short version
Oral tradition states that Juk Lam Naam Tong Long Gung Fu was codified circa early1800’s in the Bamboo Forest Temples 竹林寺 located upon the Five Plateau Mountain / Wu Tai Shan and on Long Fu Shan / Mt. Dragon Tiger 龍虎山 gongsai province. Two more temples were built in Hong Kong and Macau in the early 1900’s. None of which maintain the martial order to this day.
Today the martial order is maintained in small mostly private WuGuans discreetly found in towns and villages and cities around the world.
This combat art is now known as southern mantis and is the product of a broader Shaolin, Daoist and Hakka Gung fu genesis and subsequently has played various roles in Chinese military history. The combat program as we know today is not all that ancient; however way of logic one can infer
the history is rich leading up to the several hundred years of traceable history we can confirm.
- Monk Saam Daat 1 gen
- Lee Sim Si (Zen master lee) 2nd gen
- Cheung Yel Chung 3rd gen
- Lam Wing Fei 4th gen
- Gin Foon Mark 5th gen
- Louie Jack Man 5th gen
- Roger Hagood 6th gen
- Rick L Gamboa 7th gen
- Riley J Boyer 8th gen (6th gen adopted)
A longer telling:
Juk Lam Ji Naam Tong Long Pai is credited to the Martial Monk Saam Daat 三達祖師 who was Tibetan born sometime nearing the end of the 18th century.
As a young child Saam Daat was living in an orphanage associated with the shaolin and Juk Lam Temples, and this is when he first got involved in martial arts; over the years the young monk did as many did and organized a system from the many influences he encountered.
The story goes; in the late 1700’s Saam Daat was confronted by the Abbot Tai Yueh after he had gotten into several nasty fights. In an effort to explain himself Saam Daat demonstrated the things he had been developing. Due to the potential that was seen he was given a deeper mentorship and subsequently, the Abbot elevated the status of Saam Daats training within the temple. This meant further refinement with the elders of the daoist halls of old shaolin.
The young monk Saam Daat was now training among the elites of his time, including the Abbot Tai Yueh as well as the hermit Hai Shem. It is here that the art takes root..
Saam Daat was eventually named to be the succeeding Abbot of the Juk Lam Temple at Long Fu Shan this is around 1840s 1850’s 1860. Saam Daat spent decades refining and teaching while living as the hermit monk.
Monk Saam Daat was well known for his abilities but he was aging and had yet to take an official successor to see to the future of his work. Saam Daat began to examine all the resident monks. He then traveled to various other temples and he explored the countryside. It would be that he would Lee Kwong Ching.
Lee Kwon Ching, was born early 1800’s. Little is known of Lee’s early years however it is is known that he was a skilled boxer when he met Saam Daat and that he was to learn directly with Saam Daat within the courtyards of the Dragon Tiger Mountain Temple and five plateau mountain as he dedicated his life to self cultivation and was ordained, Lee Seim Si 李禪師 ; the name means Zen Master Lee.
Lee spent many years learning and nurturing the intricacies of Saam Daat’s gung fu while training the ways of the monastic order. He took care of Saam Daat as he aged and he was eventually named the successor and official second generation Abbot of Saam Daats Temple Boxing in the halls of kwong Sai Juk Lam Ji, a position he held for many years as the 1800’s drew to a close.
In 1911 Lee Seim Si oversaw the building of the Macau Juk Lam Temple where he would later return and subsequently be named the patron saint.
Zen Master Lee would often take to walking the countryside and quietly taught martial arts outside the Temple Walls and to one family in particular a Hakka family named Chung. Here the southern mantis practice would become forever entwined with the Hakka people.
Chueng Yul Chun was born in the south of China near the Juk Lam Temple that Master Lee oversaw. The Cheung family who where traveling acrobatics, provided for the Abbot while he traveled the countryside, and in gratitude he taught them some exercises to practice. Master Lee then took on Chang Yu Chung as a student sometime around 1917. Where after Chueng Yul Chung accompanied Master Lee between the Juk Lam Temple and his home. As time would have it the old master was to tutor the young boy.
