GRANDMASTERS
LINEAGE
Grandmaster Sin Kwang Thé
The son of Chinese parents, Sin Thé was
born in Bandung, Indonesia. He began his martial arts training under
a sand burn master at the age of 6. When he was 7 years old he began
studying under one of Grandmaster Ie's top students. After proving
himself worthy, he then studied under Grandmaster Ie Chang
Ming as a private student until Ie Chang Ming
retired and passed the title of Grandmaster to Sin Kwang
Thé (at the age of 25).
Having learned the entire body of Shaolin weapon, empty hand, animal,
and internal styles, Sin Kwang Thé became
the youngest Grandmaster in Shaolin history. Any martial arts school
is limited by the accumulated body of information available to the
student. In Shaolin Do, this body of knowledge is almost limitless,
as Grandmaster Thé constantly reveals new
forms from the 900-plus Shaolin forms he received. In truth, the
students of Shaolin Do are limited only by their level of dedication
and perseverance.
Story
of the Grandmasters
The Shaolin schools under the Shaolin Grandmaster Sin Kwang
Thé trace their lineage back to the Fukien temple
through a succession of three remarkable Shaolin Grandmasters.
The first of the three Grandmasters was born in Fukien in 1849.
He came to the world covered with hair from head to toe. His horrified
parents, convinced that they had given birth to a demon, abandoned
the infant in a forest near the Fukien Temple. A passing monk rescued
the newborn and presented him to the Shaolin Masters. The Masters
realized that it would be nearly impossible to find a family willing
to adopt such a child, so they decided to raise him themselves.
They named him Su Kong T'ai Djin.
From childhood on, Su Kong T'ai Djin studied the
Shaolin art with exceptional dedication. The Fukien Masters responded
to his enthusiasm with a rare variance from Shaolin tradition. Instead
of assigning Su Kong's training to a single Master,
as was the practice, each of the Fukien Masters contributed to Su
Kong's martial education. Su Kong was
therefore able to complete every branch of Shaolin training, learning
and mastering hundreds of forms and disciplines. It was an unparalleled
achievement. [Usually the 10 Grandmasters of the temple each learned
1/10th of the Shaolin art].
Su
Kong's knowledge and strong character led to his appointment
as the Grandmaster of Fukien. More than once, his exceptional martial
skills were needed to fulfill the responsibilities of his position.
For example, he once arranged a meeting with 12 Shaolin Masters,
representatives of the Shaolin Temples of China. When Grandmaster
Su entered the room for the meeting, all the Masters bowed.
Instead of returning the bow, Grandmaster Su picked
up a knife and threw it up the rafters. An assassin tumbled down
from his hiding place, the knife embedded in his heart. Grandmaster
Su had heard 13 men breathing where there were only supposed
to be 12! (back to top)
The Fukien Shaolin monks took it upon themselves
to protect the Fukienese coast from the raids of Japanese pirates.
They were tremendously effective, earning the love and respect of
the common people. When word reached the Ch'ing Kwang Hsu
Emperor in Peking, at the beginning of the 20th century,
trouble brewed. Kwang Hsu saw the Fukien monks
as potential rebels with widespread popular support. He secretly
dispatched imperial troops, armed with cannons on a mission to destroy
the Fukien Temple. He even sent a renegade Shaolin Master, Chi
Tao Su, the White Eyebrow Monk, to strengthen the attacking
force.
A sympathetic official warned the monks of the impending attack.
The Fukien Masters chose a surprising, ingenious
solution. They evacuated the Temple, removed all of its valuable
artwork and books, and set fire to the temple themselves. They hoped
to rebuild the Temple in more favorable times. More favorable times
never came.
Grandmaster Su and his disciples retreated into
the Fukienese mountains to continue their training. One of the disciples
was Ie Chang Ming, the man who would become the
second of the three Grandmasters of our lineage. Su Kong
died in 1928 at the age of 79.
Ie Chang Ming was born in 1880. He was admitted
to the Fukien Temple as a small boy. Like Su Kong, Ie Chang
Ming poured all of his time and energy into the martial
arts training, especially the Golden Snake style. Tied hand and
foot, he could evade spear thrusts by twisting and turning like
a snake. He could also wrap his body around a pole climb it, like
a snake on a vine.(back to top)
Grandmaster Ie's extensive knowledge, sensitivity,
and martial skill was complemented by great personal strength and
concentration. For example, he trained wearing a weight vest (equal
to his body weight!), and used an iron staff and Kwan Tao. He also
did the Iron Bar posture (stretched out between two wooden benches,
with his head on one bench and heels on the other) for 2 hours every
night.
