 |
Sat, November 21, 2009
The Shaolin Phoenix
The Founder of Bak Sil Lum and Hua Quan, Gan Fengchi by Gene Ching
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
did wonders for the Western kungfu movement. Now
everyone is acknowledging this film
genre that we have loved so dearly for so long. We all
knew kungfu cinema was great cinema. It's so full of
soul. Now, finally,
the rest of the world is seeing it too. But of course we
were there, before this new wave of interest, back in
the day...
While Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was new
sensation for pop culture, we martial arts aficionados
have seen this kind of
film a hundred times before. It was a throwback to the
old "old school" martial arts movies, pre-Shaw brothers,
when romantic
swashbucklers ruled the silver screen. These movies were
called wuxia pian or "warrior-knight films."
Wuxia pian were
usually based on a popular genre of books known as
wuxia xiaoshuo (warrior-knight novels.)
Wuxia novels are the pulp
fiction and comic books of Asia, packed with quixotic,
inspiring legends about great martial arts masters with
magic qi powers.
Often, these fictional adventures were derived from folk
legends about actual famous masters, just like our own
tales of Robin
Hood or King Arthur. In fact, the majority of period
kungfu movies such as Wong Fei Hung, Hung Hay Kwun, Fong
Sai Yuk
and even Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon are based
on classic wuxia stories. Despite their penchants
for the absurdly
fantastic, wuxia xiaoshuo preserves the spirit of
the forefathers and foremothers of our cherished art of
kungfu. And buried in
those beloved novels remain countless legends about our
martial ancestors yet to be translated.
One of the many wuxia xiaoshuo heroes so
far unsung in English is Gan Fengchi. Gan is
recognized in the martial circles as the founder
of Bak Sil Lum (northern Shaolin) and Hua
Quan (Flower Fist.) Additionally, Chinese
readers know his posthumous martial treatise
Introduction to Hua Quan. Gan was a great
kungfu master and the embodiment of wude,
the warrior's code. He was known by the title
Jiangnan Diyixia - Jiangnan means south of
the river, a reference to southern China and
Diyixia means "number one knight." The
stories of his adventures are full of the
impossible, just like the flying and leaping in
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,
nevertheless his esteemed legacy remains to
this day.
The Phoenix versus Plum Flowers and
Bulls
Gan Fengchi was a native of Ningxian County
in Jiangsu Province who lived under the reign
of the 4th Qing Emperor Yongzheng
(1723-1735 CE.) His given name Fengchi
means "phoenix pond." Gan was born with a
small, skinny body, not at all what one might
expect of a legendary master, but he loved
kungfu from the very start and trained
assiduously all his life. Through his devotion,
he eventually became the layman disciple of a
Shaolin monk name Zhao Yuan. Zhao Yuan
was originally from the royal family of the
previous Ming Dynasty, whose secular name
was Zhu Fu. When the Qing overthrew the
Ming in 1644, Zhu Fu renounced his family
name and became a monk, in hopes of
learning Shaolin kungfu to help restore Ming
reign. He trained Gan for twelve years.
Once, the Jin clan held a big party in honor of
Master Gan. The Qing dynasty actually
adopted the Chinese name Qing; they were
really Manchurian, known as the Jin. As a
show of respect, Master Gan sat at the highest
seat of honor presented by the Jin head
clansman. Everyone was drinking merrily when
Master Gan noticed the beautiful flower
garden outside on the Jin estate. Gan
exclaimed, "Look outside! So many plum
flowers are in bloom. We should appreciate
their beauty but the window is closed."
Without another word, Master Gan blew the
window open, using only the qi of his breath.
Everyone applauded with amazement.
Noticing that the master was in a mood to
demonstrate, another guest asked about
Master Gan's legendary throwing skills. Gan
obliged by instructing a maid to mark several
of the plum flowers outside in the garden. He
took a piece of napkin, crumpled it up into a
tight wad, and flicked it from his seat. He hit
every single mark dead on target.