Despite being a citizen lay-monk and not a full resident monk, Cheung took his training serious. Some years later with the completion of his physical studies and harboring a gift for herbal medicine, Master Cheung was given the blessing of Lee Seim Si to teach the system as his personal successor. This was a prestigious gesture by Lee Seim si, to offer Saam Daats Gung Fu in its whole to a laymonk. This was early 1920’s
Master Chung settled alongside his family and opened a medicine shop and fighting art school. Master Lee continued building monasteries and teaching Zen Buddhism.
While Master Cheung was teaching, turbulent times where indeed at a boil once again. Secret societies were very much a part of the political scene. Revolutions, Civil Wars and foreign invasions, pestilence, and crime all over the country, each faction had their own agenda and the modern era was creeping in to make things more complicated.
During the early 1920’s Master Cheung took on two young disciples; Lam Wing Fay 林榮輝 and Wong Yuk Gong 黃毓光. These two would carry the art forward through the next generation despite another world conflict.
The various masters of all styles were enduring extreme persecution and many temples were burned between the time of Taiping rebellion up to and during the Boxer Rebellion and in the years of its aftermath little changed for the good. The remaining temples were becoming hotbeds for militants and monks alike.
Lam Wing Fei, later known as Lam Sang 林生, trained for several years with Master Cheung as he was from the local village community, Lam was a young boy of 10-13 years old when he began training. He was small and without a great muscle build but as he grew he became fast as lightning. Lam Sang gained a high understanding for the arts strength and aggression through his Sifu, Master Cheung. His instructor was a rough teacher who had little interest in pretend( it was Master Chung who had the first sign for “broken martial art repair”).
Lam Sang also practiced with Madam Cheung, Master Cheung’s mother. She was skilled before hand but had learned the cotton body methods from The Abbot Lee Seim Si.
This routine continued until the mid 1920’s when being the youngest of the disciples, Lam Wing Fei left his Sifu to escort the the aging Master Lee Seim Si and learn the temple arts and practices in more detail.
It is said that Lam Wing Fei traveled with Master Lee for nearly ten years as he further examined daoist martial arts as they pilgrimaged from temple to temple.
In the 1930’s Lam Sang returned to Hong Kong, by now in his early twenties; he opened his first Juk Lam Tong Long Pai Martial Art school. This was relatively short lived.
By the late 1930’s the indochina wars were heavily damaging to mainland China and it was only getting more insane. Mankind’s technology was racing through evolution at a dangerously ignorant pace. World War II was building steam and Asia had a front seat.
Lee Seim See, a older man now, returned to the Juk Lam Temple branch he had seeded in Macao, Lam Wing Fai was told that it was time to leave China and go to the west.
Within a short time Lam was once again seeking refuge as England came under attack by the Germans. Lam Sang again boarded a ship bound to America. The ship Lam Sang was on was bombed at sea but fortunately he was rescued by the United States Navy. Lam Wing Fai finally made his way to Chinatown, New York City, United States of America, 1942.
Lam Sang Was a learned man and the Benevolent societies and various tong organizations formed around the city began to call upon him for guidance, he gained a reputation with the nick nam little monkey.
Around 1947 Lam Wing Fei got word that his first sifu, Cheung Yul chung was missing and presumed dead as a result of the war. He was the official successor to the lineage teaching.
When speaking of Lam Sang, there are many stories of his uncanny and mysterious abilities such as light skill as well as the explosive shock power. It was also common knowledge that Lam Sang was not known as an easy teacher to gain acceptance from – in-fact he refused to teach non-Chinese with perhaps only one exception.
It was known that Lam Wing Fei even turned down many requests for private instruction from Bruce Lee, who in 1963 came to New York to find him. It would be Lam Sangs student, Gin Foon Mark, who spent some time teaching Bruce Lee, although Bruce did not at the time realize he was just a student of the master until after the lessons concluded.
