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Among
China's well kept secrets, one caught
the imagination of Americans - Chinese
wushu. Wushu is an important component
of the cultural heritage of China,
with a rich content that has remained
untarnished over the centuries. Literally
translated, "wu" is military,
"shu" is art. Wushu therefore
means the art of fighting, or martial
arts.
Previously, wushu figured significantly
in the simple matter of survival through
China's many wars and political upheaval.
Today, wushu has been organized and systematized
into a formal branch of study in the performance
arts by the Chinese. It reigns as the most
poular national sport in the country of
1.1 billion people, practiced by the young
and old alike. It's emphasis has shifted
from combat to performance, and it is practiced
for its method of achieving heath, self-defense
skills, mental discipline, recreational
pursuit and competition.
To
describe wushu, it is best to understand
the philosophy of its teaching. Every
movement must exhibit sensible combat
application and aestheticism. The
wealth of wushu's content, the beauty
of wushu movents, the difficulty factor,
and the scientific training methods
are the song of the elements that
set wushu apart from martial arts.
Routines are performed solo, paired
or in groups, either barehanded or
armed with traditional Chinese weaponry.
In short, wushu is the most exciting
martial art to be seen, felt, and
ultimately practiced.
How is wushu related to kung
fu and taijiquan? "Wushu" is the
correct term for all Chinese martial arts
therefore kung fu and wushu were originally
the same. During the last thirty years,
wushu in Mainland China was modernized so
that there could be a universal standard
for training and competing. In essence,
much emphasis has been placed on speed,
difficulty, and presentation. Consequently,
wushu has become an athletic and aesthetic
performance and competitive sport, while
"kung fu" or traditional wushu
remains the traditional fighting practice.
Taijiquan is a major division of wushu,
utilizing the bodies internal energy or
"chi" and following the simple
principle of "subduing the vigorous
by the soft."
Although
still in budding stages in many countries,
wushu is an established international
sport. In 1990, wushu was inducted
as an official medal event in the
Asian Games. Since then World Championships
have taken place with 56 nations participating.
Wushu is also vying for the Olympic
games in the 21st century.
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