Kung Fu
The Shaolin order dates to about 540 A.D., when an Indian
Buddhist priest named Bodhidharma (Tamo in Chinese), traveled to China to see
the Emperor. At that time, the Emperor had started local Buddhist monks
translating Buddhist texts from Sanskrit to Chinese. The intent was to allow the
general populace the ability to practice this religion.
This was a noble project, but when the Emperor believed
this to be his path to Nirvana, Tamo disagreed. Tamo's view on Buddhism was that
you could not achieve your goal just through good actions performed by others in
your name. At this point the Emperor and Tamo parted ways and Tamo traveled to
the nearby Buddhist temple to meet with the monks who were translating these
Buddhist texts.
The temple had been built years before in the remains of a
forest that had been cleared or burned down. At the time of the building of the
temple, the emperor's gardeners had also planted new trees. Thus the temple was
named "young (or new) forest", (Shaolin in Mandarin, Siu Lum in
Cantonese).
When Tamo arrived at the temple, he was refused admittance,
probably being thought of as an upstart or foreign meddler by the head abbot
(Fang Chang). Rejected by the monks, Tamo went to a nearby cave and meditated
until the monks recognized his religious prowess and admitted him. Legend has it
that he bored a hole through one side of the cave with his constant gaze; in
fact, the accomplishment that earned his recognition is lost to history.
When Tamo joined the monks, he observed that they were not
in good physical condition. Most of their routine paralleled that of the Irish
monks of the Middle Ages, who spent hours each day hunched over tables where
they transcribed handwritten texts. Consequently, the Shaolin monks lacked the
physical and mental stamina needed to perform even the most basic of Buddhist
meditation practices. Tamo countered this weakness by teaching them moving
exercises, designed to both enhance ch'i flow and build strength. These
sets, modified from Indian yogas (mainly hatha, and raja) were based on the
movements of the 18 main animals in Indo-Chinese iconography (e.g., tiger, deer,
leopard, cobra, snake, dragon, etc.), were the beginnings of Shaolin Kung Fu.
It is hard to say just when the exercises became
"martial arts". The Shaolin temple was in a secluded area where
bandits would have traveled and wild animals were an occasional problem, so the
martial side of the temple probably started out to fulfill self-defense needs.
After a while, these movements were codified into a system of self-defense.
As time went on, this Buddhist sect became more and more
distinct because of the martial arts being studied. This is not to say that Tamo
"invented" martial arts. Martial arts had existed in China for
centuries. But within confines of the temple, it was possible to develop and
codify these martial arts into the new and different styles that would become
distinctly Shaolin. One of the problems faced by many western historians is the
supposed contraindication of Buddhist principles of non-violence coupled with
Shaolin's legendary martial skills. In fact, the Shaolin practitioner is never
an attacker, nor does he or she dispatch the most devastating defenses in any
situation. Rather, the study of kung fu leads to better understanding of
violence, and consequently how to avoid conflict. Failing that, a Buddhist who
refuses to accept an offering of violence (i.e., and attack) merely returns it
to the sender. Initially, the kung fu expert may choose to parry an attack, but
if an assailant is both skilled and determined to cause harm, a more definitive
and concluding solution may be required, from a joint-lock hold to a knockout,
to death. The more sophisticated and violent an assault, the more devastating
the return of the attack to the attacker. Buddhists are not, therefore, hurting
anyone; they merely refuse delivery of intended harm.
The Shaolin philosophy is one that started from
Buddhism and later adopted many Taoist principles to become a new sect. Thus
even though a temple may have been Taoist or Buddhist at first, once it became
Shaolin, it was a member of a new order, an amalgamation of the prevailing
Chinese philosophies of the time.
Other temples sprung from Honan. This happened
because the original temple would suffer repeated attacks and periods of
inactivity as the reigning Imperial and regional leaders feared the martial
powers of the not-always unaligned monks. Refugee Shaolin practitioners would
leave the temple to teach privately (in Pai) or at other Buddhist or Taoist
temples. In rare cases, a new Shaolin Temple would be erected (Fukien, Kwangtung)
or converted from a pre-existing temple (Wu-Tang, O Mei Shan). Politically and
militarily involved monks (such as the legendary White Eyebrow and Hung Tze Kwan)
would be perpetual sources of trouble for the generally temporally aloof monks.
The Boxer rebellion in 1901 was the beginning of the end of
the Shaolin temples. Prior to that, China had been occupied by Western and
Japanese governments and business interests. The British had turned the Imperial
family into an impotent puppet regime largely through the import and sales of
opium and the general drug-devastation inflicted upon the poor population. This
lead to the incursion of other European powers, including Russia, France and
Holland, and later the Japanese and Americans. By the late 1800s, China was
effectively divided into national zones, each controlled by one of the outside
powers (similar to post World War II Berlin, on a hugely larger scale). The long
standing animosities between China and Japan worsened, and extended to include
all other "foreign devils" as well. Coupled with the now almost
universal disdain by the Chinese for their Empress, a Nationalist movement with
nation-wide grass-roots support was born. Among the front line soldiers of the
new "order" were the legendary and near-legendary martial
artists--many Shaolin--known as Boxers (remember how Bruce Lee, in his films
depicting these times, refers to himself as a Chinese boxer...). Though their
initial assaults on the military powers of the occupation governments were not
entirely successful (many believed in Taoist magical spells that would make them
impervious to gunfire), their temporary defeat would lead to a more modern
reformation that included adopting modern military weapons and tactics.
The withdrawal of western forces was prolonged over many
years, and by the end of World War I saw China in an almost feudal state of
civil war. Not only were national troops fighting loyalists, but both sides had
to fight the Japanese (who still held much of the northern Manchurian region of
China) as well as many powerful, regional warlords. Many parts of China were
virtually anarchies, but by 1931 almost all non-Asian occupants had been
successfully driven out (with the interesting exception, in the late 1930s, of
the volunteer American airmen known as The Flying Tigers, who helped repel
Japanese forces prior to World War II), and the major combatants within China
were the Nationalists and the Communists. Both sides displayed the typical
jingoistic attitudes of forces in mindless warfare--if you aren't with us, you
are against us. Neutrality meant nothing except the possibility of a later
enemy. Consequently, Shaolin and other monks were routinely murdered by soldiers
from both sides. One result of this program of murder was the exodus of many
monks into the hills, or abroad, with the hope that Shaolin knowledge might
survive even if the temples themselves did not.
The temples were unfortunate victims of war in a land that
had abandoned its historical practice of respecting posterity and ancestors. All
were ransacked and looted by various armed groups. O Mei Shan Temple
("Great White Mountain"), in Szechuan Province, was situated on a
mountain top and deemed by Chinese officers to be a fitting target for artillery
practice. It was shelled in turn by Nationalist and Communist armies. In a
fitting twist of fate, this one-time site of medical and natural history
knowledge was rebuilt by the Communists in the mid 1970s, and now stands as the
National Park and Research Headquarters for the panda preserve.
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