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Thread: extrajoshep 's help

  1. #1
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    extrajoshep 's help

    joseph x


    i know you are more than a translator , but you are the only one i know and trust here for asking this . i need the translation to cantonese of these words . they are for name a kung fu school .
    here we go :

    - southern cross society ( in this name cross are the cross like the same of jesuschrist )

    - southern siu lam & lama kung fu studio
    - southern siu lam & tibetan kung fu studio ( in this two i know the translation but i need to know if the order of the words are correct )

    thank you for you time and good luck .

  2. #2
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    Re: extrajoshep 's help

    - southern cross society ( in this name cross are the cross like the same of jesuschrist )

    Nam Seb Ji Wui

    - southern siu lam & lama kung fu studio

    Nam Sil Lum Pai Lama Kung Fu Gwoon

    The Chinese characters can be seen in this webpage.

    http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/4098/

    The third and forth chraracters down the page to the left says Lama.

    - southern siu lam & tibetan kung fu studio ( in this two i know the translation but i need to know if the order of the words are correct )

    Nam Sil Lum Pai Sai Jong Kung Fu Gwoon.

    Studio is Kung Jok Sed strictly speaking, but very few people use this term, Gwoon is more in keeping with a Kung Fu school.

    I put the word Pai after Nam Sil Lum to make it clear that both Lama and Tibetan styles belonged to Southern Shaolin School of martial arts.

    thank you and good luck .
    Last edited by extrajoseph; 10-20-2002 at 11:38 PM.

  3. Extrajosepth

    Lama Pai Kung-Fu is NOT a part of Southern Shaolin.

    Lama (Tibetan Lion's Roar) has roots in Indian Kalari, Tibetan indigenous martial arts, and then influeneces from Western China, Mongolia, Northern China and finally, before it passed into Hong-Kong and the West South China.

    It was a fully formed system well before entering the South, and its particular brand of Esoteric Vajrayana Buddhism (Tibetan Dorje) is far apart from Shaolin, either Northern or Southern.

    It is commonly misnamed as 'Southern' because it was thru Canton that the art diseminated into Hong-Kong and the West.
    Whilst in Canton, many Southern Shaolin stylists learned the art - either in whole or in part. Some then combined it with their Shaolin styles and these became hybridized lineages.

    Some Lama Pai branches, retain the original Tibetan art:
    "Senge-Ngwa Rang-Soong Dag-Stay". Some are still to be found in Northern China and Manchuria and are totally separate from Shaolin - again either Northern or Southern.

    It depends therefore on lineage, but it is a gross inaccuracy to claim that Sai-Jong Si-Ji-Hao is Shaolin, it is not.

    You quoted a web site, David Ross's... David Ross is probably the best authority on Lama Pai history in the West. It would be useful to ask him directly. He is very helpful and has access to many Chinese primary historical sources.

    You could also look at: www.tibetankungfu.com which is an extensive site dedicated to the origin, history, development and practice of Tibetan Lion's Roar Lama martial arts, whether pure Tibetan or Chinese (Han) lineages.

    Tao
    www.tibetankungfu.com

  4. #4
    well said i was reading that second post and thinking hey!! thats not right hehe
    u beat me to it with a better response than i could have put together

  5. #5
    hey Rain

    btw
    i remember one of your ppl sent me an inquiry ages ago on continuing to learn tibetan white crane kung fu. If you guys are serious about that u should pay a visit or contact my sihings in your areas.

    unless youve found someone already

    Friday

  6. #6
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    Sorry Guys,

    I was only doing the translations for Rain into Cantonese, not knowing the history of Lama or Tibetan Kung Fu much, may be you guys can do a better job.

    May be we should add the word "Yu" meaning "and" between Nam Sil Lum and Lama, and Nam Sil Lum and Sai Jong. But "Nam Sil Lum Yu Lama" and "Nam Sil Lum Yu Sai Jong" is a very cumbersome way of writing a name with 2 different styles and lumping them together.

    Any better ideas?

  7. No problems.

    Maybe rain should identify which lineages he teaches/studies under?

    Some in the Tibetan tradition call it "Han" Lama Pai, others "Sai-Jong" (Tibetan) Lama Pai.

    rain in a private message just over a week ago, asked about accessing a Private All Tibetan Pai forum. I suggested that he apply, that way he could be put in touch with representatives from all the Major Tibetan Traditions.

    He would certainly get any help that he needed there - no problem at all. He would also have been given the calligraphy and translations that he has asked for.

    Alternatively, I offered to put any questions he may have to the Forum Members on his behalf.

