboo swords in a dôjô in Japan,<br />

ca. 1920. (Michael Maslan Historic Photographs/Corbis)<br />

on the front wall—along with national flags in many contemporary training<br />

halls. Hierarchy is signaled by positioning within the dôjô. <strong>The</strong> higher ranks<br />

line up facing the front of the training hall, with lower-ranking students<br />

lined up behind them; teachers stand at the front of the room facing students.<br />

<strong>The</strong> dôjô and the behaviors appropriate to it set the model for many<br />

other contemporary Asian martial arts and those non-Asian systems influenced<br />

by them.<br />

In south India, a dynamic relationship is believed to exist between the<br />

students of kalarippayattu and their training hall, in that the building is<br />

analogous to a human body, while the students are the body’s animating<br />

spirit. One cannot exist without the other. Even abandoned training halls<br />

do not lose their sanctity. In ancient times, Howard Reid and Michael<br />

Croucher report that landowners commonly owned private kalaris. If the<br />

training buildings fell into disuse, rather than destroying them, owners had<br />

them converted into temples. Rituals such as lighting a sacred lamp every<br />

day marked the abandoned kalari as sacred space.<br />

Again, even in those systems lacking formal buildings for the practice<br />

of their disciplines, the symbolic use of space is obvious. Even in Southern<br />

Kalarippayattu, where outdoor areas rather than buildings are utilized, students<br />

of this art, like their northern counterparts, ritually honor deities as-<br />

Training Area 645

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