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Hendrik
06-29-2005, 10:39 AM
So, it turns out that my Buddhist sigung late Ven. Sek Koh Sam is a real Chan Buddhist monk and Shao Lin martial monk who is related to Shong san Shao Lin and Southern Shao Lin.



http://wulin.proboards31.com/index.cgi?board=southern&action=display&thread=1104931321&page=1


I am looking for something trace able like these if anyone has the Wing Chun and Southern Shao Lin link.

Obviously, we can do similar stuffs with White Crane from Fujian. We can trace we can link even the SLT to White Crane of Fujian.

But as for Shao Lin. That is a different story. and whoever believe in the connection might want to provide the link and the supporting data and the endosement from Henan Shao Lin about a trace able ancestors link.




Why is Wing Chun not in the

The Complete Encyclopedia of Shaolin Temple Martial Arts (volume I & II) ?




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When Shi Deqian from Henan Shaolin Temple in China, came to Singapore for his book 'The Complete Encyclopedia of Shaolin Temple Martial Arts (volume I & II)", he wanted to write down Yi Zhi Mei. All the schools in Singapore worked hard together and agreed on one version of Yi Zhi Mei, which ended up in the book.

Below a translation of part of the description in the book:


"Yizhimei Quan of South Shaolin temple.

Chan Master Gaocan, originator of Southern Yizhimei (Yi Ki Muay) Quan, is responsible for spreading it. According to records in the Boxing Manuals in Songshan Shaolin temple, the source of Chinese Shaolin Kungfu, Yizhimei Quan came from Shaolin temple.

In Jiaqing time of Ming Dynasty, pirates often violated China. Southeast coast. Many times the government ordered the fighting monks of Shaolin temple to go and suppress the bandits. Some of these monks died and others were heavenly injured on their legs. The latter couldn't return and stayed in the area and started teaching to the locals. Because of their injuries they had to mainly teach arm movements and only a few kicking skills. As a result, later a saying emerged in Chinese Wushu circles called: 'Southern Punch, Northern Kick'.

Then in Qing Dynasty, a monk and his five students names Jingren, Jingliu and so on left Songshan and moved to the South, traveling through Fujian, Guanzhou, Hainan, Taiwan and Nanyue. And they deeply propagated Shaolin Kungfu. As the years went by the boxing skills from Songshan gradually changed into South Shaolin boxing. After that it spread all over China and became the best Kungfu skill in South China.

Southern Yizhimei Quan is a branch is a branch of South Shaolin Boxing. Yizhimei Quan is the evolution of Shaolin Luohanquan. Gaocan improved Yizhimei Quan over the years by long time actual combat as to make it more consummate. He started teaching in Singapore and over the years the practitioners of Yizhimei Quan numbered over the thousands. It is now famous in South-East Asia and beyond."