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News and Articles
Black Tiger Guards the Mountain: Reflections
and Observations on our Shaolin Temple today Trouble at Shaolin Temple However, in the midst of all this perceived controversy, Shaolin Kung Fu presses forward. Those critics lack the patience and perseverance to penetrate the grimy tourist facade. They will forever stand outside of the Temple gates, shouting their blasphemies to the deaf ears of Shaolin's guarding door god statues. While it is true that modern wushu (forms competition), as well as modern San Da (free sparring), have both been heavily incorporated into the Shaolin curriculum, the traditional Kung Fu is still practiced. However, just like the old days, you have to earn it. You have to spend enough time and effort at Shaolin before you can find some one willing to teach you the real stuff. While Shaolin definitely has it's charlatans, remember this: Shaolin Temple has many hidden tigers. Shaolin Spreads to the world Also, another monk defected. This time it was the extraordinary Shi Xing Peng, one of Shaolin's finest warrior monks, who now resides in Holland. Before this happened, Shi Yan Ming (the Shaolin Monk in New York) told me that he believed that there was five other monks aside from himself that are now outside of China, including Shi Gou Lin (also in the United States) and four other in France. Rumors are flying that more are on the way… Recently another martial tour, advertising child actor Chen Shao Lung (a child actor famous for portraying a Shaolin Monk), made its way across the states, promoting "authentic Shaolin Kung Fu" from the Henan Province Team. There were no actual Shaolin monks on his team. Some members were trained at Shaolin village and possessed some extraordinary Shaolin skills (obviously, you do not have to be a monk to practice Shaolin, or a lot of us would be out of business). Unfortunately, Chen Shao Lung didn't make it on the tour. However, the fact that this national tour billed itself as "Authentic Shaolin Kung Fu" and feature Chen is interesting. It is a testament to Shaolin's rising popularity. Probably the most exciting prospect on the horizon of Shaolin is
the reopening of the Southern Shaolin Temple in November. According
to legend, the southern temple was burned down in the Qing Dynasty.
Five monks who escaped this destruction (known as the "five
elders") are attributed with establishing the southern school
such as Hung Gar and Wing Chun. The central Chinese government funded
research to located the ruins of this lost temple. In September
of 1991, it was announced that the Linquanruan Temple in Putian
county, Fujian Province, was actually the site of the southern Shaolin
Temple. At this writing, I haven't heard yet if this is the temple
that will be unveiled as the new Southern Shaolin Temple this November
or not. There were other temples that were in contention as the
southern temple site. It will be interesting to see what is taught
there. Will it have some valid connection to authentic southern
styles, or will everyone be learning compulsory Nanquan (the modern
wushu version of "southern fist")? With the tardy opinionated
coverage of Shaolin's 1500th anniversary in our martial magazines,
I would be surprised to find very much information about this reopened
southern temple. For the rest of this article, I will serve as your humble guide as we go on a walking tour of Shaolin village. I will try to describe what we might see if we were to walk a few miles up main street, from one end of Shaolin Village to the other. My goal is to provide you with a more penetrating look than at Shaolin than what you might see if you were only there for the usually four hour tour. Hopefully, this will give you with a better understanding of the complex situation at Shaolin Temple, and how many of the criticisms directed at Shaolin are short sighted. The village- Locals only This is rural China so "main street" is filthy. Pigs run wild and children defecate on the side walks. Garbage is littered into the gutters and in unused corners. Both the tourist and the locals are very inconsiderate when it comes to trash. Rats, centipedes, stinging wasps, scorpions and other unmentionable vermin thrive here. There is noisy construction all around. New buildings, more pavement, and new attractions are all signs of the economic development of Shaolin Village. The stench and the dust can be overpowering. The village can be also be a nasty place if you not used to poverty. Many people live on the streets and sleep in the dirt. They possess little more than their clothes and their hunger. Poking through the little stores of the village is a trip in itself.
Last year, I counted over 50 stores that sold martial arts equipment.
This year, there may have been more. Most of the weapons that are
available here are of the cheapest materials and are of the flimsy
wushu variety. I once read a criticism of this point by an American
writer. That writer believed that those weapons were too light for
traditional Kung Fu and cited it as evidence against Shaolin's authenticity.
What that writer failed to see was that the thousands of people
that train at Shaolin would love to work with better, heavier weapons,
but they just can't afford it. Most of the Kung Fu teachers and
students are very poor. Good weapons and equipment are a rare commodity.
