Showing posts with label martial arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label martial arts. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2010

Independent Testimonial

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Mr. Eugene Chung came to visit us on the 28th Of December 2009. He kindly provided us with the following testimonial.

Kindly visit:


Dear Mr. Eugene Chung,

Thank you for visiting us and thank you for such high praises. Actually, Sifu and the practitioners deserve the credit more than me. I'm just happy I'm allowed to learn from sifu and allowed to practice with my TTDI brothers and sisters! Hahaha

I'm looking forward to having that teh tarik!!

Kahar Saidun


Dear Practitioners Yip Kin Wing Chun in TTDI,

Mr. Eugene has kindly put my name as the title but this is actually a testimony to YOUR hard work and dedication. As everybody know, I'm still a nobody within Yip Kin Wing Chun and I still have A LOT to learn. I only seem good because you guys are great! I'm honored to be your friend and be allowed to practice with you guys! Kudos to all of you!

Kahar Saidun

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Yeah@Kids on 2

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Yip Kin Wing Chun is featured on Yeah@Kids on 2, Fridays at 10am, TV2. We started in January this year and we are still featured at the time of this writing (June 2010).

So far we have shot 11 episodes. Check out the first four episodes below!

Our debut! Kahar made lots of mistakes. Sorry!

Second time. A bit more confidence from Kahar and the kids.

Third time. Better watch!

Getting more and more used to this. Hope to improve more!

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Monday, February 9, 2009

Our Instructor - Carrying the torch on!

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Kahar Saidun





Kahar has been practicing Yip Kin Wing Chun since 1991 with various experiences in other Wing Chun between the years 1998 to 2000. He has the curiosity of a scientist, the playfulness of an experimenter, the wide-eyed wonder of a child and the single-minded determination and ferocity of a warrior. He is considered a purist with a strong and unwavering passion towards Wing Chun Kuen, Yip Kin's in particular.

This is evident in his classes where he imparts knowledge through classes that are fun and interactive while fostering a strong bond between students. Quality is stressed in an open and friendly but firm manner.

He was featured several times in various newspapers such as The Star, Harian Metro, Shin Chew Jit Poh, Nanyang Siang Pau (among others) and major Television channels in Malaysia such as TV1, TV2, TV3, Astro Awani and TVi. He was also featured once in History Channel.

In 2015 he was certified by The Late Grandmaster Yip Fook Choy as a Master Instructor carrying the title "Sifu".



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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Our centres - Where to find us

(updated 30th September 2019)

HEADQUARTERS
Persatuan Tinju Wing Choon Kuala Lumpur (since 1960)
30A, Lorong Yap Hin, Off Jalan Pasar, Pudu, 55200 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia


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Seapark, Petaling Jaya
First Floor, No.5, Jalan 21/1, Sea Park, 46300 Petaling Jaya, Selangor
Above Satellite Optical.
(5 minutes walk from Taman Paramount LRT station)

Mr. Kahar Saidun 
https://www.facebook.com/kaharwingchunteacher/


Training Times: Saturdays at 5.30pm

White Tiger Martial Arts Academy
Taman Danau Kota, Setapak
48-2, Jalan 2/23A, Danau Kota, 53300 
Setapak, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Opposite Setapak Sentral.
(Nearest LRT Station is Wangsa Maju)

Mr. Ken Khoo
Telephone: +60178701250
https://www.wtmaa2019.com/courses
Training Times: Fridays 8.30pm to 10.30pm


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Our forms - Providing different energies

Family of Weapons Forms

Lok Tim Poon Kuan family of Forms
  • Kwan Do (春秋大刀)
  • Subdue the Tiger Trident (伏虎大扒)
  • Yum Yeung Ba Gua Kuan (陰陽八卦棍)
  • Spear (梅花槍)

Yong Mui Pang family of Forms

  • Willow Leaf Double Broadsword (柳葉)
  • Bench (横頭櫈)
  • 3 Section Staff (三節棍)
  • Twin Butterfly Knives (蝴蝶雙刀)

Advanced Forms

  • Iron Elbow - Empty Hand
  • Rope and Weight (飛鉈)
  • Broadsword and Rattan Shield(单刀籐牌)
  • Broadsword and Rattan Shield vs Subdue the Tiger Trident (单刀籐牌對拆伏虎大扒)
  • Subdue the Tiger Empty Hand Form (伏虎拳)
  • Small 5 Animals Empty Hand Form (小五形拳)
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Our Core Forms - The DNA of Yip Kin Wing Chun

Core Forms

Empty Hand1. Small Flower Fist (小花拳)
This is the first form of the Yip Kin Wing Choon system and it introduces the practitioner to the basic hand, body and footwork movements and positions. It also contains the road map on how to practice the other forms to achieve the best results. It can be broken into 7 sections, each focusing on a specific footwork, body positions, structure and energy. The techniques are put into "points" so the practitioner can focus him/herself on the essentials of the Yip Kin Wing Choon system.

