Woof All:
These things seem to have a certain circularity, so may I be forgiven if I repeat what I said earlier?
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It seems to be a tradition in FMA to have terminology disputes with near religous fervor. To this American, it often seems analogous to an American and a Mexican over the word "negro". For one it is considered an unpleasant racial term, for the other it means "black". What an odd debate that would be!
Terminology is certainly not a forte of mine, , , , Concerning Kali, there seem to be many Filipinos of the opinion of our anonymous guest, and certainly its use is a minority one, but I am of the opinion that the term does have proper lineage. This point having been debated many, many, many times before I am uninterested to go into yet again. In that we use the term Kali, I merely note this diversity of opinion for your awareness.
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There are various reasons for the use of the term "Kali". Some are as described by the critics of the word. And some are not.
When used in the critical perjorative way against those who have other reasons, what communicates is a personally insulting tone/intent, and demands of proof can come across with a tone of "justify yourself to me" which tends to lead to "go fornicate yourself rejoinder" and Voila! -- a conversation devoid of forward purpose.
For the record, I believe the term to have historical merit. If you don't, I have no urge to persuade you.
But some of those that don't believe the term to be historically accurate, take an additional step and cast aspersions upon those who do.
Whatever.
The simple fact is that there is very little agreement about many, if not most things in Filipino history-- yet many seem determined to believe theirs as the one true version.
I've been around a while and I've heard countless times about Filipinos saying that the term is a fraud. Of course, the next stop in the syllogism is "How dare you, a euro-american, dare to disagree?!?"
OK, here's my teacher PG Edgar Sulite from an interview in Martial Arts presents "Filipino Martial Arts" (Graciella Casillas on cover)
ES: "In Mindanao, "kali" was the term used, but that doesn't mean it was the only one. , , , We must remember that according to the region where you live, the terms change and others apply such as 'estocada' and 'pagkalikali' and more"
Amongst the informed, the depth and breadth of PG ES's travels and trainings in the RP are well known, and many of these people may have heard of his book "Masters of Kali, Arnis and Eskrima", an amazing collection of interviews and essays on various masters of the arts from around the RP.
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So anyway, what are we to do? Have a duel?!? Oh whoops, we can't do that-- no one challenged/disrespected PG Edgar's or GM Villabrille's use of the term to their face while they were alive. Well then, how about a trial by compurgation to solve the discrepancies amongst the sundry Filipinos with opinions on this?!? That would really settle it. Oy vey.
BTW, currently Roland Dantes writes of indigenous use of the term in the south. Go find him in Mindanao and tell him how and why he's wrong.
Like these people we think the term is historically valid, we like it and we use it. If you don't, it is perfectly OK by me and I have no need or interest in changing your mind-- but it really is beyond me how anyone, Filipino or not, can claim to speak authoritatively on matters linguistic throughout the entirety of the Philippine Archipelago-- and into Indonesia to boot!
If you want 'proof' I ain't the man to give it. Go elsewhere. But if you tell me this proves that there is no proof, , , ,
END OF QUOTED MATERIAL
One of the ditties that I use in teaching is that "Intelligence is the amount of time it takes to forget a lesson." By engaging in this conversation I have revealed a short memory. At first I was intrigued by QE's perspective and background, but unfortunately things have gone the way they usually seem to with all this.
I thought by saying TWICE that no personal dig was intended that the simple, sincere transparency of my question about whether being a white mormon would affect his access would be apparent, but apparently it set off quite a stream of consciousness that as best as I could tell was more related to prior experiences in QE's life than to the spirit in which the question was asked.
Oh well.
Moving on to the next point I'd like to address: perhaps when QE says "the difference with KALI is that it is arrogantly promoted as the historic title of the ancient art of the Philippines" we get to some of the reason for his emotion on this subject.
Like I said in my earliest posts of this thread "There are various reasons for the use of the term "Kali". Some are as described by the critics of the word". I thought it clear enough at the time, but perhaps this needs to be rephrased so that the point better communicates-- there is no disagreement here that the word Kali is sometimes used in a way which is unsound and braggadocious. (In that we are dealing with the mad, merry world of FMA how rare is that?)
However, this does not mean that ALL use of "Kali" is such.
