The United States of Shaolin
There were two successive National Shaolin Kung Fu Games in the wake of the Worlds, but it wasn’t until the Worlds that I first got confirmation of them. They both came together astonishingly quickly. That’s Shaolin – keeping us all in the moment.
These National Games are a new thing, just like the World Games and the Continental Games, which has been covered here in Shaolin Trips. We held the first National Games earlier this year. It was a component of 2024 Tiger Claw Elite KungFuMagazine.com Championships. That was before the Worlds were confirmed (see 2024 Tiger Claw Elite KungFuMagazine.com Championship – Shaolin Kung Fu Games).
Every year, it takes us several months of hard work to put TCEC together. Like every tournament, there are a lot of moving parts. So much behind-the-scenes infrastructure must come together. Being a distributor, Tiger Claw cannot tap a body of student and family volunteers in the same way a school might. But even without that handicap, I’m very impressed as how quickly the second and third National Games came together.
The second US Nationals were held in Denver on September 21st. These were a component of the 13th Denver National Chinese Martial Arts Championship & Shaolin Games, an event put on by the Denver Shaolin Kung Fu Tai Chi Institute under Sifu John Burns. Akin to TCEC’s first games, having a longstanding Denver National Chinese Martial Arts Championship already well established certainly made the addition of the Shaolin Games easier than starting from scratch. Sifu Burns kindly invited me to witness and report, but I was already committed elsewhere so had to regretfully decline. I’ve only heard good things about the event from those that participated, which was encouraging. Sifu Burns came to Houston too and he was satisfied with how it all went, so much so that he hopes to do it again.
On October 25-27th, the third Nationals were held in Houston, a sprawling city with one of America’s more invidious Shaolin histories. Four Shaolin monks run separate schools within the tight confines of Houston’s Chinatown. It started over a quarter century ago. In 1999, two of those monks, Shi Xinghao and Shi Deshan, were featured on the cover of Kung Fu Tai Chi, in what was the precursor to our legendary Shaolin Specials (see December 1999). That was soon after they both immigrated to Houston, and right when I began working fulltime at Kung Fu Tai Chi.
Xinghao was among the monks present when I first went to Shaolin in 1995. After several years apart, we crossed paths at Shaolin just outside of Talin at the World Games just a few months ago. I think the last time I saw him was at the Shaolin Temple Cultural Festival in 2013 (see The Shaolin Temple Cultural Festival, JAN+FEB 2014).