Asian Geographic - 08.2018

(Grace) #1
Originating from the Malay Archipelago,
pencak silat, or silat Melayu, has developed
over 100 styles and techniques across
Southeast Asia. One of the theories of
the origin of pencak silat by Mariun
Sudirohadiprodo, a renowned Indonesian
pencak silat master, is that the martial art
originated from humans’ observation of the
movement of animals.
The legend goes that in olden times,
ferocious animals roamed Java, and a woman,
Rama Sukana, was washing beside the river
when she spotted a pair of monkeys on the
opposite bank in battle. One attacked with a
tree branch, while the other dodged expertly,
and the fascinated Sukana copied their
techniques through careful observation. After
arriving home late, she used her newfound
fighting skills to dodge a beating from her
husband, and eventually he begged her to
teach him the moves.

Today, pencak silat practitioners still
copy the movements of snakes, crocodiles,
monkeys and scorpions, with certain styles of
fighting – like the harimau (tiger) and garuda
putih (white eagle) – named after the animals
themselves. In competitions, fights involve a
series of three matches, called tanding, lasting
two minutes each. Opponents use a series of
attack and defence moves – which each have
scores attached to them – to overcome their
opponent. Each of these must adhere strictly
to a fixed routine: first a fighting stance, then a
step pattern, then back to a fighting stance.

PENCAK SILAT


DATA SOURCES: SOUTHERN CROSS BUJUTSU,
SILAT IN INDONESIA,TRIBUN NEWS

“Pencak silat was born


in our country and this is


going to be the first time


athletes compete in the


martial art at the Asiad”


Imam Nahrawi, Indonesian sports minister

gaMePlay


Attacks must be
delivered in a row,
with fewer than six
techniques per attack

6


Embracing an
opponent is a banned
defence tactic

left Pro kabaddi
matches in India

above Fighters brawl
in pencak dor, a silat
spinoff popular in Java

PHOTOS © ULET IFANSASTI/GETTY IMAGES
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