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Disclaimer
This website represents the understanding of Tiel Jackson and Todd Ellner,
a pair of students of Pencak Silat Serak of the Djut, John de Vries,
Paul
de Thouars, Stevan Plinck lineage. We are beginners, albeit ones with
solid instruction under a very skilled teacher. The material here reflects
this; there will be mistakes, innacuracies, and omissions. The correct
material is thanks to our teachers. The mistakes are entirely our own.
This is not a definintive treatise on the system. It is a work in progress
which
will
evolve with our knowledge, skill, and understanding.
There are also things which Guru Plinck has requested that we not include
such as the offensive use of weapons and advanced attacking. These are
reserved for long term students of proven character.
The terminology and analyses you see here come strictly from the Paul
de Thouars and Stevan Plinck cabang (lit. branch). Some are found
in other martial arts. But it's essentially a product of the minds and
hard work of these two remarkable men. It should not be necessary to say
this, but we feel compelled to. Many of their insights have been appropriated
by others in the Silat community.
This is a good thing of itself; that is how progress occurs. But not
when it is done without giving credit. As a case in point Guru Plinck
came
up with the analytical tool of describing techniques in terms of "Base,
Angle and Leverage". After he had presented it as a teaching tool
and his student Steve Perry had included it in the Tom Clancy Netforce
books other Pencak Silat teachers started
using it without acknowledging the source. And they got it wrong, we
have to
note.
Evolution
Serak comes from the Western part of the island of Java. It is a cultural
art of the Western Javanese closely related to styles such as Cikalong,
Sabandar and
Cimande. The style was brought to the West by Dutch-Indonesian refugees
after Indonesian independence. It owes much to these peoples.
But everything changes over time. Lifestyle, physiognomy, local conditions,
and exposure to people with different fighting and weapon preferences all
leave their mark. In the same way that the indigenous fighting arts of Indonesia
were affected by Indians, Arabs, Chinese, and Dutch they have altered to
fit circumstances in the Netherlands and the United States. We recognize
this. So while we try to stay true to what is important and precious in
the art it will continue to be adapted to the needs of its practitioners.
Magic, Mystery, and the Need for a Well-Tuned BS Detector
Indonesian culture is marvelously syncretic. The high cultures of India,
Arabia and Europe have been fit into the national character. Spiritual
life
is no exception. Animist, Buddhist, Christian, and Hindu influences can
all be found in the world's most populous Muslim country and in its indigenous
practices including martial arts.
Some of these are explicitly religious. Or they can be the result of a
world-view which we in the West would consider "magical" but
which makes sense to someone who grew up with it. Quite a bit comes from
the training methods of mystical religious traditions such as Sufism. Others
are exercises designed to develop mental and emotional
attributes.
Some are
pure charlatanry
dressed up in mystic clothing. Some are the perception of less-skilled
opponents
who couldn't believe that they lost to an opponent with greater skill and
understanding. Some may be the results of phenomena which can not be explained
by current scientific understanding - although we must hasten to say that
we have never seen such things personally. And some flow from the nearly
universal desire to have a good joke at the expense
of
a gullible
foreigner.
In any case they can not be separated from the society from which they
arose. An outsider who takes up practices from a culture of which
he or
she is not a member is always in a difficult position. Whole sets of associations
that a native would learn from childhood are simply not there. The foreigner's
emotional and spiritual structure will react differently.
As Americans we think and act like Americans. We haven't grown up in a society
where the call of the muezzin and the reading of the Ramayana are parts
of everyday life. So while we respect the culture that the art came from
we recognize that we are not and never will be part of it and must adapt
the mental and spiritual aspects to our internal structures. And we can
still smile mysteriously and say nothing when we throw someone who says
"That couldn't have worked. It had to be magic!"
Even in Indonesia and Malaysia these practices are not universal. Devout
Christians and Muslims will shun activities which a Hindu or Animist would
engage in and vice versa. |