Results 1 to 12 of 12

Thread: Shaolin Taiwan

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Shaolin Taiwan

    This is very interesting for it's global implications.

    Shaolin Temple Taiwan branch in talks: Shaolin abbot
    (Chinadaily.com.cn)
    Updated: 2009-10-30 13:48

    ShaolinTemple is discussing plans to establish a branch in Taiwan, abbot Shi Yongxin said in Shanghai yesterday, the Beijing-based Global Times reported.

    Although many people in Taiwan hope Shaolin Temple will set up a branch or a Shaolin Buddhism college there, a number of relevant programs have not been implemented yet, he said at a Shaolin Kong Fu promotional activity.

    Shi also said Taiwan and the Chinese mainland have had many exchanges concerning Buddhism, but so far he has not taken a visit to Taiwan into consideration.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Back home in Atlanta, GA, USA, after living in Singapore
    Posts
    532
    Whoah...That is interesting
    Yes, "Northwind" is my internet alias used for years that has lots to do with my main style, as well as other lil cool things - it just works. Wanna know my name? Ask me


    http://www.pathsatlanta.org

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Shaolin emmissaries

    It's Wushu at the White House for 2009.
    Updated Sunday, December 13, 2009 12:33 am TWN, The China Post news staff
    Henan delegation to visit Taiwan for procurement
    TAIPEI, Taiwan -- A 660-member trade, tourism and cultural delegation from Henan Province in central China will arrive in Taiwan tomorrow for a week-long visit. The group is expected to make US$500 million worth of purchases from domestic suppliers. The delegation will be headed by Xu Guangchun, former secretary of the Henan Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC).

    The visitors will include secretaries from 18 municipal committees of the CPC, mayors, representatives of 21 major enterprises in the province, kung fu monks of the Shaolin Temple, and a famous traditional dancing team, as well as a famous biographer bearing a pen name “R Yue Ho.”

    Xu will call on Honorary Chairman Lien Chan and Chairman Wu Poh-hsiung of the ruling Kuomintang, and meet with Chairman P.K. Chiang of the Straits Exchange Foundation, among others, during his stay here.

    Meanwhile, the kung fu monks of the famous Shaolin Temple will perform martial arts, and the “Ho Luo Fong” dancing team will present dancing performances during their stay here.

    Furthermore, the Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) will arrange 100 trade meetings between major Chinese enterprises of Henan Province and Taiwanese suppliers. The 21 visiting Chinese enterprises are expected to place around US$500 million worth of orders from Taiwan suppliers.

    Huang Wen-rong, deputy secretary general of TAITRA, said that Henan Province is now the most populated administrative region, with a total population of over 100 million, thus showing strong consuming ability.

    In 2008, Henan Province boasted a gross domestic product of up to 1.84 trillion renminbi. Wal-Mart of the U.S. has set up branches in Luoyang and Zhengzhou cities in the province
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    more...

    We'll surely have coverage of this. We have a lot of staff from Taiwan and they return annually to visit family.
    Dec 21, 2009
    Kung fu schools in Taiwan

    TAIPEI - CHINA plans to open a kung fu academy and several cultural centres in Taiwan to promote martial arts from the mainland's famed Shaolin Temple, media on the island said on Monday.

    Xu Guangchun, head of a delegation from central China's Henan province where the Buddhist monastery is based, said the project is expected to cost about 300 million yuan (S$62 million), said the United Daily News.

    Shaolin monks were also part of the delegation, which visited Taiwan earlier this month, the report quoted Mr Xu as saying.

    Shaolin Temple is world-famous for its martial arts and has become the subject of an entire pop-culture industry, with movies, novels and comics devoted to the exploits of its hard-hitting monks.

    The temple also tried to woo the Taiwanese public in 2005, when thousands signed up for martial arts lessons from visiting monks. However, the classes were cancelled amid lingering political tensions.

    Ties between the two sides, split since a civil war in 1949, have improved dramatically since Beijing-friendly Ma Ying-jeou became president of Taiwan last year. -- AFP
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Mazu Fest

    I did an article on the Mazu Festival with Dr. Daniel Weng in our 2004 September/October issue: Fist Nest Guard the Heavenly Mother: The 2004 Taichung County Mazu International Festival. It was part of our "Treasures of Taiwan" series. The festival is a smorgasbord of traditional martial arts and folk lion dancing.

