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Kerala's
traditional martial art form teaches you how to floor an opponent with a feather
- and then mend his injuries
As it happens with a great many traditional culture survivors caught in
the hurly-burly of modern life, disbelief greets the fact that the southern
Indian state of Kerala was once the crucible of the world's martial arts:
but look closely at "Kalarippayat" and you will find the kernel of the
world's martial arts systemsfrom the dowager tai
chi chuan to the adult survival kit known as Shaolin
wushu to the baby of the lot, jeet
kune do.
Kalarippayat as it survives today is also more than the sum of its mutated
progeny. It was designed, in the first place, to be more than just a narrow-focus,
single-purpose martial art: "Kalari" is an arena for combat, "payat" stands
for a system of combat. The arenaterra firmais more or less
common to all the martial arts; the "payat" always follows the ground
rules and martial imperatives of the multifarious societies where this
martial art has taken root.
The only instrument of the original that has survived to this day without
redesign or restating its purpose is its ubiquitous circular shield: for
the most part, however, the shield is no longer what it used to be. Making
a good shield is an art in itselfall the way from the foundry to
the forge of the blacksmith to the decorator of symbols. What distinguishes
a good metal shield from a passable one is how it sounds when you land
a thwack on it: a good one rings like a bell, the run-of-the-mill thuds
like a bag of cements.
Nevertheless, the shield had worked its way to the top of the totem pole
of folklore, a tribal
symbol that was always more than its stated purpose of defense through
blocking and deflection. Today, lightweight nylon flags and chrome-and-brass
plaques set on mahogany have replaced the proud pennant and the coat-of-arms
on the shield.
Not many systems
of violence can get away with claiming with a straight face that spiritual
transcendence is both one of its causes and its primary aim. Kalarippayat
slips through because of the transparency of its conviction: it stretches
the body to its limits, and then repairs the damage with massage and medication.
The kalari acolyte graduates to master only after having perfected both
the art of disempowerment and the art of re-empowerment.
It's a tall order, but then kalarippayat has a spiritually impeccable
lineage: according to historians, in AD 4 when one monk, Bodhidharma,
carried Buddhism
to the world outside, kalari piggybacked along for the ride. The rest,
as they say, is history.
It also echoes a Sanskrit term, "khaloorika" which means "military training
ground". It's a bit misleading, in that what was glorified as the arena
is a packed floormeasuring 35/43/63 feet in length and of a width
measuring half that of the length.
The complex architecture of kalarippayat has its own raison d'etre, some
of it firmly down to earth, some of it hurtling towards the dim fringes
of esoterica. The gladiatorial arena was built according to the ancient
vaastu
shastra, with constructionabout 4 ft below ground levelaligned
along the secondary east-west axis. The mud from digging the ground is
used to build walls around an area, which is bald and featureless but
for a single door on the eastern wall.
A platform with seven steps in the southwest corner of the kalari is a
poothura (dais for flowers) where the presiding deity, a volatile
double-trouble of Shiva and Shakti, is given place of honor. Gurupeedam,
a representative embodiment of the entire line of past gurus, is placed
next to the poothura. And this is only the beginning of a lifelong
study of physical, mental and spiritual proaction and reaction at fever
pitch.
Most acolytes begin when they are seven years old, when their bodies and
minds are supple enough to withstand the harshness of kalarippayat its
apparent rigidity, its innate malleability, its knowledge, its wisdom,
and finally its detached observation of the body's spiritwithout
cracking.
MOVING
TOWARDS STILLNESS
In days gone by, every village had a kalari near the temple pond administered
by a master who was reverently addressed as "gurukkal". In terms
of the patriarchal terror and respect he commanded, he was second only
to God.
Down to this day, the gurukkal performs the initiation rituals
by lighting the lamp, offering flowers on the pothua and chanting
mantras: Oh God! Save us together/Nurture us together /Bless us to
work courageously/ Protect our bond against our enemy.
Right at the initiation, the acolyte is informed that kalarippayat is
more than the rippling of muscles, the speed of reaction, the endurance
of pain.
It is equally about quite the oppositestillness and the ability
to hold on to stasis, the art of doctoring, the sublimation of feeling,
humility before a fallen enemy, doctoring in both healing enemies as about
disabling them.
Every day, before and after practice, students gallop through a series
of symbolic rituals to acquire the fabled discipline and pinpoint concentration
of the perfect warrior. Says C.V.Govindankutty, Gurukkal of Thiruvananthapuram:
"There are no free lurches. And because the practicing of every little
clause in the kalarippayat system is a formidable exercise designed as
much to root out those with questionable dedication as it is to strengthen
those whose dedication is unquestionable, the tutelage is tailored according
to the individual capability of each student."
