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The Hawaiian art of Lua

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Wolf Nightshade
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Sun Aug 06, 2006 10:02 pm


Lua is a traditional Hawaiian martial art with a focus on joint dislocation and bone-breaking.

The First Outsiders Arrive
Historians place the arrival of the Polynesians in Hawaii at around 190 A.D. From then migration north and south began to populate the islands and establish different ruling clans for each island. In November, 1527 shipwrecked Spaniards are the first reported outsiders to arrive in Hawaii.

These people were probably survivors of three ships under the command of Don Alvaso de Saavedra, bound from New Spain to the Molucca islands. In 1555, the Hawaiian Islands were discovered again by Juan de Gaytan on a voyage from New Spain to the Mollucas. The islands were called in Spanish, "Los Majos".

Kamehameha I is Born
In November of 1736, Kekaulike, King of Maui, died and was succeeded by his son, Kamehameha nui. Kamehameha I is also born at Kokoike, N. Kohala, Hawaii. Kamehameha would later become famous as the only king in Hawaiian history to ever unite all of the islands under one ruler - and all of his warriors knew the Lua.

Lua Begins
The Lua began as a healing art, the "Lomi Lomi" palm-heel striking massage was used to tone and condition tired rowers on long ocean voyages. From there, "Hakoko" or catch-as-catch-can wrestling and "Mokomoko" or boxing were developed.

There were twelve original schools of Lua, each one specializing in attacking a certain part of the body. Techniques were practiced on travelers and unsuspecting persons lured by the music and dance of the hula.

Originally, only the "Ali'i", the guardians of the Kings and high priests were instructed in the Lua. Eventually, the Lua was instructed to everyone. Men and women trained alike in the Lua, each one having techniques especially suited to their body type. The hula ku'i and hula ku'ilima were used to teach the soft and hard techniques respectively.

The Lua is Kapu
When the James Cook and the Christian missionaries arrived in Hawaii in 1778, they banned the Lua shortly thereafter, calling it barbaric. From there, the Lua was taught within the families. Some 50 years later, King David Kalakua reinstated a more civilized version of the Lua for public teaching, but the Lua was still "kapu" or forbidden to outsiders.

Lua Comes to the Mainland
The Lua was first brought to the United States in the 1960s by Olohe "Supreme Grandmaster" Kolomona 'Sol' Kaihewalu when he began to collaborate with other Polynesian martial artists, Tino Tuilosega from American Kenpo and professional boxing, Richard Nunez and Saul Esquival from Kajukenbo, Haumea Lefiti from Five-Animal Kung Fu and John Marolli from Shotokan karate to form the Lima Lama organization.

Not satisfied with the direction of the Lima Lama organization, Kaihewalu decided to teach the Lua as a pure system and opened his school in Orange, California. There are very few Lua Grandmasters left in Hawaii and the United States. Most of the top Lua "kumus" or instructors are either students of Olohe Kaihewalu or Olohe David Nuuhiwa.

The Lua continues to evolve with each passing generation and is still as alive today as it was centuries ago, perhaps even more now is done to preserve the Lua as more and more people learn about this fascinating and ancient martial art.
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Secretly, in the dark of night, the ancient warriors practiced the deadly moves involved in the art of self defense called lua. It was a discipline that required balancing the practitioner's spiritual and physical aspects in order to achieve victory in battle as well as harmony in everyday living.

Two of several definitions for "lua" appropriately portray the discipline. The word "lua" can mean "pit," as "to pit in battle," or it can mean "two," expressing the duality involved in this Hawaiian martial art. A similar duality in Hawaiian belief is embodied in Ku, considered the positive male god, and Hina, the negative female. Hawaiians believed by learning to balance life's negative and positive forces-the physical and spiritual, emotional and intellectual-a lua master, or 'olohe lua, could turn an opponent's energy into a force against the enemy himself.

In more concrete terms, balancing these aspects involved toning the body by performing gymnastics, wrestling and swimming, simultaneously achieving harmony with nature by going with the surf, for example. To gain spiritual balance, lua warriors learned to chant and to hula. They ate a special diet and learned to breathe with measured inhalations and exhalations, much as yoga students do today.