2. Big Flower Fist (大花拳)
This second form simplifies the movements of the first form and adds new combination/techniques to the practitioner. It is also a power form where you build your strength and stamina to cope with the stresses and needs of a fight situation. It also teaches you to fight from impossible/odd positions such on the ground and in twisted positions.

3. Wooden Dummy (木人樁)
Practical applications, positioning in relation to an enemy, power application and footwork in relation to a person is taught here. You will also learn how your structure corresponds to an opponent in a particular situation. It requires both soft and hard energy to be able to get your self around the dummy.

The dummy only has 2 arms that is pointed to the practitioner's centre (throat and belly button) and a leg.

4. Sticky Hand Form (黐手)
The sticky hand form provides a bridge between the empty hand forms and free fighting. Techniques are applied to a partner in a sequence which resembles two person fighting with the hands in almost constant contact. Students learn to attack and defend according to Wing Choon principles in a safe environment with a partner. However, unlike the empty hand forms, the movements are not executed by the practitioner but based on input by his/her partner.

At advanced levels, the attacker has the choice to follow the form or change the sequence by changing the energy he/she applies into the attack. His/Her partner must interpret the energy he/she receives and acts accordingly using the proper principle and/or techniques that will best correspond with the attack using minimal movement and energy.

Later, this will flow into a free flow fighting technique by both practitioners.


Weapons


1. Plum Blossom Staff ()
The basic weapon and what practitioners of Yip Kin Wing Choon believed to be the TRUE Wing Choon weapon. The pole is held with both palms pointing away from the practitioner. ALL the the Wing Choon principles can be applied using this weapon and all the movements are almost exactly like empty hand techniques learnt in the first and second forms. Using this pole, practitioners also learns to apply Lien Siu Tai Ta (linking offense into defense) and footwork for their empty hand techniques.

2. Six and a Half Point Pole ()
This is a unique pole form which has six and a half techniques combined and repeated over six and half directions together with its variations according to usage and needs.

3. Partnered Plum Blossom Staff (楊梅棒對拆)
This is a partner form learnt after the practitioner has finished learning the Six and a Half Point pole. It's objective is to teach the applications of the Plum Blossom Staff together with introducing the practitioner to stick fighting and fighting using a medium range weapon.

4. Partnered Six and a Half Point Pole (六點半棍對拆)
This partner form is learnt after the practitioner has finished learning the Yin Yang Ba Gua Pole. Its objective is to introduce the practitioner to using the Six and a Half Point pole in a combat situation, fight using a long weapon and to sticking pole (Chi Kuan) exercises.


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Basic Training - To get you started


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Stances and Footwork
There are 4 different types of footwork  from sets done on 5 basic stances. All the stances are interchangeable with each other with only at maximum one or less movement in between.

Qigong
Consist of 6 static postures which a practitioner must hold for a period of time. Its objective other than for health is to develop Qi for use in combat.

7 hands
These are separate techniques like those in 40 point Wing Chun and the San Sik of Yuen Kay Shan Wing Chun. Other than teaching a specific technique, they also teach the basic principles used in Yip Kin Wing Choon.

8 legs
Taken from the 3 empty and forms and 1 wooden dummy form, it is a way to practice the kicks separately for practical use in fighting.

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Oral History of Yip Kin Wing Chun

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(Written in 2008 by the late Grandmaster Yip Fook Choy)

Wing Choon Kuen originally was part and parcel of Shaolin’s Buddhist theoretical studies. It stressed mainly the formation of one’s personal character and ethics. Kuen Faat (martial techniques) was initially human’s imitation of the movements of animals and birds. After a long period of in-depth study and trails, those movements were arranged into a series of movements we call forms.

The original founder of the series of Wing Choon Kuen was an intelligent, innovative female disciple of Shaolin called Ng Mui Shi Tai. She studied diligently and humbly at Shaolin and eventually became one of the top Kungfu masters. The objectives of her martial techniques were not only to inculcate the high morality of the learner, but also to provide ample physical exercise for fitness and health, through a series of nimble movements. In addition to building up a strong and tough body physically, it also aimed to prevent diseases and defend oneself against any attack from wild animals.

