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San Soo
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| Also known as | San Soo, Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung |
|---|---|
| Focus | Hybrid martial arts |
| Country of origin | China (Republican Era), United States |
| Creator | Jimmy H. Woo[1] |
| Famous practitioners | Benjamin Brandt, Kathy Long, Gerald Okamura,[2] Ralph Johnson,[3] Daniele Bolelli |
| Ancestor arts | Hung Gar, Li Gar, Fut Gar |
| Part of a series on |
| Chinese martial arts (Wushu) |
|---|
Kung Fu San Soo (功夫散手) is a Chinese-American martial art. It is based on techniques from all over China, both Northern and Southern Chinese martial arts systems.[1]
Etymology
[edit]The specific or proper name of this art is Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung (蔡李何佛雄) and/or 5 Family Fist (五家拳). The name "Kung Fu San Soo" itself was chosen by the style’s creator, Jimmy H. Woo, to simplify the pronunciation and meaning for American students, rather than using the complete names of the 5 families.
San Soo (散手) can mean both "unbounded hand" or "free hand".[1] It bears a similar name with Chinese martial art Sanda (also called Sanshou), which is a different style from San Soo.[4]
History
[edit]Kung Fu San Soo has heritage to the martial arts devised by the monks of the Kwan Yin Temple. These techniques were developed by the monks to defend themselves from the bandits while on pilgrimage.[1] The style began truly forming itself from the 5 Family Fist (五家拳), commonly practiced in the Taishan region of the Guangdong province.[5]
In China, many centuries ago, there were three original families that contributed information from their systems in order to create this art. They built a monastery and developed a combined defense system. These families are Tsoi, Li, and Ho. Fut was the philosophical or religious base and originally made reference to Buddha. The Hung family was added later in order to increase power, physical conditioning and dynamics.[6]
Style founder Jimmy Woo had learned the techniques, that he would use to create San Soo, from his great-uncle, Chin Sue-Hung. Jimmy Woo, who learnt the style and illegally emigrated to United States in 1937, would establish his first San Soo school in 1962, at Chinatown, Los Angeles, California.[1][7][8]
Foundation and techniques
[edit]Kung Fu San Soo originated for use in military combat and uses techniques designed to swiftly disable an attacker. Due to the fact, San Soo is a practical martial art for self-defense and the techniques are intended for real fight scenarios, there are no competitions or tournaments for San Soo Kung Fu. While San Soo was not created or taught as a tournament sport, practitioners commonly incorporate forms of limited sparring.[9]
Kung Fu San Soo has no patterns (kata, taolu etc.), making it adaptable style. Its been founded on the knowledge of physics, with there being an emphasis on leverage, power and speed. When fighting, the practitioner is to assume the mentality that they must either incapacitate the opponent within three strikes or to end the fight in less than 10 seconds.[1]
Kung Fu San Soo does not attempt to emulate the motions of animals with elaborate forms.[10] His words were, "We fight like men, not animals."
The basic premise of San Soo is there are no rules in a fight, so the style is techniques oriented[11] to remove a threat as quickly as possible through seizing the initiative and keeping the opponent off balance. Like many martial arts, San Soo can be used by smaller or weaker persons against larger or stronger assailants by utilizing technique and knowledge of reaction to make up for a lack of strength.[12]
Techniques in San Soo are made up of Chin Na leverages, throwing, choking, joint-locking, strangling, strikes, and quick takedowns.[13] Targets include the eyes, nose, throat, base of the skull, neck, liver, spleen, kidneys, testicles, and knees, and for this reason, most San Soo practitioners do not engage in full contact competition/sport fighting. Techniques are commonly practiced in unrehearsed 'freestyle workout' sessions with carefully controlled contact. San Soo practitioners claim this method of training builds an automatic and flexible response in much the same way we learn language a few words at a time until we have full and versatile vocabularies. Training methods, historic interpretations, and modifications exist from school to school among the modern descendants of San Soo.
San Soo also incorporates training with the use of many traditional Chinese weapons. These include the staff (5', 7' and 9'), broadsword, hooking or ripping swords, baat cham do (butterfly swords), three-section staff, taijijian (tai chi sword), knife, spear, kwon do, chas and chain. The baton, although not a traditional Chinese weapon, was a weapon that Jimmy Woo specialized in and incorporated into the art.
