Copywrite 1995, Chas Clements
In America, traditionally, fighting with the knife has not been looked
upon with favor. We're a nation of gunfighters; from the Colonial longrifle
to the present 'wondernine'. It has been left to the 'underclasses'; poor,
minorities, the criminal class and immigrants to favor the knife and to hold
and teach the methods of using it in combat. In other lands, however, the
knife has been the weapon of choice and favor. The Indonesian Archipelago is
such a place; land of a thousand languages and cultures. In this culture of
masters of the blade, the De Thouars family have carved a place for
themselves rivaled by a very few.
Presently, the family consists of the four brothers; Pendekar Agung Paul
De Thouars, Great GrandMaster of SerakŪ Tulen and Bukti Negara, Guru Besar
Willem De Thouars, founder of Kun Lun Pai Kun Tao and GrandMaster of SerakŪ,
Maha Guru Victor I. C. De Thouars, Founder of SerakŪ Tongkat, and Maurice De
Thouars, Maha Guru of Silat SerakŪ in Holland.
In this style, the knife is taught as one of the first weapons. Before
one learns to fight with the empty hand, one must learn to protect oneself.
The short stick is also favored, as there is one available in almost any
circumstance. The attitude of the body is one of reserve, to refrain from
extending the body so as not to get something cut off. In some other forms,
this would be known as the attitude of the Short Armed Monkey.
The knife of choice would be 'pisau'; a short single edged utility knife
of common pattern. While different kinds of blades require different
stylings, the pisau is the most reflective of the empty hand style. The Kris
is the knife favored for formal usage, and the Parang is the weapon most
used by agricultural exponents. Each of the knives uses a different
expression of the same body of art.
One is charged with using all of the knife. this is to say that one
should learn to be familiar with the usages and blows generated from the
pommel, guard, flat of the blade, spine, edge, and point. As this is your
utility knife, it is a blade that you know intimately; length, weight,
balance point, edge up or down, seating and reinforcement. Approach the
weapon as if it were a tool that you use everyday; you carve, you pierce,
you slice. To hold the mind to use the knife as for everyday, in combat.
The referencing method of using animal names and attributes to describe
movements of body or attitudes of mind is a favorite means of teaching and
memorizing techniques. The animals include; Orang Utan (the old man of the
jungle), tiger, snake, horse, and so forth. When we speak of 'monkey'
footwork, we also speak of Orang Utan, the rock ape or the Hamadryad ape.
The footwork is not necessarily that of a capering treemonkey, it can plant
the foot solidly and speaks of positioning rather than speed or deception.
The hand of the tiger is perhaps not so important as is the attitude of the
tiger.
Snake does not hold the Biblical connotation in Indonesia that it does
here in the Christian world. The snake is sinuous, full of musculature, he
has a penetrating aspect and his touch is poison. He defies Dragon on his
own ground.
The Horse strikes without warning, each blow is devastating, because he
has four legs he changes position and weight without telegraphing his move.
These are only some of the animals and only some of the attributes that we
find in them. The observation of the animals, the appreciation of the
application by a human in a martial arts manner, accepting the attitudes
displayed by animals and reflecting those attitudes in our martial study is
an ongoing study.
Pendekar Agung (Revered Champion) Paul De Thouars is a complex man of
wonderful talents. Born in Java to a family of champions dating to the early
nineteenth century, Raden Mas Paul has fulfilled the promise of his
training. An undefeated champion of many bouts on the Kendang (the fighting
floor), he has added to the knowledge of the masters passed to him to expand
and codify the art of SerakŪ. His personal study of lines of force and
weakness, his understanding of the engineering of the body and the space
that it occupies is unparalleled. He is a cheery man, given to dribbling his
opponents about the room with an infectious smile on his face.
The arts of Pukulan Pentjak Silat SerakŪ De Thouars have been forged in
the crucible of reality. For many lifetimes, these arts have been tested,
refined and tested again. Nothing superfluous has been retained while
nothing new has been ignored.