Later, after they had finished drinking, the
partygoers all decided to take a stroll about
the Jin estate. While walking, some teenage
shepherds approached them in desperate need
of help. Two of their biggest bulls had been
fighting all day nonstop. When the party
approached, they found the bulls were
struggling because they had locked their horns
together. Master Gan effortlessly separated
the mad bulls and tossed them aside. Both
bulls fell into mud so deep that they couldn't
get up. Everyone laughed with astonishment.
Then Master Gan went down to rescue the
hapless bulls.
Master Gan versus the Evil Emperor
But still, a martial arts master seldom makes
his reputation on flowers and bulls. Master
Gan was best known for his opposition to the
notorious Emperor Yongzheng. Later at that
same Jin party was the first time they crossed
paths. This was prior to Yongzhen usurping
the throne. Before the party, a disciple of Gan
named Bai Long Daoren (white dragon Taoist
- a nickname) introduced the prince in disguise
as Mr. Li. Bai Long told Master Gan that Mr.
Li was his boss and had extended his invitation
to Gan to return to the capital with him. The
disciple praised Li for his generosity and his
martial skill, but it was all just a ruse to get
Gan to work as a fighter for the Qing. Master
Gan agreed to meet Li for dinner at the party
given by the Jin clan, which quickly became a
test of each other's martial arts.
The prince, posing as Mr. Li, went first. He
was a master of Shaolin gecko skills. Li placed
his back to the wall, focused his qi, and then
walked up the wall just like a gecko. Master
Gan smiled, and took the same position
against the wall. He told Li to hit him in the
stomach as hard as he could. Li gathered all
his strength and struck. Gan used his qigong
skills to flatten out his belly so his body was a
thin as paper. When Li punched, it was as like
his fist collided with the wall behind Gan. Then
Gan used his qi to suck Li's fist into his
stomach so it was stuck as if it were glued
there. Li was powerless to remove his fist.
Gan laughed then loosened his stomach,
releasing Li.
Later that night, Bai Long confided in Master
Gan, revealing Mr. Li's true identity as the
prince and his intentions to take the throne. He
told Gan that Yinchen (Yongzhen's birth name
before he became emperor) wanted Gan as
one of his imperial guard, a very illustrious
position indeed. Nevertheless, Gan refused.
Bai Long begged, but Gan was adamant.
Yinchen became very upset and grabbed Gan
by the sleeve, but in one quick move, Gan
turned and disappeared into thin air. Bai Long
and Yinchen searched and searched. Finally,
they found him hiding in a closet, using his qi
power to stick high up on the wall. Neither Bai
Long nor Yinchen could pull him down.
Yinchen even used a Lama mantra to try and
break the spell (the historical Yongzheng was
in fact a devout Buddhist who converted the
palace of his birth, Yonghe Gong, into a Lama
Temple.) Yinchen was amazed by Gan's
power, but he feared that Gan would join
forces with the rightful heir to the throne, not
him. So rather than lose Gan to his adversary,
he drew his gun and shot him, then
immediately fled back to Beijing with Bai
Long. Guns were already dominant in China
during Master Gan's time.
The other party guests heard the gunshot and
rushed out. Gan emerged from another room,
unscathed and laughing. Somehow, the bullet
had not injured him; it just blew him into the
next room unharmed. The Jin head clansman
asked Master Gan why he didn't accept the
prince's offer in the first place. Gan replied,
"The fourth prince has the look of the
emperor. But still, his chin bone sticks out too
much, which means he is very selfish, so I do
not want to follow him."
Master Gan versus the Begging Bowl
Monk
Gan Fengchi went to live in Nanjing and his
reputation for wude and kungfu assured that
no one dared make trouble there for some
time. But eventually a challenger did come, a
monk with a giant begging bowl. The bowl
weighed several hundred pounds when filled
with offerings and the mischievous monk
would use it to block doorways and paths. If
someone wanted to get by, they either had to
pay the monk toll or move the bowl, but of
course, no ordinary person could even budge
it. The harassed citizens of Nanjing were
powerless to challenge the monk, so they
threatened him by saying Master Gan would
take care of him. But the monk was
undaunted. Gan did not appear, so he
ridiculed Gan and publicly challenged him.