Notable practitioners
[edit]Jimmy H. Woo (founder of American Kung Fu San Soo)
[edit]Kung Fu San Soo was brought to United States by Chin Siu Dek.[14][15][a] Kung Fu San Soo tradition holds that Chin Siu Dek lived and grew up just across the river from this school in the village of Sanba. Chin learned Five Family Style / Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung primarily from his Great-Uncle, Chan Siu Hung[16] at the Hung Sing Goon school in Taishan, Guangdong Province, China. The Hung Sing Goon school would end up being destroyed by communist partisans during the Cultural Revolution.
Chin would enter United States under the Chinese Exclusion Act, and leaving China on the eve of the Japanese Occupation, Chin Siu Dek took the name, "Jimmy Haw Woo" as a lifetime pseudonym.
According to sources, he was born around 1910-14.[17] Jimmy H. Woo died in Southern California on February 14, 1991.[18]
Kathy Long
[edit]Kathy Long is 5-time World Champion Kickboxer and holds an 8th degree black belt/sash in Kung Fu San Soo.
Gerald Okamura
[edit]Gerald Okamura is a Hollywood Actor and Stuntman[19]
Ralph Johnson
[edit]Ralph Johnson is the drummer for Earth, Wind & Fire[20]
Daniele Bolelli
[edit]Daniele Bolelli is author of multiple books and creator of the History on Fire podcast. He holds an 8th Degree Black Belt in Kung Fu San Soo
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Chan Siu Duk, or Chen Shou Jue (陳壽爵, Chen2 Shou4 Jue2), depending on the dialect.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Crudelli, Chris (2008). The Way of the Warrior. Dorling Kindersley Limited. p. 120. ISBN 9781405337502.
- ^ "Gerald Okamura". IMDb. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
- ^ "Ralph JohnsonSansoo". earthwindandfire. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
- ^ "Shaolin Tiger Kung-Fu - About San Soo". Archived from the original on 2011-05-27. Retrieved 2012-01-06.
- ^ F, Michael (2011). "What is San Soo". Kung Fu San Soo Diamond Bar. Retrieved 30 Oct 2023.
- ^ "Real Kung Fu San Soo - About the Art". realkungfusansoo.com. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
- ^ Riess, Steven A. (2015) [2011]. Sports in America from Colonial Times to the Twenty-First Century: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781317459460.
A second connection with the Cai Li Fo system was Jimmy H. Woo's Kung Fu San Soo Karate, which he opened in 1959. Woo (born Siu-De k Chin) immigrated to the United States illegally from Taishan, China, where he had studied under his great uncle, Sue-Hung Chin (also spelled Shui-Hung Chan).
- ^ Vigil, William (April 1, 1995). "Attack Strategies of San Soo Kung Fu". Black Belt Magazine. Active Interest Media, Inc. p. 26. Retrieved November 25, 2024.
- ^ Black Belt Magazine, Jan 2004, The Reality of Kung Fu San Soo, Mark Cheng, p. 20-22
- ^ Hacker Cracker: A Journey from the Mean Streets of Brooklyn to the Frontiers of Cyberspace, Ejovi Nuwere/David Chanoff, p. 172
- ^ Nei Jia Quan: Internal Martial Arts, Jess O'Brien, p. 4
- ^ Black Belt, Mar 1990, p.36, The Art of Action and Reaction, Dennis Kirby
- ^ Black Belt, Sep 1995, p.39, Wing Chun vs San Soo Kung Fu, John Bishop
- ^ "Kung Fu San Soo: Home". dapgakungfu.com. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
- ^ Emerson, Award Winning Flash Designer, Web Designer, Internet Producer, Terrance Emerson, Tnt. "Kung Fu San Soo Sonora - Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung". sonorasansoo.com. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "History of Chan Siu Hung". Archived from the original on 2 November 2004.
- ^ Hawk, Ehjazz. "THE HISTORY OF KUNG-FU SAN SOO..." Kung fu San Soo Master. Retrieved 30 Oct 2023.