When you are poor, you make the best of what you can get. Believe
me, when you show anyone in Shaolin a true combat weapon, they drool
with desire. Even the monks will light up when they see a good piece
of battle hardware. They like the real stuff as much, if not more,
than we do. Next stop, the Tourist Zone Outside the gate to the right is where you should purchase your tickets. There is one general ticket that gets you all the official attractions. Private owned attractions, such as the prehistoric mummy (which I am sure is fake) or the fat Buddha that houses some dingy mannequins, are all extra. Most of these tourist traps are nasty rip-offs, but they only rip you off for pennies, so personally, I find them irresistible. The depth of their sleaziness never ceases to amaze and impress me. Across main street is the Quanzhou cinema. As tourist attractions go at Shaolin, this "official" one is surprisingly good quality. It is one of those 360 degree movie houses, where multiple projectors and screens surround you. Every half hour, a twenty minute documentary on Shaolin Temple is shown here. It is completely in Chinese without subtitles, but it is still very worthwhile. Check out the tasty Popsicles with the squid on the label at the concession stand. The first building complex inside the tourist zone is the Shaolinsi Wushu Guan. The Shaolin Wushu Guan is a 40,000 square meter complex, 7000 meters east of the temple. It is the largest training facility devoted exclusively to Kung Fu in China, possibly the largest in the world. about thirty of the Shaolin Monks reside at the Wushu Guan. They perform everyday for the endless parade of tourists and teach us weak and clumsy foreigners. These monks can be hard to recognize until you get to know them. They seldom wear their robes because when they do, they are mobbed by tourists who want photos. They tend to prefer T-shirt souvenirs from their international tours and baseball caps to cover their bald heads from the sun. Once you get to know them, they are a great group of people, not only for their amazing skill but for their individual characters. Their generous demeanor and intense discipline is everything you might expect from such a legendary figure as a Shaolin monk. On the left side of main street is the Wushu Guan amphitheater. This is where hundreds of children trained under the auspices of Wushu Guan instructors (not necessarily the monks). To the right is the center of the Wushu Guan. In the courtyard are eighteen exquisite bronze statues upon which the locals like to hang their laundry. This courtyard is the entrance to the central main demonstration hall, and two smaller training halls. The main hall is where the monks demonstrate and train, the other halls are where they train themselves and their students. The main hall was probably gorgeous when it first opened, but now it has fallen into a stage of disrepair. It has a beautiful ceiling mural and dragon chandelier, which can only be seen when you are lying on your back in the center of the demonstration floor (due to my training regimen this year, I spent a lot of time looking at it, much more than I would have wished). Behind building this is the training yard. This yard has all sorts of obstacles, like plum flower posts, and is used primarily for photo shoots. On the other side of the yard are two foreigners dormitories (an old disheveled one in front and a new disheveled one in back), a Kareoke bar and a restaurant. These dormitories offer the best facilities in town: rooms with balconies, a T.V., a toilet, a shower with tub, a sink and occasionally- running water. The restaurant is rat infested and tea pot are frequently plugged with dead bugs; It is one of the cleaner eating establishment in town. The Karaoke bar is the best place of all. In this noisy, tiny and gaudy bar, you may find yourself listening to a communist party leader or a Hong Kong organized crime boss sing his heart out (better applaud loudly) or get caught in a drinking contest with a Shaolin Monk (watch out for the drunken style masters, they will sucker punch you with their Chinese drinking games). One of the most hideous aspects of the Tourist Zone are dragon buses. These run-down, filthy, nasty buses give Shaolin the feeling of a ride at a cheap carnival. You can catch tern anywhere in the Zone, just like an infection. There are also horse and buggy rides, which aren't quite as evil as the buses. I was once in such a buggy, brimming with some of my travel companions and several of the monks almost a dozen of us - when one of the monks decides to start pushing us, the full buggy, the horse, and all uphill. I think it was his idea of a joke. Everyone laughed but the horse. Further up main street, on the right, is the Shaolin Temple. It is still in the process of restoration. Last year, the bell tower that was destroyed by the Japanese in 1928 was rebuilt. A vegetarian restaurant was also constructed. This year, another symmetrical tower is nearing completion. While it is easy to be critical of the garish tourism that surrounds the Temple, it is the revenues generated by this tourism that is funding this restoration. Without tourism, the entire Temple would still be ruins. Everyone who visits Shaolin village will visit the temple. Some of us have even trained in there. Perhaps I will describe what lies inside in a later article, but let's trod onward. Across form the Shaolin Temple, on the left, is new temple, The Temple of Four Directions. This temple is laid out on the cardinal directions, like a compass. In the center is a stunning Avalokiteshavara Buddha. The four wings of this temple are filled with statues of the Lohan or Arhats, which are sort of like Buddhist saints. Some of these statues are disturbingly lifelike, so that you might swear that they gaze back at you. Others are delightfully surreal, with grossly extended arms, or six feet long eyebrows, or two pares of eyes. There is even a Christ figure, holding a lamb (Jesus is sometimes considered an Buddhist arhat!) This temple is not very well attended, which makes it a lot more peaceful and pleasant. Personally, I found this place was a little too quiet; All of those statues can get a little creepy. Just past the temple, on the right, is the trail up the peak to
Ta Mo's cave. This stone carved trail is breathtaking and steep.
The hike takes an hour or two, depending on how fast you climb steep,
uneven stairs. It is the most extraordinary part of Shaolin village,
not to be missed. This modest cave is where Ta Mo meditated for
nine years. Last, year, a magnificent marble statue of Ta Mo was
built on top of this peak. It overlooks the entire gorge and can
be seen from anywhere in Shaolin Village. This statue is another
contribution of tourist money. Holy Mount Song On one side of the cableway is a high wire suspended between two
peaks that some old guy rids a bike across for a tourist stunt.
I never saw this happen myself. He used to do it everyday, bur apparently
has slowed down in his old age. The cable is very high, so I am
sure it is impressive. Beyond that is one of Mount Song's sacred
spots, the Nine Dragon Polls. This is a series of natural polls,
one of which is at the bottom of a thirty-foot cliff dive, if you
dare. Trust me, take a guide to the polls. It is a treacherous trail
and difficult to find, but quite pristine. Shaolin Tomorrow In truth, it is very difficult for outsiders to penetrate the tourist
facade of Shaolin. Personally, I feel that I have barely scratched
the surface. I can't imaging what impression one might have after
spending less than a day there, which is what most tourists do.
I saw a very reputed Sifu take his tour group through Shaolin village
in just four hours. They only saw the Temple, the Pagoda forest,
and a demonstration by one of the local schools that dressed their
top students up like monks. It was a good demonstration, but it
wasn't the real monks. I cannot but wonder how those tourist might
have perceived about Shaolin. When anyone tells you their opinion
about what is really happening at Shaolin Temple, be skeptical. |
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