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Ben
Largusa
By
Dan Inosanto – The Filipino Martial Arts 1980
Ben
Largusa separates himself from the title of Escrima
master. He is a man of Kali, the older Filipino art.
Kali is the source from which all Escrima styles developed.
"Escrima,
Arnis, Sikaran, Silat, Kuntao, Kaliradman, Kalirongan
an Pagkalikali are all phases of Kali," says Largusa,
"but Kali is the mother or ancestral art. These
phases are all part of our training."
"Ben
Largusa is a master because of his skill and knowledge,"
says Dan Inosanto. "If you don't know him, it's
hard to draw anything personal out of him, but movement
wise - can't touch him."
Largusa
gets his movement from his instructor, Floro Villabrille,
the most commonly repeated name among the Escrimadors
in Stockton. Villabrille lives in Hawaii and Largusa,
who was born on Kauai, studied under him for six unbroken
years in the fifties. He has maintained contact with
him to become his foremost protégé.
Largusa
now has a school in South San Francisco with a system
of ranking and a curriculum that is geared to span three
years. If the student is active and learns what he is
taught, he may then qualify to teach. According to Largusa,
it is the first time Kali has been organized commercially
and the school has Villabrille's blessing.
A
class in Kali at Largusa's school begins with "Orascion"
or meditation and a kind of non-partisan prayer. Largusa
makes a point of saying that neither the prayer nor
the meditation are used to teach any brand of religion.
"I
just teach the basics and they communicate whatever
they want," he says. "If you're a Christian,
they you communicate with the heavenly Father. If you're
not a Christian, then you communicate with whatever
you believe, supernatural spirit or spirit of light.
It is the spirit of giving that is exercised in this
meditation. You have to be humble. You have to give
before you can take, especially when you train."
After
the orascion, beginners learn the 12 basic movements
of Kali with a stick in each hand. Then they learn five
variations or styles to each of those movements: "Numerado"
style for infighting, "Literada" {otherwise
called riterada or retreating style} for outside fighting,
"Sumbrada" which is a fast-paced counter for
counter style, and "Fraile" and "Cabisedario"
that are combinations of the previous styles. The double
sticks may be round or flattened to resemble a sword.
The flattened sticks serve as a reminder that Kali is
adaptable to any kind of weapon, bladed or blunted,
and one edge of the flattened stick is used like a blade.
Using a stick in each hand helps the student develop
his weak side by immediately relating it to the movements
of his strong side. He in effect becomes ambidextrous
with his weapons and by shortening his weapon, he soon
learns that the art works just as well empty-handed.
All in all, the training not only makes the person ambidextrous
in terms of hand movements, but in terms of weaponry
as well.
The
Kali people often use the circle to organize their hand
and foot movements. A defending Kali man, for instance,
may step around his opponent to position himself in
"safety zones." These safety zones are places
where the opponent has either not had time to gain momentum
in his strike, a zone that would jam his strike before
it begins, or where his strike has reached the end of
its motion.
The
end of every movement in Kali is the beginning of another
movement. "DeCadena" or chain-like movements
where each is connected to the next is what gives Kali
its fluidity.
According
to Largusa's descriptions, the basic concepts of defense
in Kali have three elements: the parry, the safety factor
and the killing blow. The parry is the motion that deflects
the opponent's strike. The safety factor is the checking
motion that holds the opponent's striking hand in place
after a strike has been deflected. The killing blow
is the counterstrike, but it may occur after the parry
and safety factor or during either one. The Kali men
train to be able to insert the killing blow or counterstrike
at any time in the clash.
"Killing
blow" may be a misnomer because, according to Largusa,
the ultimate philosophy in Kali (at least as he practices
it) is to discourage, not injure, and to spare life,
not take it.
"If
we wanted to kill the person," says Largusa, "if
we were convinced that our lives were threatened, then
we would go to the vital area, the head, to the mind
or its supporters, the lung or heart. But the ultimate
in Kali training is when you can spare a man's life.
Only then have you learned the purpose of Kali training."
"A
rattlesnake can kill, right? If you take off the fangs,
it still looks deadly, but it cannot kill. In Kali,"
says Largusa, "a hand is considered a fang. If
you take away the hands , it cannot pick up a gun or
a weapon and kill you. People who are not familiar with
Kali see us strike to the hands and say it's not deadly,
but they don't realize until they learn Kali how deadly
it is and why we strike to the hands."