    He didn't reply.

    Respect to your Choy-Lay-Fut Pai, a fine example of true Shaolin Kung-Fu.

    Tao
    www.tibetankungfu.com
    Last edited by Tao-Yin-Lee; 10-21-2002 at 06:02 AM.

  8. #8
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    extrajoseph

    really thank you for take the time of answer me . i 'll going to use the names you give me .

    friday

    i'd wrote a lot of people about bak hok kung fu , but never i'd found good help . could you tell me in what location is your sifu '? I AM FROM SOUTHAMERICA .

    tao yin lee


    i'll going to send a personal story about my knoledge for get in on the tibetan forum soon .
    i 'd learned from a lama master called wang ming shin who only teach part of his system and leave to europe . between the forms i know there is lau sing kuen or liu sing chuen and a conditioning arms drill called stars that is very long in comparition with the common sam sing found in other systems .

  9. #9
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    sorry guys . i am working the computer of a kung fu friend and put my answer under his name .

    extrajoseph

    why you think put the word " yu " can sound cumbersome ?
    what happens if the yu word is erased and i put the two systems names together ? some like :

    nam sil lum kuen sai jong lama kuen kung fu gwoon
    or

    nam sil lum sai jong lama pai kung fu gwoon


    tao yin lee

    why you believe tibetan kung fu is so closed door system even in a new millenium . i am in favor of a student must show a lot of things before his teracher teach a valuable form , but all tibetan kung fu schools i'd contact become very closed .

  10. #10
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    After talking to Prof. Liang who is a Chinese language expert, using the extra word Pai is still the best way to translate a name of a school that teaches two different systems. So they should be:

    Nam Sil Lum Pai Lama Pai Kung Fu Gwoon

    Nam Sil Lum Pai Sai Jong Pai Kung Fu Gwoon

    Using the extra word Pai after each name separate them into two distinct styles. It is OK to use the word Kuen instead of Pai but not as good because Kuen could mean just one form or one set, whereas Pai definitely means a complete system.

    Hope this helps.
    Last edited by extrajoseph; 10-21-2002 at 09:35 AM.

  11. Rain,

    There will be as many likely answers to your question as there are individual Tibetan schools. Lots of Pai are secretive, not just Tibetan ones of course.

    In some cases, the Tibetan arts are secret because of Tantric Buddhism. Tantrism is secret.

    My read on things is that if you are sincere, and actually take up offers of help or assitance, then you'll get the help you need.

    You've been offered help on this thread by more than one Tibetan Pai representative.

    Tao
    www.tibetankungfu.com

  12. #12
    Just as an outsider viewer lama kung fu is very similar to southern kung fu.
    may be one influences the other.

  13. #13
    My sifu in Hong Kong has already 'shou san' stopped accepting new students who he teaches pak hok pai kung fu to.
    u will have better luck contacting his students in your area.

    there is a student in Italy with his own kwoon
    Israel who learns under another guy from NY and has also spent a period of time revising with my sifu in HK.
    there are people in the Philipines
    Venezualia (hmm how do i spell that)
    and students of my HK sifu in HK.

    My sihing and sidai are of different levels of knowledge in the system. But there are a lot of sihing i would highly recommend.
    however, whether they accept u as students will be up to u and them. not knowing u myself i will not be able to make any recommendations or referrals.

    let me know if u are willing to travel to any of these locaitons and i'll give u the contact details.

    friday

  14. Jaza,

    It depends on the system, some "Southern Kung-Fu" looks nothing at all like other equally 'southern' systems. Pak-Mei doesn't resemble Choy-Lay-Fut for example - at least not very much.

    If you look at Lama systems, you can find similarities with 'northern', 'western', 'Mongolian', 'southern' - Kung-Fu, but also with some Burmese arts and definitely with Indian Kalari.
    Also, there is the indigenous Tibetan arts too.

    What people look for, they often 'see'.....

    Its quite different however from the common fallacy that Tibetan Lama arts are part of 'Southern Shaolin'. They are not.

    People sometimes mistake the entreport (Canton) for the origin (Tibet).

    The only way to 'know' is to do it...

    Tao
    www.tibetankungfu.com

  15. #15
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    friday


    really thank you for you info . i am very interesed in the venezuela kwoon . i am in argentina and venezuela is a neighbord country . plese , if you can , give me more info about that venezuela teacher . maybe in a private message or email me at


    lamakuen@hotmail.com

    tao yin lee :


    do you know some lama kwoon located in southamerica ?
    can you find out that for me betwen your people ?

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