When westerners think of Chinese martial arts, the term kung
fu generally comes to mind. The word kung fu is a compound of (gōng) meaning
work and (fū) merit, and refers to any skill that is acquired through learning
or practice. Kung fu is often misunderstood by outsiders to be a single
fighting style. In reality, it is made of several hundred styles or schools,
and legend has it one of them was founded by a woman.
Ng Mui was born in a noble household in China in the
seventeenth century and her life is a mixture of fact and legend. In some
stories she is the daughter of a general in the Ming imperial court, in others
a princess, but because of wealth and family influence, she had access to an
extensive education and the best kung fu teachers of the time. In her younger
years, Ng Mui mastered several Shaolin martial arts and even developed a new
training regimen on upturned logs to develop balance and leg strength, a
practice she later incorporated into her own fighting style.
Her transformation into a warrior woman began in a bloody coup.
The Manchus defeated the Ming dynasty and took over the rule of China. Ng Mui
parents, fervent supporters of the Ming, were killed. Fortunately, she was away
from home when the purge started. She escaped to Kwangsi Province and took
refuge in the White Crane Temple. Due to the Shaolin’s support for the Ming,
the monks and nuns faced great danger, so had to remain on alert for attacks.
Ng Mui became a Buddhist nun. Although highly proficient in
the existing styles of kung fu, she felt it was possible to devise a more
effective fighting method which didn’t rely on brute strength or require years
to master. Her story has several versions, but the one I like says one day she
watched a fight between a stork and a snake. The stork used its wings and legs
to deflect and counter-attack at the same time. Inspiration struck Ng Mui. She adapted
the technique to create a unique new martial art that emphasized a delicate but
natural self-defense style and transcended size, weight and gender. The movements
required little force to block and could strike effectively and efficiently.
At first, her new technique had no name. Then Ng Mui met a beautiful
young girl named Yim Wing Chun. Her fiancé was away fighting with a rebel force
and a bandit warlord tried to force her into marriage. She refused and he
threatened her and her family. Yim Wing Chun feared she’d have to yield to his
desires, but Ng Mui convinced the girl to give her six months for training. By
the end of six months she mastered the new art of self-defense and then challenged
the warlord to combat. She defeated him. Her fiancé returned and was impressed
with her new skill. She bested him, too, and he begged her to teach him the
fighting style. He named it Wing Chun in her honor. It translates as “everlasting
springtime” which sounds pretty soft for one tough cookie.
Ng Mui became one of the Five Elders of the Shaolin Temple,
the most respected marital artists of the 1700s. Because of the Shaolins’
support of the previous Ming dynasty, the Manchu eventually attacked and
destroyed the temple. The elders escaped and scattered in different directions.
Ng Mui and her followers supposedly went into hiding in the Himalayan foothills
where she became part of a rebel force and continued to teach kung fu.
Wing Chun was reintroduced in the twentieth century by Grandmaster
Ip Man, regarded as the greatest and most insightful teacher of Wing Chun. He
moved to Hong Kong in 1948 and became the first master to teach the fighting
style to the general public and spread the popularity of Wing Chun around the
world today.
L. A. Kelley writes science fiction and fantasy with humor, romance and a touch of sass. She also finds your lack of Wing Chun disturbing.
2 comments:
That was fascinating, Linda. I'm so glad you shared this info with us. My favorite Disney princess is Mulan (story based on a Chinese legend). Those women did what they had to do to save themselves and others. Admirable.
Thanks for such an informative post!
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