Southern Praying Mantis Kung Fu
HISTORY OF SOUTHERN PRAYING MANTIS
If Northern Praying Mantis is the epitome of popularized, widely
dispersed kung fu, then the true southern counterpart must be the most
secretive. It was developed as a style by the Hakka Chinese, considered to
be outsiders by the other indigenous peoples of Kwangsi province, and the
need for personal defense was indeed great. Little is known surrounding
the origins, but the style evidences elements of Lamaistic training, and
close adherence to Yin/Yang philosophy. Practitioners are skilled in Dim
Mak (death-touch techniques, using non-apparent attack modes) and healing
arts. Two schools developed, these being the Chu and Chow, and both share
so much in common as to use the same name for the method, "Bamboo
Forest".
The secrecy surrounding Bamboo Forest Praying Mantis is replete with
myths and legends, largely initiated and propagated by the practitioners
themselves. Becoming a student is extremely demanding and involves nothing
less than being adopted by the master and pledging one's life to him. Even
family ties are second to attitude and mental readiness in choosing the
disciples.
Unlike the northern schools, southern mantis rarely emphasizes one type
of technique; the mantis hook is employed, but so are numerous other
trapping and controlling maneuvers. The typical closed fist of other
styles is absent from the southern sect, which instead favors the mantis
fist, a modification of the leopard punch, but concentrating all of the
striking force through a single finger. Stances are low to moderate, but
firmly anchored to the ground. There is tremendous use of the knees,
elbows and low, powerful kicks. There are few feints or distraction
strikes; everything is designed for 100% power output, and is, thus,
potentially lethal.
There is reason to believe that at least some of the Southern method
was a direct result to ward off a political oppression during the mid-19th
century, which is further reinforced by the secret society nature of the
sect. Bamboo Forest employs fighting philosophies common to Wing Chun and
White Eyebrow kung fu, and there is stylistic evidence to support the idea
that strong exchange of information has occurred between these schools.