- ^ "San Soo AFC - Kung Fu San Soo History from Orange and Los Angeles County's Realistic Fighting and Self Defense School. Kung Fu San Soo Video, San Soo DVD's, San Soo Books and Self Defense Training Products". sansooafc.com. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
- ^ "Gerald Okamura". IMDb. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
- ^ "Ralph JohnsonSansoo". earthwindandfire. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
External links
[edit]San Soo
View on GrokipediaEtymology and Terminology
Linguistic Origins
"San Soo" represents a Western romanization of Cantonese terms used by Jimmy H. Woo (1915–1991), the primary transmitter of the art to the United States, to describe a combat-oriented system derived from southern Chinese fighting methods. The term approximates the Cantonese pronunciation of characters connoting "active" or "working hands" in the context of unrestrained self-defense against an opponent, emphasizing practical, direct application over ceremonial forms.[1] This etymology underscores the art's focus on fluid, adaptive techniques, literally interpretable as a "man learned and articulate in employing his body in combat."[1] [7] Linguistically, "San" derives from elements akin to "scatter" or "free" (as in 散, sǎn in Mandarin, san in Cantonese), paired with "Soo" or "Sau" evoking "hand" (手, shǒu/shau), forming a descriptive phrase for "free hand fighting" or "scattering hands techniques."[8] This aligns with broader Chinese martial nomenclature, where similar terms like Sǎnshǒu (散手) denote versatile striking and grappling, though San Soo's usage predates modern wushu standardization and stems from family-specific transmissions.[9] The nomenclature supplants the art's original Chinese designation, Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung (蔡李何佛雄), which amalgamates surnames of five ancestral lineages—Tsoi (Choi), Li, Ho, Fut (Buddha palm influences), and Hung—representing a synthesis of punch-kick, claw-grab, and internal power elements without a singular stylistic label in classical texts.[10] Woo's adoption of "San Soo" in the 1960s facilitated accessibility for English-speaking students, diverging from rigid Mandarin pinyin while preserving phonetic essence from Guangdong dialect sources.[11] Sources within the lineage, primarily school histories, consistently attribute this adaptation to Woo, though independent verification of archaic character mappings remains limited due to oral transmission traditions in southern Chinese arts.[1]Modern Usage and Variations
In the United States, where Kung Fu San Soo has primarily taken root since its introduction by Jimmy H. Woo, modern practice centers on self-defense applications in standalone academies and dojos, often in California regions like Bellflower and South Orange County. Instruction emphasizes explosive, close-range techniques utilizing full body weight, palm strikes, elbows, and joint manipulations without predetermined forms or sport-oriented rules, adapting the system for unpredictable street confrontations rather than competitive arenas.[12][13][14] Post-1999 dissemination following Woo's passing has occurred through his certified students, forming loose networks via associations such as the National Teachers Association of Kung Fu San Soo, which hosts annual gatherings for instructors, and the International Kung Fu San Soo Association, which certifies masters and promotes standardized core principles amid decentralized teaching.[15][16] These groups maintain fidelity to the original five-family synthesis of Northern and Southern Chinese methods, though variations arise in emphasis, with some lineages prioritizing weaponless hand-to-hand over integrated arms training.[17] Contemporary adaptations include multimedia resources like instructional DVD series documenting hundreds of hours of technique breakdowns for remote learners, alongside seminars and online communities for technique sharing, enabling broader access beyond in-person dojos.[17] While the core methodology resists hybridization to preserve its combative realism, select practitioners incorporate complementary elements from arts like Aikido for enhanced grappling fluidity or modern combatives for scenario-based drills, reflecting pragmatic evolution without diluting foundational aggression.[18][19] This flexibility underscores San Soo's utility in personal protection training, where efficacy is gauged by instinctive response in high-stress encounters rather than performative demonstration.[10]Historical Origins
Ancient Chinese Roots and Claims
Proponents of Kung Fu San Soo maintain that the art's foundational techniques originated in ancient Chinese feudal society approximately 2,500 years ago, emerging from the necessities of self-preservation during periods of endemic violence, including wars among warring states and defenses against bandits.[20] These claims position San Soo as a precursor to organized martial systems, with early practitioners developing pragmatic, close-quarters combat methods focused on rapid incapacitation rather than stylized forms or spiritual esotericism.[2] Tradition holds that the system was refined in the Kwan Yin Monastery—named after the bodhisattva of compassion—in southern China's Guangdong province, where resident monks allegedly synthesized defensive tactics from diverse influences, including animal mimicry (e.g., tiger claw strikes and crane beak grips), to protect their communities without reliance on weapons initially prohibited by imperial edicts.