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“We can
fight standing up. Explained San Kim Sean, Grand Master of Khmer
Bokator. At more than sixty years old, he looked as if he was in his
forties, but moved like a man much younger. He threws a kick at me,
similar to the round house, used in Khmer Boxing. The kick missed,
and his kicking leg landed to the side of my body. With the ease of
forty years of martial arts practice, he shifted all of his weight
forward, onto his kicking leg. Not more than a few inches to my
side, he hooked his rear foot around, and kicked me square on the
jaw. “The dragon whips his tail. He said, sounding like a Bruce Lee
movie. Next, he droped to his knees, and executed an elbow strike in
an upward motion, to my solar plexus. “We can fight on our knees. He
said. He droped to the ground and trapped the kick I had thrown at
his face. “We can fight from sitting. Next, he prostrated his body,
and dragged my ankle, causing me to topple to the ground. We can
even fight laying down. He laughed. Khmer Bokator is a very complete
martial art, which uses strikes, drags, trapping, and locking for
both offense and defense. In Khmer Bokator, the entire body is used
as a weapon. Many martial arts use a head but, but some of the
techniques which San Kim Sean showed me used the jaw and even the
shoulder muscle as weapons. “The lion has fangs. He explained. “We
also use fangs in our fighting. San Kim Sean made a first, then
extended his pointer finger, bending it at the second joint. With
pinpoint accuracy, he used this “fang to stab me in the pressure
point behind the clavicle. Needless to say, it was quite painful.
“If we train long enough, we can make the finger go through the
flesh. He said with a likable, but sadistic grin. “And then we can
rip out that bone. He showed me how the finger would extended, wrap
around the collarbone, and then how hi hole body would be used to
jerk it out. “Do you believe that your art I better than Khmer
Boxing? I asked. “Of course. Answered San Kim Sean, without
hesitation. “Do you mean that one of your students could get in the
ring with the champion, Phou Thoung right now and win? I asked,
skeptically. “My students would never b allowed to fight in the
ring. He explained. “We are trained to kill. San Kim Sean asked one
of his young students to attack him in a boxing stance. When the
student threw a punch, San Kim Sean countered with an elbow strike
to the student’s throat. “KILL! shouted San Kim Sean. The student
threw a second punch, this time, San Kim Sean stabbed the student in
the throat with his fingers. “KILL! he yelled again. The student
kicked, and San Kim Sean hit the student’s thigh with his knee,
knocking the student to the ground. The student leapt to his feet,
and clinched with the teacher, hitting him with knee strikes. San
Kim Sean crisscrossed his forearms over the students throat, and,
like a pair of scissors, he crushed the student’s windpipe with his
wrist bones. “Kill! He yelled again. Next, he rotated the wrist
bones away from the student’s throat, but careful to keep the
student’s neck locked in hi vice-like forearms. “This one not kill.
He explained. Pulling the student in close, he smashed his shoulder
up into the student’s jaw. It was obvious that if he had done it
full force, the student would have been knocked unconscious.
Finally, he drove the heel of his foot into the inside of the
student’s thigh, driving him to the canvass again. “You see? He
asked me. “You would never be allowed to o any of that in a boxing
ring. But it is very effective. The student returned to his
practice. He would leap I the air, and kicking the heavy bag with
both feet. Each time he landed, he would be lying in the ground, in
a controlled stance, ready to fight. “That boy has only been with me
one year. Said San Kim Sean, with pride. “But he already knows three
hundred techniques. And now, he can help me teach the other
students. San Kim Sean explained to me why it was so important to
him to pass on the art. Bokator is the ancient Khmer martial art,
the predecessor of Brodal Serey (Khmer Free Boxing). Today, the
name, Brodal Serey has been lost to the world, having been replaced
by the word Muay Thai. “The Thais stole our art. Say many Khmers,
who believe that the bas-reliefs carved on the walls of Angkor Wat
temple prove that the origin of Khmer Boxing predates Muay
Thai.While the name may have been stolen, the art of Khmer Boxing is
very much alive, and thriving as a professional sport, enjoyed all
around the world. This, unfortunately is not the case for the much
older art of Bokator Khmer. This art is nearly unknown, even in
Cambodia. “Outside of Cambodia, the only thing people know is Angkor
Wat. Said San Kim Sean “They don’t know about our martial art.