As fate would have it, Master Gan had fallen
very ill and was in no shape to face the monk.
Furthermore, when people told him of the
challenge, Gan knew immediately this was no
ordinary monk. To carry such a huge begging
bowl, this monk must be immensely powerful.
He must have come looking for Gan with the
intention of challenging him. Master Gan
continued to avoid the monk so the monk's
challenges grew in their offensiveness, but
Master Gan was still sick.
Then one day, Master Gan sought refuge at a
nearby temple to meditate on how to deal with
this monk. There the monk appeared, smiling
at Master Gan. He said he wanted to present
Master Gan with his begging bowl, then
immediately lobbed the massive bowl at him.
The bowl was filled with sharp coins, but Gan
deflected everything with his wide sleeves.
Master Gan retaliated by picking up a stone
and chucking it at the monk, but due to his
illness, his hand failed and he missed
completely. Undaunted, Gan got another stone
and said, "Since I missed your head, I'll hit
your leg." The monk focused on defending his
legs, but it was a feint. Gan threw the second
stone with all his might at directly at the monk's
baldhead. The second stone flew true,
cracking the monk deeply on the skull. But the
monk was unfazed. Master Gan was shocked.
Such a blow would have killed most warriors.
This monk's skill was superior then that of
Master Gan. Gan humbly bowed down and
begged forgiveness. The monk said, "You are
uncommon and you favor me. I should return
your stone, but I would like to bring it back to
present to Zhao Yuan." The monk vanished
immediately. Master Gan was worried when
he heard his Shaolin Monk master's name,
believing he had offended the monk with his
trick, but he never heard from him again.
Perhaps it was some sort of quality check, to
make sure the Shaolin disciple had kept his
skills up, but Gan never found out.
Master Gan versus the Evil Emperor - the
Sequel
Emperor Yongzheng summoned Master Gan
soon after he took the throne. Yongzheng still
wanted to enlist Gan as a bodyguard and
Master Gan could not refuse an imperial invite.
Besides, he thought he could learn something
about the inner circle of the palace for the
Ming resistance. So he went, but he found the
palace too well guarded for him to look
around. The emperor looked at Gan's slight
build with contempt and asked, "What skill do
you have?" Master Gan said, "Your subject
can be a light as a sparrow or as heavy as a
stone." Yongzheng ordered Gan to
demonstrate. Master Gan focused his qi and
then leaped up to perch on a flower bush.
Yongzheng was delighted and exclaimed,
"How light he is!" Before the words left his
lips, Gan jumped down and his legs sank into
the tiled floor up to his knees. "Supernatural!"
cheered the emperor and he immediately
ordered that Master Gan be rewarded. Gan
quickly found an excuse then escaped the
palace.
Emperor Yongzheng never let go of Master
Gan after that. In 1729, the seventh year of his
reign, Yongzheng had Master Gan arrested by
Qing officials. More than 100 others, many of
who were also martial arts masters, were
taken into custody in connection to a secret
anti-Qing religious sect, led by the Monk Yi
Nian. Like many such secret societies of
China's turbulent history, Monk Yi Nian's
followers espoused a doctrine of mysticism
and martial arts with an undertone of rebellion.
Such movements have always threatened the
governments of China, so they are crushed
quickly and mercilessly, even to this day.