[21] The Chin family lineage is central to these assertions, with narratives describing how the monastery's knowledge was entrusted to select villagers for perpetuation after temple suppressions, evolving into a hereditary guardian art passed down through 26–35 generations in the family's ancestral village near Hoiping (modern Heshan) in the Pearl River Delta.[22] Key figures include Chin Leong, credited with codifying 108 core techniques around the 1700s, and later patriarchs like Chin Siu Hung (born circa 1862), who trained Chin Siu Dek (Jimmy Woo's sifu) amid late Qing upheavals, including the Taiping Rebellion (1850–1864) and Boxer Uprising (1899–1901).[20] This oral transmission emphasized adaptability and lethality for real-world application, purportedly shielding the village from external threats without formal documentation to evade detection by dynastic authorities. However, these ancient roots lack substantiation from primary historical records, archaeological findings, or contemporary texts; Chinese martial arts scholarship reveals that southern family styles, including those from Guangdong's Sze Yup region, typically coalesced in the 17th–19th centuries as syncretic responses to local militia needs, integrating elements of wrestling (shuai jiao), pole fighting, and folk boxing rather than descending directly from pre-Han (pre-206 BCE) monastic traditions.[23] Assertions of Kwan Yin Temple origins or extreme antiquity mirror widespread legitimizing myths in southern kung fu genealogies—such as ties to anti-Manchu rebels or displaced Shaolin monks—but empirical evidence points to post-Ming (after 1644) innovations, with no verified continuity predating the Qing era's social disruptions.[24] While the Chin family's 19th-century practices align with documented village defense roles, extrapolations to 2,500-year-old precedents appear unsubstantiated, reflecting a common pattern where lineages amplify heritage for cultural prestige amid 20th-century commercialization.[25]Chin Family Lineage
The traditional lineage of Kung Fu San Soo within the Chin family originates from a claimed monastic transmission in northern China during the mid-1700s, when the monk Leong Kwei (also spelled Leung Kwei or Leong Kick), a descendant of Shaolin fighting monks, fled a government raid on the Kwan-Yin Monastery and relocated southward to the village of Mung Gai in the Hoi Wun district of Sun Wui province (modern-day Guangdong).[26][2] There, Leong Kwei established a secular school, imparting the art—described as a practical fighting system emphasizing close-quarters combat—to his student Chin Leong, marking the first non-monastic holder in the family line.[20][3] This transmission was maintained secretly within the family due to provincial bans on martial arts training, with practitioners often disguising lessons as agricultural or family activities to evade detection.[2] The art passed from Chin Leong to his son, Chin Leong Sing, who refined it amid ongoing family feuds and village conflicts in rural Guangdong.[20] Chin Leong Sing then transmitted it to Chin Siu Don, who adapted elements for street-fighting practicality while serving as a village enforcer.[3] Chin Siu Don's brother, Chin Siu Hung (nicknamed "Chin Neow Gee" or "Crazy Devil" for his ferocious reputation in combat), became a primary custodian, teaching at the Hung Sing Goon school in Taishan and incorporating influences from related southern styles such as Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung, a synthesis attributed to five families (Tsoi for striking, Li for leverage, Ho for balance, Fut for internal power, and Hung for grappling).[20][2] Chin Siu Hung, born around the late 19th century, was reportedly an adopted disciple in the Choy Lee Fut tradition under Chan Heung's lineage, blending those techniques into the family's system during a period of stylistic evolution in the early 20th century.[27] Chin Siu Hung directly instructed his great-nephew, Chin Siu Dek (born July 6, 1914, in Hoi San, Guangdong), beginning formal training at age 9 or 10, alongside supplemental lessons from other uncles and family elders.[20][28] Chin Siu Dek, who adopted the name Jimmy H. Woo upon immigrating to the United States in 1933 at age 19, became the pivotal figure in preserving and disseminating the lineage outside China, teaching exclusively within a closed network until the 1960s.[2] This family-centric transmission, spanning roughly 200 years, emphasized empirical combat efficacy over ritualistic forms, with each generation prioritizing techniques proven in real altercations rather than unverified historical claims.[20] While the lineage's details derive primarily from oral accounts documented by Woo and his students, cross-references in practitioner records show consistency, though independent verification beyond family narratives remains limited due to the art's secretive rural origins and lack of contemporaneous Chinese records.[29]| Generation | Key Figure | Notable Contributions and Transmission |
|---|---|---|
| Monastic Founder | Leong Kwei (mid-1700s) | Escaped Shaolin-influenced monastery; taught Chin Leong in Guangdong village.[26] |
| 1st Secular | Chin Leong | First family practitioner; established hidden training amid bans.[2] |
| 2nd | Chin Leong Sing | Passed to son; adapted for family defense in feuds.[20] |
| 3rd | Chin Siu Don | Emphasized practical strikes; taught brother Chin Siu Hung.[3] |
| 4th | Chin Siu Hung (late 1800s–?) | "Crazy Devil"; integrated Tsoi Li Ho Fut Hung at Hung Sing Goon; primary teacher to Chin Siu Dek.[28] |
| 5th | Chin Siu Dek (Jimmy H. Woo, 1914–1999) | Immigrated 1933; globalized art in U.S. via selective instruction.[2] |