While
explaining his concept of training the students to strike
the hand, Largusa also demonstrates how easily the target
may be adjusted when necessary. Since the hand is smaller
and more elusive than the head or body, it would seem
that training against the hand for a target would only
sharpen a student's accuracy. In incidents such as defending
against a nunchaku with a stick, the hands actually
move much slower than the weapon and, therefore, are
easier to hit. Seeing the kind of speed possible in
both Escrima and Kali, some might wonder if trying to
follow the hand wouldn't be dangerous thing to do in
any kind of combat. How so you follow five strikes that
take place almost simultaneously if you're trying to
follow them each time? This is where Largusa brings
out the concept of the rhythm triangles in Kali.
"It
has been proven in boxing," he says, "that
the hands are faster than the eye. If you shoot six
darts at me at once, I can't defend against each one,
so I treat them as one dart. If you throw three of four
punches at me fast, I treat them as one punch. They
are only one point of your rhythm triangle. Once you
understand the theory of the rhythm triangle, you can
understand these movements."
The
triangle, like the circle, is a key to understanding
Kali. The rhythm triangle is pictures with the mind
at the top of the triangle and the hands feet at the
other two corners. Knock out any one of them and you've
seriously hampered, if not completely negated the opponent's
ability to fight. The mind here is at the top because
it affects both the hands and feet.
Another
example of the triangle explaining a principle of Kali
is the "internal triangle."
"The
internal triangle is pictured like the rhythm triangle,"
says Largusa. "The mind is at the top. On one side
is 'ki,' the seat of internal strength, and on the other
side is the point of contact. If you hit the back of
the feet, the ki will weaken. Like the old saying, kill
the bark and the tree will die. This is the same process.
"Without
this spiritual and mental aspect one moves mechanical,
like a robot, no feeling and no meaning. Orascion {meditation}
is very important because it makes the mind stronger.
It develops the fighting spirit, what we call plain
old 'guts.' Now with Kali spiritual training, one doesn't
have to be born with guts, it can be developed."
The
highest level of Kali training then would be the universal
triangle. Here the supernatural spirit is at the top,
communicated with by orascion. The practitioner and
his opponent are on the bottom corners.
Supernatural
spirits, sticks and blades, fighting with weapons and
empty hands - all of this leads to the inevitable question,
always asked off to the side. Does anyone ever get hurt?
Largusa says he has never received any injury in all
his years of training. They keep injuries at a minimum
in his school by teaching "slow training,"
a theory related to the yin and yang of Kung Fu or Karate.
"Our
philosophy," he says, "is soft but hard, hard
but soft. When you train slowly, speed comes automatically.
With soft training, hardness comes automatically. We
have very slow training in the beginning so they can
correct the finer points and develop finesse. When we
go fast, we use either the light rattan stick or the
plastic baseball bat and go to the non-vital areas such
as the trunk and between the joints to prevent injuries."
Largusa's
school now has just under 40 students who are slowly
working their way up the ladder of the ranks. When they're
ready for a promotion, Largusa gives them a test. The
test includes "sayaw," the dance form that
kept Escrima and Kali hidden from the Spaniards in the
Philippines. Largusa teaches 20 or more sayaws that
the students are supposed to be at random either to
the beat of a drum or with their own imagined rhythm.
Within the sayaws are the 12 basic movements of Kali
as well as all the defensive movements, counters, strikes
and footwork patterns.
He
also teaches sets, similar to Kata in Karate but labels
them into two categories: planned and freestyle. The
planned set is as it sounds with the movements planned
in sequence, mainly for the beginners. The freestyle
set, However, employs anything the student has learned
and is more similar to shadowboxing.
All
considered, Largusa's school is probably the most organized
and commercial Filipino arts academy found in the United
States. To some Escrimadors, commercializing a school
for the public use means that the art is being watered
down and "frozen" to keep it organized and
palpable to the public consumption. But people who have
seen Largusa's students work, and particularly Largusa
himself, always seem to come to the same conclusion:
"You can't hit 'em with a 10-foot pole." That's
got to say something.
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