To learn to think quickly and to strategically plan their moves, warrior students practiced konane, a Hawaiian game similar to checkers. They learned balance by kneeling with each foot on opposite sides of a halved gourd-the trick being to avoid breaking the fragile edges of the gourd. To achieve agility, the young warriors practiced weaving their bodies swiftly through tautly strung cords hung a foot apart.

In hand-to-hand combat, King Kamehameha was reportedly the greatest lua warrior of all. Besides being renowned for courage and strength, history carries tales of the king dodging and catching a dozen spears at once and lifting rocks that no others could. He and his warriors knew perhaps 300 moves that enabled them to break bones and dislocate bones at the joints without the use of weapons. They could inflict severe pain on their enemies by pressing on nerve centers. Similar to some martial arts practiced today, high leaps and kicks were also common in lua. Warriors went into battle with their bodies oiled and their hair cropped short, so they could slip easily out of the grasp of other combatants. Battles usually ended with the death of one of the opponents.

By the end of the 18th century, King Kamehameha had acquired firearms, which brought him victory in his battles to unite the islands without resorting to hand-to-hand combat. In 1820, the kapu system was broken, disrupting a societal system that had insured the passing of Hawaiian traditions for generations past. Then, when missionaries appeared on the scene, the teaching of lua was looked upon with disfavor, and by the 1840s it was banned. Only a few Hawaiian families continued to practice themoves and pass the secrets of the discipline down to younger members. The art virtually disappeared.

In 1991, the Native Hawaiian Culture and Arts Program, with financial backing from the National Parks Service and from Bishop Museum recognized that lua was a lost tradition. A group of four men who had learned lua from a part-Hawaiian scholar named Charles Kenn back in 1974, began conducting classes on O'ahu, the Big Island, Maui, Kaua'i and Moloka'i. Named Pa Ku'ialua for the ring in which practice takes place, the group of men-Jerry Walker, Richard Paglinawan, Mitchell Eli and Moses Kalauokalani-have taught perhaps 300 Hawaiian men and women the moves involved in lua.

Lack of funding has curtailed some of the Neighbor Island classes, but Pagalinawan, age 61, continues to teach lua to about 65 part-Hawaiian students, 21 years or older on O'ahu at Kamehameha Schools and at the Queen Lili'uokalani Children's Center.

Although the martial discipline seems no longer to be in danger of disappearing, few people have the opportunity to observe warriors in practice. Sham battles are sometimes staged at makahiki celebrations, as in days of old, or during special ceremonies held every August that commemorate of the unification of the Hawaiian Islands at Pu'ukohola, the heiau near Kawaihae.

As in ancient times, battle begins with chants that give way to insults, threats and gestures to show strength. The warriors begin their challenging haka, or dance, lunging and dodging from side to side. As the battle commences, unlike those of earlier times, it is not a fight ending in death, but an event that promises life-life for an ancient art that is just one more piece of the puzzle being assembled to save the Hawaiian culture.

http://www.coffeetimes.com/lua.htm

http://www.olohe.com/
PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 10:27 am


Is this art by chance also named in any relation to "Samoan bone breaking"?

Aiki-Hooligan


Wolf Nightshade
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 12:01 pm


I do not know but from what I seen on the net it is likely very clost to the same thing. Ok I looked some more and every thing is pointing to he same art so I would sa it is Lua.
PostPosted: Tue Aug 22, 2006 9:25 pm


Sounds very interesting sort of martial art, although a bit dangerous. I mean, think about practicing everyday the ability to rip someones shoulder out of the socket with enough control not to harm them. There had to be quite a few accidents if the students weren't careful...(Cool, Kajukenbo was involved ^^ yay me lol)

lordlemming


Wolf Nightshade
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Wed Aug 23, 2006 1:12 pm


Well Jujutsu and some others are the same if you don't take it easy you could break some ones arm or damage a joint it's all done to the point where you know it's right and you stop.
PostPosted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 12:16 pm



GenkiPseudo


Wolf Nightshade
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 2:19 pm


Cool Know of any videos on the net of this guy's fights I tryed Youtube but didn't find any thing to watch.
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The United Martial Artists Guild

 
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