Saturday, 16/11/2024
Bắc giang 26 °C / 23 - 32 °C
Hotline: +84.0204.3 856 624

Sports
Hot news:
Sports
icon
0.5 1.0 1.5
Shares:
icon-zalo

Ancient eye-popping martial art gains popularity in modern Vietnam

Updated: 16:24, 14/06/2020
In a sunny temple courtyard in Vietnam, Le Van Thang pushes an iron rod hard against his eye socket and tries to make it bend.

His dizzying strength has been honed through years of practicing centuries-old martial art Thien Mon Dao.

Thang, 28, is one of an increasing number of Vietnamese to find refuge in a sport that grew out of a need to protect the country from invaders, but now offers a route to mental well being in the rapidly changing nation.

{keywords}

Le Van Thang, 28, student of the centuries-old martial art of Thien Mon Dao, bends a construction rebar against his eye socket inside the Bach Linh temple compound at Du Xa Thuong village in Hanoi.

Practitioners of Thien Mon Dao have long taken pride in the incredible shows of strength that form part of their routines.

The eye-popping feats include bending metal against their bodies, carrying heavy objects using their throats and lying under the path of motorbikes.

Now many say they also take pleasure from how the sport - which includes elements of self-defense, kung fu and weapons training - has steered them on a new course.

Thang, a furniture seller who first began practicing eight years ago, said he used to get into fights in high school and was also a gambler.

"Once I stole money from my family but after that, I was brought to Thien Mon Dao by my family and I changed," he told AFP.

"There are so many benefits: I learned how to express my ideas, how to walk properly and behave."

Thien Mon Dao has roots going back to the 10th century, according to master Nguyen Khac Phan, whose school trains in the complex of an ornate temple on the outskirts of Hanoi. But he says the first official practice of the sport was recorded in the 18th century.

In recent years it's seen a surge in popularity, he adds, with up to three new clubs set up in the capital each year.

Vietnam currently has around 30,000 Thien Mon Dao practitioners across the country, Phan estimates, with occasional public performances helping boost the sport's appeal.

"People come for different purposes but mostly they want to improve their health and mental health," added Phan, who has been teaching the sport since the early 1990s.

"Learning martial arts can help people see life in a better way, improve their strength... give up their mistakes to aim for better things," he said.

{keywords}

Master Nguyen Khac Phan (front) leads students through a training class in centuries-old martial art Thien Mon Dao inside the Bach Linh temple compound at Du Xa Thuong village in Hanoi.

From tiny children who have barely started school to people in their eighties, Thien Mon Dao embraces anyone who wants to kick their way up through 18 different levels and seven belts.

Sixteen-year-old Vu Thi Ngoc Diep, one of around 10 women training at the temple compound, said the sport had also given her a way to fight gender stereotypes.

"Southeast Asian people think that girls should be gentle and not suitable for learning martial arts," she said. "But I see it differently."

Martial arts ONE Championship returns to HCMC early next year
ONE Championship, the popular martial arts contest, will be held in HCMC next March as one of its 2020 season stops.
Martial artist Nguyen Thi Thu Thuy wins silver medal at world wushu championship
(BGO) – 14 Vietnamese athletes competed at the ongoing World Wushu Championship held in China. Excellently, the Bac Giang born martial artist Nguyen Thi Thu Thuy won a silver at the final match on October 23.
Martial artists win seven golds at World Beach Pencak Silat Championship
A team of Vietnamese martial artists have secured a number of medals including seven golds, eight silvers, and six bronze medals at the first World Beach Pencak Silat Championship 2019 which recently concluded in Phuket, Thailand.
Abandoned disabled boy finds solace in martial arts
Tran Van Hung grew up with the question “Why did my parents abandon me?” but has gotten over the sadness through martial arts.
Vietnam wins 18 medals at international martial arts contest
Vietnamese martial artists have won five gold, six silver and seven bronze medals at the Chungju World Martial Arts Masterships in South Korea.

Source: VnExpress

Shares:
icon-zalo
ancient-eye-popping-martial-art-gains-popularity-in-modern-vietnam.bbg

Reader's comments (0)

Your comment...