There seems to be more than a little heat in certain quarters-- displayed here in the references about Maphilindo, Majadpahit, Kali, certain grandmasters who've never been the to Philippines, etc-- aimed at Guro Inosanto. I confess puzzlement at the ire of his use of the terms Maphilindo and Majadpahit-- the very point of the terms is to not lump non-Filipino arts in with FMA! It seems that Guro I. is damned if he does, damned if he doesn't.
There have been repeated claims of "Prove it here and now!" on this thread with regard to "Kali".
This kind of reminds me of some FMA tournament held in Bumf*ck, Delaware a few years back that was billed as a "World Championship". Calling it such, didn't make it such and I say this even though my students won most categories (although a year after the fact, the promoter also reversed a ruling in one of my students favor in order to make himself World Champion.) It wasn't a world championship because the best weren't on hand.
Similarly why call on me to make the case for "Kali"?
My knowledge of these things is such that I was trying to think of the name "Yambao" but was afraid I might confuse it with the samurai movie "Yojimbo" and so said nothing LOL
Why not seek out those qualified to speak in this regard instead of me?
I've seen the Villabrille people defend Kali well on the ED, my teacher PG Edgar Sulite thought it sound, GT Leo Gaje thinks it sound, Roland Dantes thinks it sound (my emails in this regard were vaporized along with three months of other emails-- big bummer
(( ) Guro I., who studied with 26 FMA GMs/Manongs from around the RP , many of them born well before 1900 (including the well-travelled Manong LaCoste) thinks it sound.
Concerning this last point, it may be worth noting that language changes-- especially in the Philippines. The usages to which a Manong LaCoste was exposed in his travels in the late 1800s PROBABLY are different than current ones. How dispositive can it be then that QE has not heard the term?
Next point:
"Bored" writes
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"you are right, we do fundamentally agree, that the modern usage of kali is a modern phenomena with roots more likely in the US, rather than PI. My own feeling on the matter, is like any other historic claim. It is not the burden of the doubters to prove (sic) its validity, but those bringing up the claims. In much of the same vein in which the code of kalantiaw was disproven by Scott, without historic basis kali claims lack reality."
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He may well be right-- unless the recording of the historic basis is cloudy. In which case the claims would be true, but not really provable.
In closing, a brief statement of the use of terminology in this regard of Dog Brothers Martial Arts, of which I am the founder.
We use the following terms
1) Kali: because we like it, because in America it has come to be the most common term, because IMHO there are technical matters more suitably described as such than as eskrima or arnis, because of the reminder that there was a part of the Philippines which was not really conquered by Spain, because my teacher uses the term-- take your choice.
2) Kali-silat & others: because silat is a part of the system too. Whether its Filipino Silat or Indonesian or Malaysian or whatever we're less clear.
3) FMA based: Because there are substantial parts of the system which are not FMA, but we consider FMA to be the heart and soul of the system.
4) A Majadpahit system with some BJJ too: Probably pretty precise although it understates the FMA role, but also pretty useless with anyone except the tiny handful of people who know the term Majadpahit. The purpose is to communicate, not befuddle or trigger MEGO reactions (My Eyes Glaze Over)
If you tell me there are logical inconsistencies in this, I will agree. I just use the term that best facilitates communication with the person with whom I am talking. I don't do/discuss/debate history.
Allow me to close with a story, the point of which I leave up to you, dear readers.
I named my second Akita "Moro". My intention was to equate the brave warrior spirit of the muslim resistance to the Spanish and then American rule with the brave warrior spirit of the Akita. Then I was chastized on the Eskrima Digest for using a disparaging term equivalent to sounds-like "negro"-- the complete opposite of my intention. "How could this be?" I asked. "What about the MILF of today?"
Now at this moment those of you out there who occasionally skim porn spam
may be puzzled. Doesn't MILF stand for "Mothers I'd Like to Fornicate?" Well yes it does, but it also stands for "Moro Islamic Liberation Front" too and my point was "How can it be wrong for me to use the term if they do?"
I confess to never understanding the answers I was given to this question (analogous to the rap band "NWA"-- "Negroes with Attitude"
)and puzzled over what to do. After all, the dog was imprinted on thinking his name was "Moro". Upon reflection I renamed him "Morro Bay" (a famous bay here on the California coast) and call him "Morro" for short and he still comes when called.
with this, it is my sincere hope to be outta here,
Crafty Dog