Essentially a step beyond the system of total warfarewhich believes
in nothing less than total annihilationkalarippayat is supposed
to end in the suspended animation of total bliss, an end that is the transcendental
motivation of, among other creatures, yogis, sanyasins, all manner
of priests and laity. Some of its death and disability, and peak physical
fitness at all times, even when asleep. What makes kalarippayat stand
out alone is the single cardinal law except when under pain of death:
even when facing the worst of enemies, combatants must strictly adhere
to the pledge to defend themselves and those under their protection without
harming any creature, to fight only to defend themselves, and to escape
to live another dayperhaps to fight another dayrather than
attack suicidally, motivated by some misbegotten notion of martial honour
that plagues the male of the species." It is basically a system that gives
importance to non-violence and strives for peace
and security of the people." Says Muraleedharan Gurukkal of Kottayam.
A SINGLE FORCE OF THREE
Anything in Hinduism
that smacks even remotely of divine intent and occasional intervention
has to choose between the numbers 3 and 7. Kalarippayat chose 3beginning
with its division into three distinct parts: Meithari, Kothari
and Ankathari.
Meithari
(the physique):
The initiating procedure is designed to enhance the meippayat (physical
fitness) of students. Preparation entails wearing the kaccha (loincloth),
smearing the body with oil, and prostration before the gurukkal
and the complex pantheon of deities he arbitrates on behalf of. It highlights
the Vedantic
philosophy of surrendering abjectly to the Supreme Being. Says Govindankutty
Gurukkal: "Our body, mind and spirit are the gift of God. Every movement
in this world is planned and performed by Him alone. Kalari teaches the
students to grasp life's contents, using them to attain strength and tranquility
of mind and body. They work together."
To prepare the body for a punishing routine, students learn leg stretching
movements that lead to proper balance and the stability of a sphere, basic
body postures, the flea jumps (or flying leaps, if you will) so beloved
of photographers and tourism PR personnel, and flexibility exercises that
can stymie the most crooked of chiropractors. In its advanced stages,
meithari helps to understand and control at will the balance and flow
of energy in the body.
Kothari (weapons of wood): This is where the
student is introduced to the first of his prostheses in battle: wooden weapons
like the kettukari (the long 12-span staff), cheruvadi (three-span
staff) and ottakkol (a curved wooden weapon). The ottakkol serves
as a training instrument for perfecting the coordination of the intricate movements
of spine and feet, and is also a stepping stone to learning the proper execution
of kalarippayat's advanced fighting techniques, some that can permanently disable
or kill a man with the jab of a finger.
The first lesson the use of
these weapons teaches the student is that anything can be used as an extension
of the body, making it a potent fly-by-wire instrument of control.
Ankathari
(metal weapons combat): The final stage begins with mastery of the kattaram
(short dagger) used for close combat. Ankathari ranges from very artistically
crafted, almost choreographic, sequences of mutual respectful salutations between
the combatants to the hyper kinetic movements of puliyankam, the greased
lightning leopard fight where the bones seem to melt away.
Says Muraleedharan
Gurukkal: "Combatants start fighting only after mutual consent. It is a convention
of giving respect to the enemy as a person and to the payat for the purpose. It
reflects the patience and steadiness in the character of combatants, attained
after long years of practice."
Research has revived some of them (but
more priceless weaponry is said to have been lost than recovered). The urumi
(a paper-thin flexible sword), mace and spear are weapons that demand niggling
training because they can easily turn back upon the unversed user. As for gum:
it is saidand no master will either refute or verify itthat broken
weapons are joined with vajralepavidhi (a special paste made of precious
stones), which lasts for more than 1,000 years.
What
is less obvious is the joinery between tradition and modernity in kalarippayat.
A kalari school is a living anachronism, a piece of the past caught in a time
warp. In the 60s, a couple of kalarippayat schools did try to tie in with the
short-diploma mayhem of modern tutelage, with unfortunate consequences. Suryaprakash,
who has been a kalari student for 12 years now, likens this futile go at adapting
to changed circumstances to "dancing the Bharatnatyam to the beat of disco music."
But Ramachandra Gurukkal is firm about the virtues of being shackled
to tradition: "I am practicing and teaching my students in precisely the manner
my own gurukkal had taught me. My responsibilitywhich I feel I am fulfilling
is to sustain it for our next generation without any modification or revision."
This sounds simple but it isn't. Compounding the problems inherent in
bridging a time gap, kalarippayat is being taught in what is scientifically called
a "biosphere", a hot house shut away from the rest of the world but for experimental
purposes. Intrinsic to the threat of kalarippayat is a sublime moral and existential
agenda from a tradition that died in the vast world outside long ago.