    Taichung Mazu Festival blends old and new
    TAICHUNG, Taiwan -- The Taichung County Mazu International Festival this year had started on Feb. 28 and will last till May 30. The highlight of this most celebrated religious festival is the nine-days-seven-nights incense-offering tour, which will be held on April 16 to 25.

    The 330 km tour will have believers and visitors travel on foot to more than 80 temples in 21 townships in Taichung, Changhua, Yuanlin, Chiayi Counties. There will be traditional folk arts as well as contemporary performances traveling along with the troop throughout the trip.

    Taichung County Magistrate Huang Chung-sheng and his team aims to blend traditional and modern, eastern and western elements together in this festival to celebrate the wide varieties of cultures.

    In the three-month festival, there will be traditional arts performances, like martial arts, traditional operas, Chinese orchestras, puppet theatres, lion dances and many more. Distinguished guests include the martial monks from Song Shan Shaolin Monastery.

    Taipei County government has also invited renowned bands, choirs, circuses, dancers and drama groups from all over the world to bring different cultures to the festival.

    For more information about the festival, please visit http://mazu.taichung.gov.tw/.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Shaolin monks representing

    Music Bridges the Political Divide in China
    By CINDY SUI
    Published: April 20, 2010

    DALIN, TAIWAN — When a Taiwan music ensemble performed its reconstruction of Chinese imperial court music last year in Beijing, it marked not just a cultural milestone, but a political one.

    The concert provided a rare opportunity to hear ancient sounds salvaged from a nearly vanished musical tradition. The 3,000-year-old genre known as yayue, or “elegant music,” faded with the collapse of dynastic rule in 1911, and nearly succumbed to the later Maoist assault on “feudalistic” elements of China’s past.

    But it was also a chance for people from both sides of the long-divided Taiwan Strait to compare notes on which parts of their joint Chinese heritage have been preserved, or not.

    “The audience response was quite strong. Many were hearing this music for the first time,” said Xie Jiaxing, director of the China Conservatory in Beijing, which had invited the Yayue Ensemble of Nanhua University to perform in the capital.

    “For political reasons, we haven’t done enough to research yayue,” Mr. Xie said. “Taiwan’s Nanhua University has done a really good job in this respect. Afterwards, our students wrote to the school saying how happy they were to discover such a great treasure in ancient Chinese culture, even though they don’t really understand it.”

    The Communist victory in the Chinese civil war in 1949 and the flight of the defeated Kuomintang forces to Taiwan was followed by decades of tense separation. Taiwan considers itself a self-governed island, while China regards it as a renegade province.

    A détente, first taking the form of economic ties, gathered strength beginning in 2008 with the election in Taiwan of President Ma Ying-jeou, who has made improved relations a hallmark of his administration. Direct flights, tourism and, increasingly, cultural exchanges have blossomed.

    While Taiwan has long prided itself on being the keeper of Chinese tradition, until recently it had been distanced from its cultural roots on the mainland. The Communist mainland, by contrast, had in many regards cut itself off from its own past. The exchanges are allowing both sides to fill in the gaps. The past year has seen exhibits and performances unimaginable not long ago.

    Last October, the Palace Museum in Beijing and Taiwan’s National Palace Museum held their first-ever joint exhibition in Taipei, displaying paintings and other treasures from a long-splintered imperial collection.

    The two museums are also stepping up cooperation, coordinating their catalogs and Web sites, and sharing their expertise in storing and restoring artifacts.

    In March, the internationally renowned Chinese director Zhang Yimou staged his production of the Puccini opera “Turandot” in Taiwan, performed by mainland singers and Taiwanese instrumentalists.

    Mainland provincial governments have been sending delegations to Taiwan to promote investment, trade and tourism, and each brings examples of local culture, some of which had never been seen in Taiwan.

    Henan Province brought monks from the Shaolin Temple who demonstrated their martial arts skills. Guizhou Province displayed one of its most famous products — Maotai grain liquor, which is still barred from sale in Taiwan — but also the clothing, crafts and dances of its many ethnic minorities.

    Chou Ju-mu, 20, a Taipei fashion design student who visited the recent Guizhou exhibit, expressed amazement at the intricate embroidery, batiks and paper-thin silver ornaments. “We’ve only learned about the mainland from books,” she said. “Only today are we able to see these things in reality.”

    Joseph Lee, a businessman who was also at the exhibit, agreed, saying many aspects of China’s culture remained foreign to ordinary Taiwanese. “We’ve seen more of the culture of Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the United States or Canada than we have of mainland China.”