The Emperor versus the Girl from Shaolin
According to the wuxia xiaoshou, it was
another Shaolin disciple, a teenage girl named
Lu Siniang, who assassinated Yongzheng. As
common plot device in wuxia stories, young
swordswomen are often the most lethal, just
like Jen in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Lu Siniang and Gan Fengchi were both
outstanding wuxia heroes of that era. Lu's
father, Lu Liuliang was a great scholar from
Shimen County in Zhejiang Province. He was
sentenced to death for criticizing the Qing in
his writings. When Yongzheng became
Emperor, he further humiliated Lu. He had his
body dug up, flogged and destroyed, as well
as the entire surviving family killed. Lu Siniang
escaped by fleeing to Shaolin Temple. There
she became the disciple of a one-armed
Shaolin nun named Guang Ci. Guang Ci was
actually a Ming princess Chongping, daughter
of the last Emperor of the Ming dynasty,
Chongzhen (1628-1644.) Like Gan's master,
Zhao Yuan, Guang Ci took refuge at Shaolin
in hopes to learn kungfu and restore her fallen
dynasty. There are two legends about how she
lost her arm. The first is that she lost it to
Yongzheng in a previous battle. The second is
that she lost it to her father, the Emperor.
According to the actual history, when the Qing
troops began storming the palace, the emperor
got drunk. He ran through the palace ordering
all the women to kill themselves. While the
Empress Zhou did just that, the Emperor killed
his concubines and another daughter. In his
madness, the Emperor also cut off the arm of
one of his daughters before hanging himself on
a locust tree. However, whether or not that
daughter survived to go to Shaolin remains a
mystery.
Guang Ci poured all of her skill into Lu
Liuliang. When she was ready, Lu snuck into
the palace at night for a swordfight with
Yongzheng, one-to-one, girl-to-emperor.
Yongzheng was a highly skilled martial artist
himself, but he was caught off guard by this
beautiful young sword-wielding girl in his bed
chamber. Lu took advantage and kicked his
sword from his hand. The emperor scrambled
to his bed to retrieve his pillow sword, but Lu
was fast enough to catch him. She cut his head
off with one blow, and then escaped to tell her
master she was avenged.
Wuxia Xiaoshou versus Real Kungfu
In our paranoid age of school shootings, hate
crimes and terrorist attacks, the ancient fighting
systems of kungfu appear arcane for
self-defense, so 'reality' is a big issue. In the
face of such harsh realities, wuxia tales like
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon become
appealing escapist fantasies. But in the martial
arts, our western 'scientific' perspective can
reduce kungfu down to only what works in
street combat and defines that as 'real.' All of
the rest is disregarded as fake. Such a myopic
viewpoint might deride the fantasy fights in
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon or read
wuxia tales, saying it's not real kungfu because
it fails to meet their expectations for a real
fight. But if everything is kept in the context of
being a story, the issue of reality is absurd. Of
course it's not a real fight, it's a story.
Expecting reality in such a story is a little silly.
With the current trend of movie choreography
towards more wire work, martial 'realists'
should step back and look at the bigger
picture. Was Yongzheng really assassinated by
a teenage Shaolin disciple girl? Probably not,
but it sure makes a great story. And within that
story is something even greater.
Beyond snubbing entertainment, the
real-versus-fake dichotomy has a much
greater cost. Exclusive focus on fighting
techniques is quite literally amoral. Such
scientific reductionalism sacrifices the most
valuable lesson of kungfu - wude, the warrior's
code. Unlike the Japanese warrior's code of
Bushido, kungfu wude cannot be found in
written an ancient etiquette treatise. Much of
wude is unspoken, but you know it when you
see it. It is buried in our legends and folk tales.
It is demonstrated by examples in our books
and movies, albeit in fantastic examples. It is
what wuxia is all about. And wuxia speaks to
everyone, martial artist and non-martial artist,
about the values and ethics of the warrior way.
The real quest of the warrior is not to learn
how to fight, it's to discover when to fight and
why. While these stories might not provide the
best technique to kick someone's butt, there
are far more meaningful lessons in kungfu. We
preserve the legacy of masters like Gan
Fengchi when we practice Bak Sil Lum or
Hua Quan. We also honor them whenever we
retell their stories. And just like the kungfu he
created, the wuxia tales of Master Gan have
valuable lessons that deepen in meaning with
every recitation.
Written by Gene Ching for KUNGFUMAGAZINE.COM
Print Friendly Version of This Article
|