One evening, while traveling through the countryside, Grandmaster
Ie took a shortcut through what appeared to be an abandoned
military encampment. Although the camp was almost deserted, it was
not abandoned. A sentry stopped Ie. Soon other
sentries appeared, bringing the number of soldiers to 11. They taunted
Ie, and became increasingly aggressive. When they
ordered him to lick their boots, Ie knew he had
to take action. All 11 soldiers were killed in the resulting fight.
A price was put on Ie Chang Ming's head. He escaped
to Indonesia, settling in Bandung, where he eventually established
a Shaolin school. It was not easy to become his student; there was
a long waiting list and each prospective student had to prove his/her
worthiness.
In
1943 a boy named Sin Kwang Thé was born
in Bandung who would one day become the third Grandmaster of our
lineage. His family had several Shaolin ancestors and young Sin
was drawn to the martial arts. His father, however, had been injured
during martial arts training when he was a young man and opposed
his sons wishes. Nonetheless, Sin Kwang's mother
secretly let him out a 4 am each morning, so that he could study
the martial arts. He began with sand burn training. Sand burn training
is a crude form of toughening the hands by thrusting them into buckets
of hot sand. (back to top)
After 6 months, the sand burn man stopped teaching. Sin
Kwang heard about Grandmaster Ie's school
and went to watch. Grandmaster Ie had 80 students
practicing empty hand forms, weapons forms and sparring. The 7 year
old Sin Kwang asked to join the school, but he
was put off with polite excuses. One evening, Grandmaster
Ie spilled a bowl of uncooked rice on the training hall
floor. He asked Sin Kwang to pick up the rice,
grain by grain, and to blow the dust of each grain. He was to find
all of the 855 grains that had been in the bowl. It was late at
night, and the Shaolin students had all gone home, by the time Sin
Kwang was through dusting and counting the rice.
The
rice counting was only the first of many tests of determination
and character Sin Kwang passed. For the final test,
Ie spilled hot tea on the boy and took hold of him, looking deep
into his eyes. He saw no anger, only surprise. Sin Kwan
Thé was finally accepted as a Shaolin student.
In the beginning, Grandmaster Ie had Sin
Kwang do hundred of squats to build up his legs. They were
done standing on the edge of a chair, with only the balls of his
feet touching the seat. He also had Sin Kwang stand
in horse stances for what seemed like an eternity. Next came mastering
all 49 postures of the I Ching Ching. Only after these preliminaries
were completed did training in martial techniques begin.
Five years later at the age of 13, Sin Kwang Thé
tested to Black Belt. For his test, he had to spar 7 other students
while blindfolded. He also had to do forms blindfolded. At different
times during the forms, boards were held in his path. Since he didn't
know when there would be a board, every strike in every form had
to be true. (back to top)
In 1964, Master Sin was preparing to go to Germany
to study engineering and physics. He had added German to the multitude
of languages that he could speak. Yet the Berlin crisis altered
his plans. By chance, however, he met a couple from Lexington, Kentucky
who were able to arrange a scholarship in the US for him.
Master Sin Kwang Thé came to the United States.
Master Sin studied academic subjects with the same
dedication that he gave to the Shaolin art. As often as he could,
he returned to Indonesia, for the time had finally come for him
to learn the Golden Snake Style.
First of all, Master Sin had to learn to move like
a snake. Grandmaster Ie tied Master Sin's
wrists to his feet in an arched position similar to the I Chin Ching
#35 posture. In this position, he learned to crawl by moving the
muscles of his chest alone. Grandmaster Ie also
threw Master Sin into the ocean with his hands
and feet tied. Master Sin learned to swim by wriggling
his body. Only now was he ready to learn the Golden Snake forms.
In
1968 Master Sin's training was complete. Grandmaster
Ie awarded him the 10th Degree and the Grandmaster's Red
Belt. Sin Kwang Thé had become the youngest
Grandmaster in the history of the Shaolin art.
Grandmaster Thé continued his education
and was on the verge of completing his Master's Degree when Ie
Chang Ming died at the age of 96. Grandmaster Thé
realized that while there were many engineers and scientists, he
was the only Shaolin Grandmaster. He dropped his studies in order
to devote all his time to teaching the Shaolin art.
Shaolin Grandmaster Sin Kwang Thé could
have returned to Indonesia to resume teaching the art. Instead he
chose to stay in the US. This was a bold break in tradition, for
in the past only full blooded Chinese had been permitted to learn
the Art. Yet when American men and women from all walks of life
were able to learn what was once taught to a handful of Chinese
monks, it was clear that martial arts excellence dependence on time
and effort and not race. There are now several
American Masters. (back to top)
link: Grandmaster
Sin Kwang The' homepage
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