
This article is from
Martial Arts of the World an Encyclopedia by Thomas A. Green a noted
Anthropologist.
Thaing
is
a
Burmese term used to classify the indigenous martial systems of ancient Burma
(now Myanmar). The word thaing loosely
translates as "total combat." Moreover, as the loose translation
stipulates, the label encompasses the range of combatives that have been
systematized in Burmese martial tradition: bando,
banshay, lethwei, naban, and other ethnic or tribal fighting systems native
to the region. Beyond the martial elements of thaing, practitioners are enjoined
to incorporate ethical principles such as humility, patience, tolerance,
integrity, loyalty, courage, knowledge, physical and spiritual strength, and
love of family.
Traditional styles of thaing are associated with
specific ethnic groups. Styles that have been identified in the literature
include Burmese, Chin, Chinese, Kachin (or Jinghpaw), Karen, Mon, Shan, and
Talaing. Forms of thaing have been reported among hill tribes such as the Wa,
but little is known of their characteristics except that they have a shared
worldview with the Kachin.
Traditional styles are subdivided into systems or
forms named for (and adopting the mythical characteristics of) animals such as
the boar or the python. Generally twelve animals are incorporated into a given
style, but there are exceptions, such as the Kachin system, which uses sixteen.
Records of conflict among the various ethnic groups
that have resided in the area of Myanmar (Burma) abound both in oral and written
accounts. Accounts of this fierce competition for territory and resources begin
with the Pyu in antiquity but start becoming historic rather than legendary
during the eleventh century A.D., when King Anawrahtar organized lower Burma into a
sovereignty as the Pagan Empire (after its capital at Pegu, not its religious
beliefs).
In the Pagan Empire, martial arts were one of
eighteen subjects mastered by aristocrats. Warfare was endemic, so ethnic groups
also began to systematize the combat tactics appropriate to their environment
and cultural heritage. Variation was introduced by differences in language,
culture, geography, and religion. For example, some cultures were animists. So,
after killing a living being, either human or animal, the head was removed to
free the spirit and honored as a trophy. (This practice persisted at least into
the beginning of the twentieth century among the Wa and well into the mid
twentieth century among the Kachin.) Others were Buddhist, and so there were
prohibitions against unnecessary killing.
Accordingly, the development of thaing needs to be
viewed in the context of movements of ethnic groups such as the Shan, Mon,
Karen, Arakanai, and Kachin through the mountainous area where Tibet, Yunnan,
Burma, and India meet. The Kachins, for example, have a well‑developed
oral tradition of migration from their ancestral home, the Majoi Shingra Bum
(Naturally Flat Mountain), which was possibly located in eastern Tibet. The
Karens also have a tradition that they passed through the mountains on
their way to lower
Burma. Meanwhile, in neighboring Manipur, India, the Meiteis (who comprise 60
percent of the population) are of Tat origin and famous for their practice of
martial arts. While this may owe more to Hindu than to Tibetan influence, the
primary Manipuri art thang-ta is closely tied to dance and ritual practice.
Likewise, the equally Tat hill tribes of Nagaland (north of Manipur) have
related martial traditions.
Traditions from Yunnan province, which is where the
Tai had an empire into the thirteenth century, also may have links with thaing.
For example, as recently as 1928, Miao doctors were reported as boxing, fighting
with sticks and knives, and practicing q1gong (exercises for cultivating internal strength often associated
with martial art training). While much more research is required into the
subject, the historical connections among martial arts in the area are
intriguing.
How these interconnections probably came about is
that during the thirteenth century, Kublai Khan overthrew the Nanchao, or Tai,
states in Yunnan. This caused Tat refugees to retreat into Manipur, Nagaland,
and the Irrawaddy and Menam valleys, and over time they established a number of
states, including one that later became Thailand. Moreover, the Naga who entered
the Kachin state were often assimilated into jinghpaw clans. jinghpaw oral
narratives suggest a natural affinity between the two groups.
Meanwhile, King Narathihapate of Pagan executed a
Mongol ambassador carrying Kublai Khan's demands to Burma and even had the
audacity to directly attack China. So for the next 150 years Burma and Mongol
China were almost constantly at war, either with one another or with the various
Tai states.
That said, Lethwei only entered the oral traditions
of this struggle during the eighteenth century. Specifically, according to Thai
tradition, in the 1770s a Thai prisoner of war, Nat Khanom Tom, was awarded his
freedom after he defeated a dozen of his Burmese captors in boxing matches. In
contrast, Burmese tradition maintains that Nat was the consummate politician,
ingratiating himself at the Burmese court to such an extent that he was allowed
to train in the royal fighting arts. This dedication
to learning, his negotiating skills, and a perceived pro Burman attitude (which
induced his captors to believe he could further their cause among the Thai) led
to his release.