Bokator Khmer uses colored Krama (traditional Khmer scarves) instead
of belts. The art contains ten animal styles. The five white krama
animal forms include: king monkey, lion, elephant, apsara
(traditional Hindu sacred nymph), and crocodile. The green krama
forms include: duck, crab, horse, bird, and dragon. San Kim Sean
began training in Bokator Khmer when he was just thirteen years old.
According to him, even at that time the art was not very common.
“Only a few old men knew the art. It was still practiced in some of
the provinces, but was unknown in the capital. His uncle, a friend
of his father, taught him to fight with his hands. Another “uncle
taught him to use the long staff. And yet another, taught him to use
the two traditional Khmer long swords, called dao. San Kim Sean was
always interested in martial arts, so he practiced Khmer boxing for
three years. Later, he earned belts in Judo, Karate, and became only
one of three Khmers to earn a black belt in Hokkaido. “I was third
dan. He told me. Unfortunately for him, 1975, the year he became an
instructor of Hop Kido, was also the year that Phnom Penh fell to
the Khmer Rouge, under the leadership of Pol Pot. The city was
ordered to evacuate, and the entire country was collectivized,
forced to do backbreaking physical labor, with only a few hours of
sleep per day, and very little food. “I don’t have to tell you the
Pol Pot time was bad. Said San Kim Sean. “Everyone knows. He shook
his head sadly. “My group began with 10,000-13,000 people. Two years
later, only five hundred were still alive. They were either murdered
or died of hunger. Two of San Kim Sean’s children died at the hands
of the Khmer Rouge. Although everyone suffered, and anyone,
including Khmer Rouge soldiers and cadre were potential victims of
execution, certain groups were singled out for extreme persecution
and extermination. Among them were the Cham, Cambodian Muslims,
Chinese, Vietnamese, educated people, people with classes, anyone
with knowledge of English or French, the literate, artisans, and
skilled workers. Pol Pot had declared a Year Zero, as a symbol of
his desire to break with the past. To this end, he hunted down and
killed masters of traditional Khmer arts including singing, dancing,
and martial arts. “All of my students and training bothers died. He
told me. “And, I was the only Hopkido instructor who suvived. In
1979, The Khmer Rouge regime fell to an invasion by the Vietcong.
San Kim Sean came back to Phnom Penh, and began teaching Hop Kido.
The Vietnamese regime, which, arguably, was only slightly better
than the Khmer Rouge, prohibited the Cambodians from practicing
martial arts. “I was teaching in secret. But some Khmer person who
was jealous of me, turned me into the Vietnamese authorities. The
Vietnamese said that San Kim Sean was trying to build an army or had
some other subversive goal in mind. He would have been jailed, but
he and his wife escaped to a refuge camp in Thailand. They spent one
year in Nokor Siclium camp, where his wife gave birth to a daughter,
named Bopa. Eventually, in 1980, their paperwork came through, and
the family was allowed to relocate to the USA, settling first in
Houston, Texas, where San Kim Sean found a good job at the airport.
He also taught Hop Kido to the Khmer children at the YMCA. Life was
good for San Kim Sean and his family, but he missed his culture. On
a vacation to the Khmer community in Long Beach, California, he was
amazed at the Khmerness of the place. “The shops had Khmer writing
on them. I saw women wearing sarongs. They had Khmer restaurants..
