Modern
Arnis is the system of Filipino
martial arts founded by the late Remy
Presas as a self-defense system. His goal was to create an injury-free
training method as well as an effective self-defense system in order
to preserve the older Arnis systems. The term Modern Arnis was also
used by Remy Presas' younger brother Ernesto Presas to describe his
style of Filipino martial arts; since 1999 Ernesto Presas has called
his system Kombatan. It is derived principally from the traditional
Presas family style of the Bolo (machete) and the stick-dueling art
of Balintawak Eskrima, with influences from other Filipino and Japanese
martial arts.
Arnis
is the Philippines' national martial art and sport, after President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed the Republic Act. No. 9850 in 2009.
The Act mandates the Department of Education to include the sport
as a Physical Education course. Arnis will also be included among
the priority sports in Palarong Pambansa (National Games) beginning
2010.
TRAINING
One
of the characteristics of Filipino martial arts is the use of weapons
from the very beginning of training and Modern Arnis is no exception.
The primary weapon is the rattan stick, called a cane or baston
(baton), which varies in size, but is usually about 28 inches (71
cm) in length. Both single and double stick techniques are taught,
with an emphasis on the former; unarmed defenses against the stick
and against bladed weapons (which the stick is sometimes taken to
represent) are a part of the curriculum.
Training covers empty-hand self-defense (striking, locking, throwing,
etc.) as well as the trademark single and double stick techniques
of the Filipino martial arts. Other aspects of the art include espada
y daga (sword and dagger fighting), sinawali (double stick weaving
patterns), and tapi-tapi (locking drills with the stick). In addition
to partner drills, Modern Arnis includes the use of anyo (kata),
solo forms both with and without the stick. Emphasis is placed on
fitting the art in with a student's previous training ("the
art within your art"), smoothly reacting to changing situations
in the fight ("the flow"), and countering the opponent's
attempt to counter strikes directed at him ("tapi-tapi").
Practitioners are called arnisadors or Modern Arnis players.
HISTORY
Remy
Presas studied his family's system from an early age. He went
on to study the Japanese systems of Shotokan Karate and Judo, achieving
high rank in each; but he simultaneously studied a variety of other
Filipino systems, most notably Venancio Bacon's Balintawak . Beginning
with a small gymnasium in Bacolod in the 1950s, he attempted to
spread the art to the local youth as both a cultural legacy and
a form of physical development or sport. He also taught the art
at the University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos. His desire to
reinvigorate interest in his country's traditional martial art grew
over time, and he began making modifications and improvements to
what he had learned. In 1969 he moved to Manila at the request of
a government official, and formed the Modern Arnis Federation of
the Philippines. He was assisted by individuals such as those who
now are on the Modern Arnis Senior Masters Council: Rodel Dagooc,
Jerry dela Cruz, Roland Dantes, Vincente Sanchez, Rene Tongson and
Cristino Vasquez. He continued to develop and spread his art, including
via books, until political considerations forced him to relocate
to North America.
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