Despite being demanding, Lam Sang taught the art to a few small groups or generations through out his teaching career and inspired many more through them. The seeds are sown in the USA thanks to men like Mr. Sun, Wong Bak Lim, Ho Dun.
Gin Foon Mark (Gin Fun Maak) was born in 1927 in Toisan. When he was a young boy he was entered into temple for classical studies. As a youth he learned Mok Gar Kuen and Bak Hok Kyun and various other Shaolin skills. He trained classically is calligraphy and brush painting as well as cooking.
It was in his time in Temple that he first saw Bamboo Forest Praying Mantis being demonstrated… just enough to taste the skill of Naam Tong Long (as it was now being called). Gin Foon Left the monastery and entered his role in the second Sino-Japanese war, he was around 14 years old and acted as a guard. Gin Foon Mark eventually returned home where he and his uncle practiced the White Crane. Around 1947 the Mark family decided that it would be best to leave China and come to the West.
When Gin Foon Mark arrived in New York he was considered a young but well established martial artist. He soon had work teaching in the various society halls. after a few years, Sifu Mark found himself facing Master Lam Sang. Sifu Mark had experienced Juk Lam Tong Long while still in china and was eager to dedicate himself to the study here in America. As it come to be, mark dedicated himself to more than a decade of training full time with Master Lam.
Gin Foon accompanied Master Lam wherever he went absorbing the numerous details of Bamboo Forest Praying Mantis. Gin Foon Mark continued this until Lam Sang retired to Taiwan in 1969. This is when Gin Foon Mark became the official head master of Juk Lam Temple Gung Fu in America.
Gin Foon Mark had a different view of America then his teacher. He decided to take on any student that wanted to train regardless of ethnicity and from this pool he would find the most gifted. Master Mark officially opened the doors to the public here in America. Master Mark hand picked from the individuals within these public classes and by the 1980’s he was putting out strong roots.
Some of Mark’s class mates would also follow this path and also teach, namely Louie Jack Man. Together these men planted the seeds of Saam Daats Gung Fu in the United States to the next generation, which would so happen to include myself.
AS FOR ME: When I was stepping up to 15 years of age I began training in a collective environment of 5th, 6th and 7th generation instructors, this was in 1994/95. Alongside the primary base of Juk Lam (jook lum), there was exposure to Chu Family Tong Long stemming from Sammy Wong sifu/Manuel Rodriguez; Pak mei, village lohan & drunken fist Via “uncle” Jack Moy and Sheui jiao stemming from Dr Wu.
My principal study of Juk Lam Tong Long began with Sifu Rick who was the student of those previously mentioned as well as being the primary student of Roger Hagood. RDH was student of LJM and GFM; RDH was also training with Wong Bak Lam, Mr. Sun and others I’m sure.
In short this exposure was my inspiration to practice southern mantis from the the age of 15.
As shown, the roots run deep and the system more and more interesting with each teacher that I’ve encountered. Sifu Rick Gamboa was my door in for all of this and I can not neglect this fact.
At the time I didn’t really know the full significance of what I was beginning but i was interested in the boxing and through demonstration I was made aware that these guys had the goods.
In the very early days of practice we did not have a large emphasis on form training, Simple sets like the Chuka three battle and Juk Lam 3 arrow sets where practiced as well as various lohan type chigung; but mostly we focused our time on applications, drills and physical fitness: exercises for foot work and combinations; we did a lot of line drills and we played chi Sau and teui sau – both fixed step and moving style. This led naturally to sparring / saan da practice.
Basically we threw bones at each other and did calisthenics. It was almost always in a garage, driveway or park- regardless of the elements.
Throughout my entire experience with traditional martial arts I’ve sat at the epicenter of greatness when it comes to old gung fu and in my later teens I was beginning to open my eyes to what the bigger picture was. However things were to go another direction temporarily.