Today's kalari students are as canny and "with it" as MBA students-both plan their
lives in the cold light of reason. The difference between the two is not that
their battlefields are differentfor the former, the arena of the spirit,
for the latter the marshland of finance. The lesson that today's kalari students
aim to learn is almost entirely metaphysical a thing made of the phantom values
of war like chivalry and compassion (unless they plan to use it to disable urban
muggers, which would be an utter waste of precious and backbreaking tutelage).
Says Kavalam: "In theater, it's not only dialogues that are important,
it's action as well, action latent in the script. If you let it, kalari will first
show you then teach you the body language of metaphysics." Combatants can use
the power of mind and body to either communicate or annihilate. Kalarippayat gives
you that choice, and then makes it clear that only one option has the gurukkal's
blessings - communicate.
Kalari also opens the door to a lifelong, fulfilling chat with the demon
who knows you best: yourself. This cosy tête-à-tête is said to be the
moving force behind some of Kerala's famous art forms like the ritualistic
Theyyam and Padayani, and more sophisticated dance and drama forms like
Koodiyattom and Kathakali.
Sateesh
Nagpal, a theater artiste, says: "A sense of déjà vu is what I had when I joined
kalari. When I was a toddler, my parents took me through the initial stages of
walking by holding my hand, often correcting me and steering me away from obstacles.
But I was disobedient and stubborn. I think I lost my basic character then. But
now, being with the gurukkal and through his training, my life has changed.
It has become more disciplined and systematic."
Jamon, as senior student
says: "I had a very careless, rude and stubborn character in my childhood, But
after joining Kalari under the surveillance of Muraleedharan Gurukkal my self-confidence,
patience and humility have increased tremendously. More than that, I remained
healthy throughout my training."
THE
MARTIAL ART OF DOCTORING
But perhaps the USP of kalarippayat is the uzhichil (massage) with
specially prepared medicated oil. The gurukkal, or a skilled masseur,
use hands and feet (with the latter suspended by rope) in varied degrees
of force and weight till the body is literally squeezed and pummeled into
amazing flexibility and suppleness. The background strain to all this
wrestling, as it were, of the Saptadhabhu (the seven tissues of
the human body: plasma, blood, muscle, fat, bone, bone marrow and semen)
is the song of the charkas, the primum mobile of all yoga.
In conjunction is the stimulation of the nadisoothra (ayurvedic
acupressure), the marmam (the body's vital parts), pressure points
of the sole (foot reflexology) and the known five human senses.
Kalari massage
is also trifurcated. Sukha thirummu (massaging for overhauling the body
and for rejuvenation) is the hands-down favorite, but stress is also laid on Kacha
thirummu (for physical endurance) and Reksha thirummu (for holistic
healing). Administered to a fit anatomy, the full course of kalari massage makes
it as pliable as pure copper, allowing it to virtually slither from one contortion
to anotherthe animal mimickry, from snake to elephant to cock-of-the walk,
that personify kalarippayat.
After you rub your enemy's nose into the hallowed earth, the afterthought
of compassion that lies at the heart of kalarippayat makes it incumbent
upon you to repair the considerable damage. The system of post-trauma
treatment is called kalari marmachikitsa
treatment through vital nerve endings. Prototypal of ayurveda, this system
enabled sages and yogis of ancient India to heal by poking and prodding
the centers through which the pranavayu (life force) passes into
the human body. According to ancient Sanskrit treatises on medical treatment,
and their postmodern Tamil descendants, there are 108 "vital points" in
the human body, of which kalari is interested in 64.
Says Muraleedhran Gurukkal: "The nerve centers are
so sensitive that any hit or even jab on the spot will usually kill and almost
certainly permanently disable the entire body."
In peacetime, like traditional ayurveds, the kalari gurukkal painstakingly
attends to each patient. Gurukkals are capable of diagnosing problems
using nadi vigyan,
diagnosis by feeling the pulse.
Comparing
kalari marma chikitsa to the largely invasive modern medical system,
Govindankutty Gurukkal says," Our body organs gravitate towards the natural
spirit of Mother Nature.
This is the one convincing reason why any disorder or deformity ought
to have natural treatment."
In treatises it is mentioned that after long years of kalari treatment, the skin
attains the sense of sight. In fact, an old maxim in Malayalam, the language of
the South Indian state of Kerala, says that the final excellence in swordplay
can only happen when the whole body becomes the eye.
Now, in France,
naturologist Jule Romain claims to be able to develop our sensory cells son the
epidermis itself. The secret, he says, in relentless practice. What the skin sees
may not be what the eye sees, or at least how the eye sees: butas laboratory
tests involving the blind have shownif the tips of or fingers can be trained
to "see" colors by measuring the heat each color emanates, there is no reason
why the epidermis can't.
At the end of it all, this is what kalarippayat is all aboutmind
over matter, soul over mind, demigodhood over soul. Life
over death.
And somewhere along the way, the power to convert the spasm of a finger
into a hellish hurricane.