    That is changing. Banners on the main boulevards of Taipei that once were more likely to promote Western or Japanese performers now advertise coming performances by the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra or a Kunqu opera troupe.

    Even a singer from the People’s Liberation Army has given a concert here.

    These events are not happening without controversy or criticism, especially from Taiwan’s main opposition party and others who suspect that China’s overtures, even cultural exchanges, may all be aimed at eventually bringing the island under its rule.

    However, Chen Huei-ying, director-general of the cultural and education affairs department of the Mainland Affairs Council, the Taiwan government body in charge of policies toward China, sees benefits. “Cultural exchanges are helpful to peaceful development of cross-strait relations,” he said.

    “They increase understanding and appreciation for each other and especially feelings people on each side have for one another.”

    They are also allowing mainland Chinese visitors to see how their culture evolved on Taiwan, shielded from the Communist campaigns against many traditional practices.

    Some folk customs — such as the worship of Mazu, the sea goddess — thrive here in ways they no longer do on the mainland. Chinese temples are seeking help from their Taiwanese counterparts on how to revive Mazu festivals.

    In the case of yayue, the classical court music, the exchanges are generating lively discussion, if not always agreement.

    The yayue performance presented in Beijing last autumn was the culmination of 15 years of research by Chou Chun-yi, head of the Yayue Ensemble at Nanhua University here in Dalin.

    Such was the influence of imperial China over its neighbors that variants of its musical forms and instruments had made their way into the courts of Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Mr. Chou traveled to those countries in search of clues to what instruments should be played and how, what the music should sound like and what the accompanying dance steps might have been. But he also made numerous trips to the Chinese mainland, where he studied ancient instruments unearthed from tombs and had replicas made.

    “A people cannot be without its history,” said Mr. Chou. “Japan and South Korea can perform something from 1,000 years ago. Why can’t we?”

    The mainland’s state-run China Central Television broadcast a special program about the concert and interviewed Mr. Chou. He maintains that this was the first time many Chinese had heard this music of their own ancestors.

    Peng Qingtao, director of the materials research committee of the Cultural Relics Bureau of Qufu, the hometown of Confucius, acknowledges that much of what passes for ancient music in China today may not be genuine. But he wondered how authentic even Mr. Chou’s painstakingly researched renditions could be.

    “There are no recordings of the music,” Mr. Peng said. “Even the musical scores were notated under a different system than the one we use now. So it’s impossible for any interpretation to be completely authentic.”

    He said China also has much to offer Taiwan in terms of traditional culture.

    “We’ve held ceremonies to honor Confucius here for 2,000 years, without interruption until 1949, so it’s not correct to say that all Chinese culture disappeared from China,” Mr. Peng said, referring to the year that Mao Zedong founded the People’s Republic of China.

    “We still have documents that show exactly where the musicians stood, and the notices sent out before the ceremonies where yayue was played,” Mr. Peng said.

    “These were not all destroyed in the Cultural Revolution,” he said, referring to the 1966-76 political campaign, when Red Guards defaced the tombs of Confucius and his descendents.

    Meanwhile, the two sides are sharing their respective understandings of yayue. Partly because of the Beijing performance, the China Conservatory plans to set up its own yayue research center later this year and has invited Mr. Chou to help.

    “Yayue is really worth studying and reviving. It’s one of the treasures of our ancient culture,” said Mr. Xie, the conservatory director. “These exchanges are good. They will deepen our understanding of Chinese traditional culture.”
    Didn't know that Maotai was unavailable in Taiwan. Now that's some silly politricks.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    This is very interesting for it's global implications.
    It sure is and I keep my fingers crossed, it is not tangible but I do sense "something" in my buddhist surroudings,I dare not speek my thoughts. Let just wait and see what happens..omituofo!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Taiwan in 2014

    China's Shaolin Temple plans to open branch in Taiwan
    (AFP) – 7 hours ago

    TAIPEI — The Shaolin Monastery, an icon of Chinese kung fu, plans to open a branch in Taiwan, cashing in on the fast warming ties between the island and the mainland, a tourism operator said Wednesday.

    The monastery in central China's Henan province has authorised Liu Cheng-chih, who heads a foundation that promotes tourism between the two sides, to build the Taiwanese branch.

    "We've been authorised by the Shaolin Monastery to set up a branch in (the central county of) Miaoli," Liu told AFP.

    The complex will stretch over 30 hectares (81 acres) and may cost up to one billion Taiwan dollars (33 million US), he said.

    "The branch will help spread the legacy of Shaolin Monastery that for hundreds of years has become an important element of the Chinese culture," Liu said.