By 1999 had long since dropped out of school and was half homeless, sleeping on couches and parks. I was working general labor jobs and driving trucks but increasingly frustrated I knew It was the rowdy night life or bust….so I left off with a few bucks in my pocket to see the countryside
In spring of 2002 I returned to Illinois, Rick had a pretty decent place he rented for a school space and he was still training with RDH and LJM among others, I decided I wanted to do more. so i doubled down.
I moved into my sifus home and got to work. I had a goal and i was hungry. With training came tuition and rent, food etc. I had jobs driving trucks, moving furniture and swinging pick axes, i planted trees, dug trenches and i drove. I worked in warehouse and factories, I tended the registers overnight in the convenience stores and I held state jobs as a personal assistant for the disabled adults.
I assisted my sifu with his martial art supply business and I taught in the school. I did What ever it took to pay for as much training as I could.
I was regularly training three days a week in public class, taking one or two privates each week, i attended every seminar and workshop offered; I taught the lower classes and I lived in sifus rental house with other students. I studied dit da and cooking and i read alot.
In Short I lived gung fu and trained gung fu full time, I was with diamond vision. This went on until autumn of 2007 when I moved out of the house and by the 2008 I resigned my position all together. This concluded my time with the Bamboo Forest Temple Benevolent Association: my membership was circa 1995 to 2008.
Shortly before I left the school I had taken to networking with a few groups of Master Marks and Master Louie’s students that I found via the internet (a new thing to me ) we began exchanging information. The cross training began.
This lead me to the realization that Master Gin Foon Mark was in-fact still teaching, despite being in his 80’s. I had learned his kung fu and I Knew many of his students and peers but had yet to meet him. I quickly found my way to Master Marks WuGuan to pay my respects to the Grand Master. He was skeptical as I was not a familiar face to him but after taking a long look and a few questions, he welcomed me in to his circle and in doing so I found another group of people to train with.
I was introduced to Master Chuck Chin, Jack Spizale and others of his aging generation, I began working with their students as well.
Over the following years, we all began regular meetings, we organized training camps and seasonal workshops. We gathered from birthdays and holidays. Several times we organized large gatherings with SPM students from all over the country and even invited correspondence students from other countries all to exchange southern mantis and honor the traditions of the Monk Saam Daats Gung Fu.
I was “adopted” by 5th generation Master Gin Foon Mark as he observed my “hand” and “heart” over the time I knew him. He encouraged me to openly teach; something I had only did very informally but now I was officially named as SiFu of Kwong Sai Juk Lam Ji Naam Tong Long Pai Gung Fu, this was in the year of the Water Dragon (2012). Master Gin Foon Mark gave me his confidence and encouragement to open up publicly and teach and for that kindness I am forever grateful.
I was there when he was laid to the earth. We burned Joss and honored his legacy.
With the passing of both Master Louie and Master Mark and almost all of their generation, there are only a very small handful of legitimate heirs to these methods from the old generation and even fewer who remain active students let alone teachers. I am humbled to be among the few who have been seeing this thing forward, hand to hand heart ot heart…. and although it is no basic task, I intend to do what I can to see this thing passed forward to a new generation.
To this day I continue working with other members of the Juk Lam Paai, both publicly and privately to cultivate and preserve the integrity of monk Saam Daats Southern Praying Mantis.
My knowledge comes from all sources that prove genuine and sincere ( and a few who choose not to be), including but not limited to members of the community here in the USA.
Your correspondence is welcome. Your expectations are not.
“We must remember that every generation will bloom a new flower but only if the roots are properly maintained.”
sources:
- oral telling from Sifu rick, Master Mark, roger hagood etc
- chatting with many others in the Paai over the years
- Various online articles ( some with some leaps and confusions for sure)
- F blanko article
- ( RDH article)
- The book: Kwong Sai jook lum gee tong long pai by Master Gin Foon Mark
- the book: shaolin grandmasters text: history, philosophy and gung fu of shaolin chan