Eddie Chong
Eddie Chong | |
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Style | Wing Chun, Bak Mei |
Teacher(s) | Kenneth Chung, Pan Nam, Li Yang Jian |
Rank | Grandmaster |
Website | http://www.chongskungfu.com |
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Eddie Chong is an internationally recognized kung fu martial artist and instructor. Chong operates from his Sacramento, California-based school. He has nine affiliated schools and a school in Mexico. Chong has been viewed by many prominent martial artists worldwide as a preeminent practitioner and instructor of Wing Chun Kung Fu.
Chong has been involved with Wing Chun[1] for nearly 50 years. He regularly conducts seminars in and outside the United States. Chong was born and raised in Singapore. He lived in Japan for two years where he became fluent in the Japanese language. He then moved to the United States in 1964 at the age of 24. He trained several years in Tae Kwon Do and was about to test for the black belt, but discovered his passion when he discovered the Wing Chun system. While practicing and teaching Wing Chun, Chong worked as a lithographer for 20 years. He retired from lithography in 1989 to completely dedicate his life and efforts to teaching and promoting Wing Chun.
Earlier career[edit]
Chong began Wing Chun training under the tutelage of Kenneth Chung in 1968. Kenneth Chung is a direct disciple of Leung Sheung. Leung Sheung was Ip Man’s first student. It was under the direct tutelage of Kenneth Chung that Eddie Chong mastered the Yip Man style of Wing Chun. Later on, while living in the West, Chong observed that the fighting art taught at many Wing Chun schools varied, sometimes dramatically. Although a highly effective martial art, he believed that the system had been modified, and therefore resolved to trace back and find as original a form of Wing Chun as possible. Obviously, the closer he could get to the system's founder, the more pure the art would become. Eddie Chong realized the possibility existed that a practitioner might still be living who had been trained by one of the early masters. With China now open to travel, Sifu Chong decided to seek him out.
Chong and Pan Nam[edit]
On a trip to his Singapore school, Chong took an excursion to Foshan, the traditional home of Wing Chun. While in Foshan, his inquires regarding local Wing Chun instructors brought information about 81-year-old Master Pan Nam, the last known disciple on Painted Face Kam's branch of the family tree. Chong learned that Pan Nam had ceased teaching in 1990 and had, in fact, "closed the door" to his school. Unknown to Chong, Pan had delayed officially retiring, which involved certain formal rituals because he had a premonition that someone, his final student, was coming.
In Foshan, Chong met Pan Nam and was accepted by Pan Nam as one of his closed door students and became his last disciple. Mr. Chong went through the traditional Chinese ceremony of kneeling and giving a cup of tea to the old Master, asking to be accepted as his disciple. This was followed by a special meal. After-wards, Pan took out his family tree and entered Eddie Chong's name as his closed-door student, the last he would ever accept.
Having fulfilled his desire to train a successor, Pan Nam officially hung out the scrolls that proclaimed his retirement when Eddie Chong left Foshan in late Spring of 1992. Chong returned to visit Pan Nam every year until Pan Nam's death in 1996.
Aside from Pan Nam teaching Eddie Chong the Foshan branch of Wing Chun (See www.chongskungfu.com), Pan Nam also taught him Five Petal Plum Blossom Qigong, which Master Pan Nam considered the lost treasure of Shaolin training. Pan Nam was a direct descendant of Shaolin Kung Fu otherwise known as Shàolínquán. Pan Nam believed that the style of Wing Chun he trained in was the original Shaolin Wing Chun system.
Chong and Bak Mei[edit]
While training in Foshan with Pan Nam, Chong also met an acquaintance of Pan Nam's, a Bak Mei (White Eyebrow) kung fu master. The Bak Mei master sought Pan Nam's expertise in Five Petal Qigong as a method of healing his internal organs damaged as a result of extremely vicious and deadly altercations with other masters. The name of this Bak Mei master is Li Yang Jian, the current head of the Foshan branch of Bak Mei. Li sought the advice of a local physician due to his suffering from chronic hematuria (blood in one's urine). The physician informed the Bak Mei master that he did not have long to live.
Li Yang Jian heard of Pan Nam and the healing ability of Pan Nam's Five Petal Qigong. In almost fifty years of teaching Shaolin Wing Chun, Pan Nam taught fewer than a dozen students Qigong. Li appealed to Pan Nam to save his life. Pan Nam told him that he must abstain from all alcoholic drinks, sexual intercourse and smoking during his Qigong training. Pan Nam required that Li must meet him every morning just before dawn for one hundred days straight. Li was cured after sixty days of Qigong training and vowed to follow Pan Nam wherever he went to protect him with his life.
When Eddie Chong saw Li's Bak Mei, he felt Li's style of Bak Mei complemented his Wing Chun and could take his Wing Chun to new heights of technicality and aggressiveness. Chong asked Master Li if he would teach him Bak Mei. Li decided to take Chong under his tutelage due to Pan Nam accepting Eddie Chong as his disciple and trained him intensely from 1990-1996.
Bak Mei is characterized by its emphasis on powerful close range hand strikes. Within Bak Mei can be found the four principles of Fou (Float), Chum (Sink), Tun (Swallow), and Tou (Spit) common in the Southern Chinese martial arts. Unique to Bak Mei is its classification of the following six powers: biu (thrusting), chum (sinking), tan (springing), fa (neutralizing), tung, and chuk. Bak Mei emphasizes the movements of the Tiger, but Bak Mei also uses the other four animal styles associated with the Henan Shaolin Temple as well such as the Tiger, the Crane, the Leopard, the Snake and the Dragon. Together they are known as the Five Animals. One other animal style used in Bak Mei is called the Phoenix.
Currently[edit]
Today, Chong teaches the Leung Sheung style of Wing Chun, the Pan Nam style of Wing Chun and Foshan Bak Mei as well. Only Chong's closed door students are taught Bak Mei and only by his invitation. There are three treasure forms in Foshan Bak Mei, only the most dedicated of his closed door students may learn those forms and their applications.
Chong is fulfilling his lifelong desire to master all aspects of Chinese martial arts, including the health benefits of Five Petal Qigong and meditation. Five Petal Qigong channels one's life energy to enhance the body’s ability for self-healing, regeneration and internal power.
Chong has been the subject of feature articles in several martial arts magazines including BLACKBELT MAGAZINE (May 1982 issue) and featured in INSIDE KUNG FU magazine on many occasions throughout the 1980s to our present time in the twentyfirst century. Sifu Chong has also been featured in newspapers in the cities where his schools are located.
References[edit]
- ↑ WingChunKuen.Com Archived 2006-11-12 at the Wayback Machine
www.wingchunkuen.com - Enter the Wing Chun Time Machine by Michael Nedderman
External links[edit]
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