Fighting Oppressive Regime
During the Qing Dynasty, Ng Mui Shi Tai created and founded this series of martial techniques. At that time, China was ruled by Manchuria from the north, i.e. Qing Dynasty. The Emperor of Qing used all sorts of barbaric means to suppress the people of China. All those who dared to oppose the regime were cruelly massacred. The people of China had suffered miserably due to political suppression as well as shortage of food.
It was indeed timely that Ng Mui Shi Tai appeared on the scene during that critical period. Though the martial techniques founded by her was not yet properly named, it was already widely learned by people as a means to fight the Qing oppressors.

In order to stem any sign of uprisings against the regime, Qing Dynasty banned all forms of martial arts practices throughout the country. They even resorted to setting fire to the famous Shaolin Temple and banishing all the learners of martial arts. Ng Mui Shi Tai also had to evade arrest by the Qing’s secret squads by constantly moving from one place to another. Finally she settled down in Guangdong Province where she recruited students and taught them her . Meanwhile, they planned collectively to overthrow the Qing and restore the Ming.

During that time Ng Mui Shi Tai’s martial techniques was not known as Wing Choon Kuen, but just as Shaolin Martial Art. In Guangdong, she came across a gifted disciple called Yim Sei who became Ng Mui Shi Tai’s favourite student. Ng Mui Shi Tai instructed and trained him until he mastered all that she had acquired in her life.

After inheriting everything from Ng Mui Shi Tai, Yim Sei did not make his great mentor disappointed for he continued her work in uniting all the anti-Qing forces, vowing to fight the oppressive regime of Qing to the end. He recruited many capable people and became the spiritual symbol of patriotism and nationalism in an effort to oust the Qing and restore the Ming.
Master Yim Sei, once a Red Boat coach, trained and taught his disciples in a temple. It was there that his daughter Yim Wing Choon was born.

Naming of Wing Chun Kuen
Yim Wing Chun took martial arts lessons from her father at an early age and became very competent in it. But she realized that Shaolin Kungfu emphasized on rough and tough combat techniques which were not suitable for the weaker ladies to practice. Being a lady herself, she tried to find ways and means to ‘soften’ Shaolin Kungfu so that it would be more suitable for the fairer sex. She began to change the tough and rough movements into tender and graceful movements. She eliminated rough combat techniques, made use of the opponent’s force to fight back, and initiated the so-called” tough and soft combination” of martial art.
The new series included such changes and improvements. It had the good effect of making the learner’s body and limbs soft, elastic, nimble and agile after a round of practice. Its main combat method uses the opponent’s own force to strike against him. Yim Wing Chun had surpassed her father’s achievement in wushu. This series of martial techniques, from the time of Ng Mui Shi Tai to Yim Sei, had never had a proper name. After the improvements and refinements by Yim Wing Chun, Ng Mui Shi Tai decided to name this series of martial techniques after her, to commemorate her tireless efforts and contribution to the development of this branch of martial art.

As a result, a complete series of “ hard - and- soft” Wing Chun Kuen" was ‘handed’ down from generation to generation, from Guangdong to Fatshan and then to Fujian and Yunnan Provinces.

The Spread of Wing Choon Kuen
Wing Choon Kuen was formally named. Then, there lived a man by the name of Soo Kai Ming in Pak Wan San (White Clouds Mountain) in Poon Yue county. Being a martial arts master himself, he took an active part in the campaign to topple the Qing and restore the Ming. His love and devotion to martial arts propelled him to practice very hard and became an expert in Wing Choon. The spread of Wing Choon Kuen in Poon Yue county fell on his shoulders. He was very competent in martial arts and was reputed to be the best martial arts master among the older folks.

However, due to the changes of political situation, this old master decided not to move around too much. He preferred to lie low and settle down to set up school to train students, rather than involving deeply in external affairs. He actively taught and spread the martial arts of the early founders. At that time, a lot of people came to him to learn wushu because of his great reputation. He had indeed trained a lot of capable and competent disciples who then spread Wing Choon Kuen throughout China.

Among Soo Kai Ming's students was one Yip Kin. Yip Kin was tutored by this old master in Wing Choon Kuen. Besides, Yip Kin had also learned Ying-Yang Ba Kua Stick from Master Yip Hong Seng of the Yip Clan Memorial Hall. He also acquired the Five Weapons skills from Master Cho Fei Hoong.

In addition to this, he learned more about Wing Choon and many different martial arts under Master Yik Kam who was a master of a Chinese Opera group during the Red Boat era. When Yip Kin left China to immigrate to the south sea known as Nanyang, he chose to settle down in Kuala Lumpur and began his legendary life history there.

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