From 1811 to
1815, Burmese rebels hiding in British
India led raids into Burma. The British did little to prevent this, so between 1819
and 1823 the Burmese sent military forces into British‑controlled
Assam, Manipur, Cachar, and Bengal. In 1824,
the East India Company had had enough, and responded by declaring war on
Burma. Rangoon was occupied without resistance, the Burmese agreed to pay
indemnities, and in 1825 the British
withdrew.
However, this defeat embarrassed the Burmese
government, and revolts followed. Meanwhile Anglo Burmese relations continued to
deteriorate, and there was a second Anglo Burmese war in 1852-1853.
During this war the British East India Company annexed Pegu province.
Finally, in 1878, Burmese insurgents attacked Manipur, and this led to a third
Anglo Burmese war in 1885. That in
turn led to the British annexation of all Burma in 1886, followed by a decade of guerrilla warfare.
British rule over Burma lasted until World War 11;
its most famous policeman was probably Eric Blair, who in 1934 published the novel Burmese
Days under the pseudonym George Orwell. During their administration, the
British outlawed headhunting and instituted a campaign intended to stop
guerrilla warfare; this included prohibiting training with swords and spears.
Thus the British occupation started a progressive decline in the Burmese
fighting arts.
Two
Kachin tribesmen near Bhamo, Myanmar (Burma), photographed around 1886. The man
on the right is armed with a dha, the traditional sword used for the practice of
thaing. (Hulton‑Deutsch CollectionlCorbis)
Ironically, however, in 1933 the
British‑supervised Ghurka Rifles attempted to revive unarmed systems of
Burmese traditional fighting. Forming the Military Athletic Club, nine Gurkha
officers combined knowledge of the Burmese arts with what they knew of the
Indian, Tibetan, Chinese, and Nepalese martial arts (i.e., the native arts of
the countries from which the Ghurkas were recruited into the British army). The
result was called bando
During World War II, the Japanese occupied southern
Burma, but the British and Indians continued to fight in the mountains using
Chinese military and American logistical assistance. (This area was home to
Claire Chermault's Flying Tigers in 1941, and subsequently the famous
"Burma Road.") During the war, the mountain tribes were generally
loyal to the Allies, and in the process demonstrated formidable military skills.
The Jinghpaw, for example, who fought with American troops during the war, in
spite of retaining hostility toward the British, cooperated with them out of a
greater hatred for the Japanese occupation forces.
The role played by the Jinghpaw (still known to the
Allies as Kachin) is representative of that played by the hill tribes. OSS
Detachment 101 worked with a force of 11,000 Kachin tribesmen who reportedly
killed 10,000 Japanese at a loss of only 206 of their own. U.S. military
personnel came to appreciate the Kachins as natural guerrilla fighters. So great
was their skill (developed, in part, through practice of thaing), that the
Kachin method of attack and ambush came to be emulated in the tactics of U.S.
special forces teams such as the SEALs and Green Berets.
In 1946, nine survivors of the Military Athletic Club
formed the National Band6 Association (NBA) in Burma. Their eclectic background
is indicated by the ethnicity noted following their names: Abehananda (Indian),
C. C. Chu (Chinese), Has. K. Khan (Pakistani), U Zaw Min (Burmese), G. Bahadur (Ghurkan),
U Ba Saw (Karen), Duwa Maung (Lisu), Boji Mein His (Arakanais), and U Ba Than [Gyi]
(Burmese). As the senior military officer, U Ba Than (1883‑1968) was
elected president.
In 1948 the British granted independence to Burma.
The new government refused to join the Commonwealth, and shortly afterwards both
Karens and Communists led rebellions. Although it was at first a close contest,
the central government retained power. Nevertheless student unrest in the cities
and guerrilla warfare in the countryside have continued into the present. Given
this ongoing turmoil, reliable information on the state of thaing in Myanmar in
general and among the Kachins and Karens in particular is difficult to obtain.
Branches of
Thaing
Bando, the
most widely known of the various subdivisions of thaing, means "way of
discipline." Practitioners train to master physical and psychological
strategies that develop hardness. Physical hardness is developed by rigorous
conditioning exercises, including punching lightly padded tree trunks with the
intent of punching through the object rather than stopping at physical contact.