Laughed San Kim Sean. “I said, hey, this is my country. And so, he
quit his job, and moved to Long Beach. Eventually, he found work
dubbing Khmer voice-overs on Chinese action movies. And, he
continued teaching Hop Kido. “This is all very interesting. I said,
and I meant it. Here was a man who had overcome great odds, for both
the love of martial art and the love of his people. “But, your story
is all the way up to 1990 and you don’t seem to be teaching Bokator
to anyone. “That will come later. San Kim Sean laughed. “I have to
tell you the whole story first. To be a good martial arts student,
you have to have patience. “I took my Hop Kido students all over for
competitions. And, I never once heard the words Bokator Khmer. In
fact, no one knew anything about any Khmer martial arts at all. By
this time, San Kim Sean was a tenth degree black belt in Hop Kido.
“I began to wonder. He told me. “Why am I out doing all of this
advertising for a Korean art? He explained to me that Bokator Khmer
is an ancient art, predating even the 1000 year-old carvings at
Angkor Wat. King Jayavaraman VII, the creator of Angkor Wat is
depicted in a stance, with the Khmer short sword, the dao. “Do you
know why he was such a good king and why he kept Cambodia safe? It
was because he was a martial artist. He knew Bokator Khmer. “At that
time, there were no rockets, no guns, only fighting swords and hands
and feet. And the Khmers could win because our soldiers were trained
in Bokator. San Kim Sean explained why the martial art, which was
once so proud and strong, had already faded into near extinction
before the Pol Pot regime. “The masters never taught all of their
art to a student. They always held back about ten percent, in case a
student ever attacked them. If each progressive generation learned
ten percent less than the previous generation, it is no wonder that
the Khmer martial arts were on a downward slide. “Khmer young people
don’t even know their own history. They don’t know about our
greatness in the past, the ancient arts which were taught by the
grandfathers grandfather, which is running in our blood. San Kim
Sean told me that he began having nightmares about Cambodia. “It was
God telling me I needed to come home and help the Khmer
people.During the early 1990’s he returned to the stricken land to
help rebuild the Khmer Hop Kido Association. “We still aren’t
talking about Bokator. I reminded him. “And you still have to wait.
He told me, in his friendly tone. Finally, in 1995, he moved back to
Phnom Penh, became the leader of the Hop Kido Association, and began
teaching Hop Kido. “But, Bokator I protested. He waved his hand
dismissively, and continued with the story. “Finally, in 2001, I
left the Hop Kido school, an began teaching Bokator. San Kim Sean is
still a respected officer of the Hop Kido association. But, his true
love is Bokator. And now he dedicates all of his time to this
pursuit. He began combing the countryside, looking for Bokator
Masters who had survived the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese Regime.
“They were old. Many of them between sixty and ninety years of age.
The number of masters remaining was very small. And of that number,
none were teaching. After being repressed under both the Khmer Rouge
and the Vietnamese regime, the men were afraid to start teaching. “I
tried to tell them it was OK, we already had permission from the
government, but they wouldn’t listen.ESaid San Kim Sean. The old
men wanted to stay in the province. But San Kim Sean insisted. “You
have a great gift which was given to you by our ancestors. Do you
want to steal it from our children? When you die, the art will die
with. “Did it work? I asked. “Some of them broke down in tears.
Laughed San Kim Sean, who seemed like he could be persuasive when he
needed to. “In April of 2004 we held the first Bokator conference in
Phnom Penh. Now, there are schools in eight provinces. And, we are
preparing for a national championships. Most martial artists in the
west can’t be bothered to practice. Here was a man who had risked
his life to preserve the arts. And more recently, had given up a
well paying job I America in order to come back to Cambodia and help
recover a lost art. “I really respect what you have done here. I
told San Kim Sean. But the interview was finished, and now h wanted
to kick me in the head some more. The Bokator association needs
financial support, as well as equipment. San Kim Sean has prepared
what is probably the first ever Bokator textbook, written by a
Khmer, in Cambodia. “We want to produce ten thousand books, and give
them to school children. He told me sadly. “But we have no money.
Contact San Kim Sean at: chamroeunvath@hotmail.com
Contact the author at: antonio_graceffo@hotmail.com
You can find all of Antonio’s books at
www.amazon.com
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