Chinese “iron crotch” kung fu masters fight to preserve a
painful-looking tradition
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[December 10, 2020]
By Martin Quin Pollard
JUNTUN, China (Reuters) - Wang Liutai is no
ordinary kung fu master. The 65-year-old from a village in central China
practises a unique and excruciating-looking strand of martial arts
coined "iron crotch kung fu".
Its most famous technique involves a steel-plate capped log, 2 metres
(6.5 feet) in length and weighing 40 kilograms (88 pounds) that swings
through the air and smashes into a man's crotch.
"When you practise iron crotch kung fu, as long as you push yourself,
you will feel great," said Wang, head of the Juntun Martial Arts
Academy.
Wang, who has been practising the technique for around half a century
and has two children, insists that with the correct methods and
sufficient practice, it does not hurt and has no effect on fertility.
The iron crotch, mastery of which is gained by taking hits to the body's
weakest points while using qigong breathing techniques to inure oneself,
is just one element of the branch of Tongbeiquan kung fu that has been
practised in Wang's village for the past 300 years. The style
encompasses scores of attack techniques as well as resisting pressure,
pain or hits to other sensitive areas.
"We also have iron throat, iron head, iron chest, and iron back as
well," said fellow master 53-year-old Tang Xiaocheng.
The style of kung fu practised by those in Juntun village on the
outskirts of the ancient capital of Luoyang was historically a fiercely
guarded secret, but concern has grown that fewer and fewer people were
taking it up and it might not survive.
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Wang Liutai practises the ancient art of "iron crotch" kung fu,
which involves smashing the crotch with a steel-capped log or other
heavy object. For some reason, it has been struggling to draw new
recruits. Lucy Fielder reports.
There were once around 200 people regularly practising in the
village, said Tang, but now there are just over 20. The number that
can practise the iron crotch technique has dropped from around 80 to
just five.
That's why Wang and his fellow masters started to actively promote
their style of kung fu, adopting the swinging log device in 2016 to
demonstrate the iron crotch technique where previously villagers had
kicked, punched or used bricks or sticks.
Their efforts have helped them gain several new students in cities
across the country who learn using social media or custom-made
videos posted online.
"If there are more students carry it forward and spread it to the
whole country and the world, if they can carry this form of kung fu
forward, then my dream will come true," said Wang.
(Reporting by Martin Quin Pollard; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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