Other exercises include tearing through bags of rice and rock to condition the
hands for gouging. Controlled competition is encouraged because it allows the
practitioner the opportunity to use techniques at full speed, to get used to the
physical demands of combat, and to simulate the stress and uncertainty of real
conflicts. And, while adaptable for the ring, band6's fighting tactics are based
in the concept of a life‑and death struggle. Therefore, a traditional
curriculum includes various aggressive techniques typically banned from sport.
Mental hardness is created through a philosophy that
encourages the acceptance of death. The process of accepting and embracing the
worst is said to lead to liberation from fear and to the willingness to fight
for total victory.
Toward this end, students are taught from the
beginning that there is no substitute for physical fitness. They are further
instructed that movement through or around threats and attacks is almost always
the safest strategy. As a consequence, mobility skills (stepping, slipping,
dodging, and rolling) are primary tactics. Blocking, parrying, and breaking are
practiced as methods of defense. Offensive methods include a variety of striking
and grappling methods.
Banshay,
the
Burmese term used to describe armed methods, is an integral element of thaing.
Handheld traditional Burmese weaponry includes a variety of wooden and bamboo
armaments. Examples include a small, pocket‑sized stick held in a closed
hand with a portion either Jutting from the underside or top of the fist, short
and midsized batons (dhot), walking
staffs, clubs, spears, and shields. Also utilized are hosts of edged weapons,
including knives, machetes (including the kukri,
with its angled, curving, forward weighted blade), swords (dha, whose blades vary from thick, Malay style blades to sleeker
versions similar to those used by other Southeast Asians), battle‑axes,
and fighting spears.
Projectile weapons such as the bow and crossbow also
play a role. For example in the Glass
Palace Chronicle, a Prince Sawhti, who was trained in archery by a hermit
bow master, rescues the kingdom of Pagan from four giant monsters (a bird, a
boar, a tiger, and a squirrel) by means of his skills as an archer.
Ropes, chains, belts, whips, shoes, and clothes also
are included in the banshay arsenal.
Lethwei is the Burmese boxing system. Its repertoire
includes all manner of unarmed techniques, and practitioners claim that it is a
more complete system than the similar Muay Thai. Weapons include elbow and fist
strikes; foot, leg, and knee blows; head‑butts; and trips, sweeps, throws,
and ground strikes.
Although Muay Thai converted to boxing gloves during
the 1930s, hand wraps continue to be used in Lethwei. Tradition plays a role in
this. For example, among the Kachin the fighters' hands are traditionally bound
in hemp cloth wraps used to wrap deceased relatives.
Lethwei contests are often associated with festivals
and generally are accompanied by music. Matches are decided by a competitor's
being knocked out or submitting, or by the referee stopping the match. The rules
have remained very much the same since the eighteenth century.
Suppressed during British rule, lethwei experienced a
renaissance in the 1990s. Not simply a sport, Lethwei has practical defense
applications and is used to develop a foundation for thaing.
Naban is the Burmese grappling system. It utilizes
palm and foot strikes along with grappling techniques (including joint locks,
pressure points, and chokes) to control and thus render an adversary unable to
continue fighting. Commentators have characterized naban as practical in its
tactics and strategies because it stresses compliance and eventual submission.
Attacks are allowed to any part of the body, and there are no illegal targets in
naban.
Thaing contests traditionally allow any strike or
submission technique, with the exception of biting (this was probably because of
the rate of death due to infection from bites), and matches have ended in death
or disability.
Contemporary
Developments
Two traditional styles of thaing survive in Myanmar the Karen "School of
Seven Arts" and the Mon "School of Nine Arts." With government
approval, tournaments and exhibitions have been held regularly since the 1990s.
National student sports festivals, along with European and Asian imports such as
boxing, karate, and tae kwon do, regularly include thaing, with both men's and
women's divisions. Information on the nature of these competitions is not
readily available, but it is likely that the style is based in the eclectic NBA
system.
In addition, lethwei was resurrected in Yang on
(Rangoon) in the 1970s. Described as a "vicious combination of wrestling,
boxing, jad6, karate and gymnastics with its most deadly technique being the
high kick" ("Burmese Boxing . . ."), its matches are nonetheless
accompanied by music. Therefore these events probably resemble Muay Thai
matches, without the formalities of rounds or weight classes.
Outside Myanmar, thaing is represented by two styles: the eclectic American
Band6 Association and the Kachin style.
The American Band6 Association (ABA) system, founded and currently headed by Dr.
U Mauna Gym, incorporates not only traditional thaing, but also a range of Asian
and Western combat systems. This eclecticism, of course, characterized the NBA,
parent system of the ABA, as well.
In keeping with
the general practice, the NBA/ABA animal systems incorporate both striking and
grappling techniques. In this style, the animal forms are said to teach the
psychological (rather than exclusively the physical) attitudes of the animal
after which the system is named.
The
following animals with their characteristics represent the NBA/ABA style.
Name
of
Form
Characteristics
1. Boar
courage, rushing, elbowing, kneeing, butting
2. Bull
charging, tackling, power striking
3. Cobra
attacking upper vital points
4. Deer
alertness
5. Eagle double
hand blocking and striking
6. Monkey
agility, confidence
7. Paddy
Bird
rapid flight
8. Panther
circling, leaping, tearing
9. Python
crushing, strangling, gripping
10. Scorpion
pinching and seizing nerve centers
11. Tiger
clawing, ripping
12. Viper
attacking lower vital points
(Draeger and Smith 1981, 1S7‑1S8)
Unlike the NBA/ABA style, the Kachin style, currently
headed by Phil Dunlap (inherited through his grandfather, William O'Shaunessy)
has not consciously sought to incorporate non-indigenous elements into its
curriculum. At least initially, the relative purity of the style was because of
the isolation of the Kachin (also known as the jinghpaw) territory. Moreover,
the jinghpaw intensified this separation by actively refusing to accept outside
domination throughout the British colonial period and into the present. Due to
decades of rebellion and drug wars (the rebellions are financed in part by opium
sales), the current state of Kachin martial arts is unknown.
Nevertheless, the Kachin style is best understood
from the perspective of the traditional jinghpaw worldview, which includes their
animistic religion. For example, the Kachin preservation of sixteen animal
systems (as compared to the twelve cited by Dragger and Smith and the nine
commonly taught by the NBA/ABA) is likely due to this animism.
Kachin animal systems embody both the physical and mental attributes of the
animal described. Systems are further tied into human attributes as well,
because it is believed that a fighting method must fit the individual's nature
rather than force the individual to conform to the system. As an example, the
Bull system with its "charging, tackling, [and] power striking" is for
a big, strong, aggressive person who likes to deliver punishment to an opponent
and does not mind receiving punishment in return. In a confrontation, the Bull
will attempt, as far as possible, to remain at a distance from an opponent until
the opportunity to deliver a devastating attack arises. The Boar is a smaller,
quicker version of the Bull, for someone who attempts to get inside and work
from clinching range. Lethwei is therefore said to be a combination of the Bull
and Boar sets. Nevertheless, neither Bull nor Boar is simply a form of
stand‑up striking; they incorporate ground fighting as well. However, the
ground fighting in these sets seeks less to grapple than to pin the enemy to the
ground to be struck at will. Thus, during a takedown, body weight drives through
the opponent's legs and torso along with twisting and lifting slams.
In contrast, there are several Snake systems that are
very supple, quick, and relaxed. For example, the Python subset is mostly
grappling. Here the purpose of strikes is to stun so that the opponent can be
taken to the ground for the finishing techniques. Python takedowns rely
primarily on imposing one's body weight on an opponent.
The Kachin style also includes a Monk system, which
utilizes internal martial methods. Given the qigong practice reported in the histories of related groups such as
the Miao, a Chinese heritage for this system is a tempting hypothesis.
Practitioners, however, with backgrounds in yoga, xingyiquan (hsing i cb'uan), acupuncture, and qigong contend that the Monk system
demonstrates more affinity to Indian yoga than to the Chinese internal arts.
Each method ("animal") is a martial art in
its own right, with its own techniques, specific exercises, and weapons. Before
specializing, the practitioner trains for about five years in Lethwei. Upon
completion of this period, the student then trains in an animal system for the
rest of his career.
Each animal, however, is part of a much greater
whole. Non-family members learn an individual animal, but the family of the
lineage holder learns an overall system that teaches the underlying concepts of
each system. This makes it possible to exploit weaknesses inherent in a given
animal or to fuse the combat techniques of the various subsets, ensuring that
the family line of the lineage holder will be able to defeat all others in the
group.
Summary
Via bando, thaing has had an impact on martial
arts in North America and Europe. It is (at least as conceived by contemporary
Western society) a mixed martial art. As a result, its methods adapt well to
self‑defense applications (civilian, military, and law enforcement) and
the no‑holds‑barred circuit.
Advanced Fighting Systems
262 Franklin Turnpike
Mahwah,NJ 07430
Phone 201 828 5860
www.thaing.net
© Copyright
2000 Phil Dunlap
All Rights Reserved