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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Madras University library manuscript collection), and a few have appeared<br />

in print, such as Rangabhyasam (published by the Madras Government<br />

Oriental Manuscript Series). <strong>The</strong>se titles are similar to those in the possession<br />

of practicing masters. At an obvious functional level, these manuals of<br />

practice are similar to those of other artists or craftsmen—they are used as<br />

reference books for occasional consultation to clarify any doubts that a<br />

master might have.<br />

A text is defined by whatever is included within any particular palmleaf<br />

manuscript or copied notebook; for example, a text in the possession<br />

of one master may be a loose, lengthy collection of sections of technical information<br />

on a variety of subjects, sometimes including not only techniques<br />

of practice but also information on the body (both gross and subtle); preparation<br />

of medicines and a variety of massage therapies; how, when, and<br />

where to reveal secret knowledge to one’s most favored disciples; the history<br />

and foundation myth of practice in Kerala; information on the construction<br />

of a traditional place of training (kalari); and installation and<br />

worship of appropriate deities. One master’s text records the following details<br />

about worshipping the deities of his kalari:<br />

During puja in your mind you must meditate on all the Gurudevada which<br />

dwell in the forty-two by twenty-one kalari, and also the twenty-one masters,<br />

the eight sages, and the eight murtikkal [aspects or forms] of Brahma, Vishnu,<br />

Siva, the forty-three crores devas [430 million gods], four sampradayam [lineages]<br />

which are meant for kalari practice, the sambradayam which are used<br />

in Tulunadu, the famous past kalari gurus of the four Namboodiri households<br />

known as ugram velli, dronam velli, ghoram velli, and ullutturuttiyattu, the<br />

eight devas connected with thekalari, and the murti positions connected with<br />

kalari practice.<br />

Others masters possess many shorter texts devoted to specific topics<br />

such as collections of verbal commands for body exercises, empty-hand techniques<br />

(verumkaipidutham), mantras, or medical preparations for external<br />

application of an oil or for internal consumption in treating a condition.<br />

Some specialized texts are devoted to identifying, locating, attacking,<br />

defending, and healing injuries to the vital spots of the body. Kalarippayattu<br />

masters possess one or more of three types of texts on the vital spots:<br />

(1) those, like the Marmmanidanam (Diagnosis of the Vital Spots), that are<br />

ultimately derived from Susruta’s early medical text (Samhita) enumerating<br />

each vital spot’s Sanskrit name, number, location, size, and classification,<br />

the symptoms of direct and full penetration, the length of time a person<br />

may live after penetration, and occasionally symptoms of lesser injury; (2)<br />

those, like Granthavarimarmma cikitsa, that also identify the 107 vital<br />

spots of the Sanskrit texts and record recipes and therapeutic procedures to<br />

be followed in healing injuries to the vital spots; and (3) much less San-<br />

Written Texts: India 755

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