    Construction is due to be completed in 2014, but monks from the Monastery may start teaching martial arts within eight months using existing facilities at the venue.

    Taiwan branch will eventually provide programmes such as Chinese Zen Buddhism and Shaolin medicine, he said.

    Liu said the investment plan would not have been possible if tensions between Taiwan and China had remained high and exchange of visits by people from the two sides restricted.

    Ties between the former cross-Strait rivals, split in 1949 at the end of a civil war, have improved markedly since Ma Ying-jeou of the China-friendly Kuomintang party came to power in 2008 on promises of ramping up trade and allowing in more Chinese tourists.
    $33 mil USD. That's a serious investment. Anyone ever been to Miaoli?
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    I would love to see this

    1000 weapons? That sounds amazing.
    Taiwanese martial arts master shares weapon collection
    * Publication Date:02/21/2011
    * Source: Liberty Times

    A Taiwanese Shaolin kung fu master is planning to put his collection of more than 1,000 weapons on display at the proposed ROC Martial Arts Weapons Cultural Exhibition Hall and Shaolin Temple Martial Arts Academy.

    Hsiao Chuan-yi, founder of Taiwan's first Shaolin kung fu association, said he hopes his generosity will help locals achieve the ideal of a healthy mind in a sound body through the study of martial arts.

    “Shaolin doctrine preaches that meditation and fighting skills go hand in hand to purify the heart,” Hsiao said. “I hope to channel the spirit of this ideal to help the people of Taiwan better themselves.”

    According to Hsiao, he has long dreamed of bringing Shaolin to Taiwan and setting up an association. He claims to have taught nearly 10,000 students, including police and military martial arts trainers.

    A martial arts buff since childhood, Hsiao, who also goes by the Shaolin name Shi Xingying, is a member of the 32nd class of followers under Shaolin Master Ling Fangzhang. He studied martial arts and Buddhism at Songshan Shaolin Wushu College in mainland China.

    Hsiao has studied various forms of martial arts and also meditation, Chinese medicine and Buddhism. He believes that martial arts students should base their fighting skills on meditation.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Not sure if this is official

    It sounds more like one of the private schools from Dengfeng, but I might be wrong...
    China's Shaolin Temple to help Taiwan open martial arts school
    May 19, 2011, 23:19 GMT

    Taipei - China's Shaolin Temple, which trains the famous fighting monks, will help Taiwan open a martial arts school, press reports said Friday.

    Construction of the Fuhsing Martial Arts School, in Miaoli County, western Taiwan, began Thursday. The school will open in September when the first-stage construction is completed, the China Times and Liberty Times said.

    The school will cover 20 hectares and cost 600 million Taiwan dollars (20 million US dollars) to build. It will be a boarding school eventually recruiting more than 1,000 primary and high school students, the two dailies said.

    The students will learn Chinese, English, mathematics and martial arts.

    Miaoli County began sending students to the Shaolin Temple two years ago, so that they could learn martial arts, or kungfu, and become seed teachers at the Miaoli school.

    Shaolin Temple will send monks to teach martial arts at the Miaoli school, press reports said.

    The school has full backing from Miaoli County Magistrate Liu Cheng-hung.

    'It can promote Shaolin Temple's martial arts and boost tourism in Miaoli,' he told reporters.

    The Shaolin Temple, in Henan Province, was founded in the 5th century and is one of China's best known Buddhist monasteries, due to its association with marital arts.

    In the 1990s, the temple began to open kung fu schools in China and send its monks on overseas performance tours.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,092

    Then again...

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    San Diego, CA.
    Posts
    1,162

    Inquiring Minds

    A few questions about Shaolin education...how does Shaolin Buddhism differ from other sects of Buddhism? So what encompasses Shaolin Medicine? Is it just Chi Kung? or does it encompass Tui Na, herbal remedies, and acupuncture?

    I know this is probably a very long winded answer...I think Shaolin is fascinating because of the spiritual aspects. Its also intriguing to me that they focus on Mathematics education. Math is much more than numbers.
    "if its ok for shaolin wuseng to break his vow then its ok for me to sneak behind your house at 3 in the morning and bang your dog if buddha is in your heart then its ok"-Bawang

    "I get what you have said in the past, but we are not intuitive fighters. As instinctive fighters, we can chuck spears and claw and bite. We are not instinctively god at punching or kicking."-Drake

    "Princess? LMAO hammer you are such a pr^t"-Frost

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •