Ken Gullette

New Chen Village DVD Takes You Inside Birthplace of Tai Chi



Posted: Thursday, February 04, 2010

by
American Tao Internal Arts

Chen Village is a documentary by producer Jon Braeley. It is a beautiful and fascinating journey to a place very few people have seen -- the birthplace of Tai Chi. I eagerly unwrapped the DVD when it arrived and put it in my player.

Shot in high definition, the documentary includes interviews with westerners who have traveled to Chen Village to study, and it shows a disciple ceremony in which Grandmaster Chen Xiaowang accepts new disciples.

Chen Village (Chenjiagou) is located in Henan Province. It's a very poor village with 3,000 residents. It is said that 2,500 Chen Villagers practice tai chi, and all but 15% are named Chen. You see parts of the village here that you haven't seen before.

When you think of the birthplace of Tai Chi, you might think of beautiful Chinese buildings, and there are a few that meet the description, but Chenjiagou is a dirt-poor farming community. It just happens that they are the best in the world at their art.

The documentary features Chen Xiaowang, his brother and head of the Chenjiagou tai chi school Chen Xiaoxing, Chen Ziqiang (son of Xiaoxing) and Chen Bing (a nephew of Xiaowang and Xiaoxing). It's exciting to watch, considering I have met and trained with three of the four, and Chen Xiaoxing stayed in our home for a week back in 2006. It's also fascinating to see the Chen Xiaoxing's school since I received a certificate in 2005 as a recognized instructor connected to the Chen family school.

I didn't know until seeing this DVD that Chen Bing now runs his own school, and he has built it with foreign students in mind. Some students have been reluctant in the past to travel to Chen Village because living conditions are not very good compared with our standards. Chen Bing decided to build a school that is more welcoming to Westerners.

I was disappointed but not surprised to hear Chen Bing say that foreign students are usually trained differently than the Chinese -- not as tough because they can't take it, and most of them, he says, are interested in the health aspects more than the martial aspects. Are you listening, people? We focus on the wrong things, and as a result, the Chen family doesn't take us as seriously. Despite what you've heard and read, real tai chi is a martial art -- it's about fighting and not about meditation. It also requires a lot of sweat to achieve skill. If you're not sweating, you're not practicing right.

Chen Ziqiang is interviewed, talking about how only one in a hundred students -- even those from the Chen Village -- are able to persist long enough to become really good at tai chi. I've been teaching now for a dozen years and that is something that becomes clear very quickly when you teach -- the fact that for every 100 people that come through the door, only one has the determination and passion to achieve their goals.

The interviews with the western students are very interesting. Students find a different world in the Chen Village, as if they have gone back in time when technology was much simpler and the pace much slower. A few of the comments go a little over-the-top, as you can imagine from people who are dedicated enough to spend a year or two living there. One devoted student breaks down and cries when discussing Chen Xiaowang. I understand the devotion, but I tend to look at these masters as people who are the best at what they do -- like Tiger Woods, Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan, all worthy of tremendous respect. I don't look at them as gods. My wife watched the documentary with me and strongly objected to the disciple ceremony where the disciples were kneeling and bowing in worship before Grandmaster Chen. I didn't react as strongly because I understand why they're doing it, but it was fascinating to see a ceremony like this after hearing about it. When you become a disciple it's a very serious relationship, supposedly like being admitted to the family, and yet there is a master/student relationship that is very strict, and let's face it, the culture is not what we are accustomed to. Americans by nature don't like to kneel and prostrate themselves before anyone, but in the context of the situation and the culture, it's something that you do.

Chen Bing is shown at his school demonstrating a form, and as usual, he's breathtakingly impressive. There is a little video of Chen Xiaoxing practicing with some students, and Chen Xiaowang does a short demo, too.

One of my goals is to travel to Chen Village and give it my best effort to train like the Chinese. It's nice that Jon Braeley has produced such an inspirational documentary.I highly recommend this DVD to anyone with an interest in tai chi.

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Ken Gullette is a 36-year veteran of the martial arts and a tournament champion. He teaches Chen Tai Chi, Hsing-I Chuan and Baguazhang through his online school with members around the world. He also produces instructional DVDs related to the internal martial arts.
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