| 南派螳螂 | |
| Southern Praying Mantis | |
|---|---|
| Pinyin: | nán pài tángláng |
| Yale Cantonese: | naam4 paai1 tong4 long4 |
| Hakka pinjim: | nam2 pai5 tong2 long2 |
| Literally | "southern style praying mantis" |
Despite its name, the Southern Praying Mantis style of Chinese martial arts is unrelated to the Northern Praying Mantis style. Southern Praying Mantis is instead related most closely to fellow Hakka styles such as Dragon and more distantly to the Fujian family of styles that includes Fujian White Crane, Five Ancestors, and Wing Chun.
Southern Praying Mantis is a close range fighting system that places much emphasis on short power techniques and has aspects of both the soft and internal as well as the hard and external. As in other southern styles, the arms are the main weapon, with kicks usually limited to the hip and under. Emphasis is placed on strengthening and lengthening the arms. When an extended arm has strength, it allows the practitioner to move about faster since his arms don't need to recoil or move back for more strength, like in boxing or many other fighting systems.
Like Wing Chun and Xingyiquan—other styles created as pure fighting arts—Southern Praying Mantis has relatively no aesthetic value, unlike its northern counterpart and many other styles.
Southern Praying Mantis is informed by traditional Chinese medicine, in particular the concept of meridians, which it uses for dim mak and tui na.
A common antecedent can be surmised not only from their similarities but also from the fact that they all share a common routine, Sarm Bo Jin. However, the genealogies of these branches are not complete enough to trace them to a single common ancestor.
In fact, Kwong Sai Jook Lum tradition records that it was once nicknamed "Hakka Kuen" (literally "Hakka fist") by the general public of the Pearl River Delta. When Lum Wing-Fay first began teaching Southern Praying Mantis in the United States, he did so at Hakka fraternal organizations such the Hip Sing Tong. Lum would eventually accept students that were not Hakka, but they still had to be Chinese (with the rumored exception of a Caucasian taxi driver whose extraordinary kindness to Lum won the driver some basic instruction from one of Lum's disciples). It was the following generation of Kwong Sai Jook Lum masters who made the art available to non-Chinese.
Lau Shui's acceptance of the non-Hakka Ip Shui as a disciple had much to do with the kindness that Ip and his wife showed Lau when he had fallen ill and was isolated from any relatives by the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong. Each of Lau's four other disciples—Chu Kwong-Wha, Chu Yu-Hing, Lum Wha, and Wong Hong-Kwong—were all Hakka.
Chu Gar Southern Praying Mantis tradition contends that the Hakka descend from loyalists of the Ming Dynasty who fled south when it was overthrown by the Qing Dynasty. However, according to mainstream Chinese historical scholarship, the term "Hakka" originally referred, not to refugees fleeing persecution by the Qing Dynasty, but to those whom the Qing Dynasty paid to settle in underpopulated regions of southern China. Among southern Chinese martial arts, the Chu family branch of Southern Praying Mantis is far from alone in claiming an anti-Qing heritage; that most do reflects the prominence of anti-Qing partisans in southern Chinese martial arts. Both Guangdong and Fujian are provinces that the Hakka call home, both are strongly associated with the southern Chinese martial arts, and both saw strong and persistent opposition to Qing rule, such as the Hakka-led Taiping Rebellion and the Heaven and Earth Society, whose founders were from the prefecture of Zhangzhou in Fujian Province, on its border with Guangdong. Societies like Heaven and Earth were noteworthy for how their membership transcended traditional Chinese social barriers like those separating Hakka from non-Hakka. In fact, a precursor to the Heaven and Earth Society was organized by Ti Xi, one of the Heaven and Earth founders, in Huizhou, part of the aforementioned "heartland" of Hakka Praying Mantis. The Heaven and Earth Society developed myths of Shaolin origins as part of a larger anti-Qing narrative. Perhaps Hakka opposed to the Qing Dynasty did something similar, redacting their own migration and the southward flight of Ming loyalist refugees into a single narrative.
However, the traditions of the Chu family branch contend that the name "Southern Praying Mantis" was chosen to conceal from Qing forces its political affiliations by pretending that this esoteric style of Ming loyalists was in fact a regional variant of the popular and widespread Praying Mantis style from Shandong.
| Chinese | Pinyin | Yale Cantonese | Hakka pinjim | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sarm Bo Jin | 三步箭 | Sān Bù Jiàn | Saam1 Bou6 Jin3 | Sam1 Pu5 Zien5 | literally "Three Step Arrow" |
| Jook Lum Gee | 竹林寺 | Zhú Lín Sì | Juk1 Lam4 Ji6 | Zuk7 Lim2 Sii5 | literally "Bamboo Forest Temple" |
| Kwong Sai | 江西 | Jiāngxī | Gong1 sai1 | Gong1 si1 | Jiangxi (江西; Yale Cantonese: Gongsai), not Guangxi (廣西, Yale Cantonese: Gwongsai) |
In the Australia version of Chow Gar Tong Long under direction of Henry Sue the form structure up to Disciple level is
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"Southern Praying Mantis (martial art)".
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