Signed - CTGB the Official UK Branch of the Chen Village School |
On
July 1st 2013 Chen Ziqiang, Chief Instructor of the Chen Village
Taijiquan School (Chen Taijiquan Xuexiao) and David Gaffney and Davidine Sim,
founders of Chenjiagou Taijiquan GB (CTGB) signed an agreement making CTGB the official UK branch of the Chen Village Taijiquan School. This
was a proud moment for the school and follows a relationship of nearly two
decades.
We
first visited Chenjiagou in the mid 1990s. At that time it was a very different
place than today. The two large roads that bisect the village had not yet been
laid. The new family temple, the Taijiquan museum, the impressive façade at the
entrance of the school were not yet built. There were no western-style toilets or showers. I vividly remember a blisteringly hot July day on that first visit
when we walked through the fields to be shown the memorial tablets of some of
the most venerated ancestors - Chen Bu, Chen
Wangting, Chen Fake, Chen Zhaopi… The
reverence in which the tombs were approached made it obvious that these were important
figures in the history of Chen Taijiquan. But on that first visit they all
seemed to blur into each other. Today
they are all comfortably familiar names.
After several more visits on our own, in the
winter of 2003 we were ready to take the first British group to train intensively in the Chen
Village School with GM Chen Xiaoxing. During our stay Chen Xiaoxing closely
supervised the group’s training. Every day the routine was the same - five
hours formal instruction and then self-practice to consolidate the keypoints we covered that day. For nineteen days GM Chen worked slowly through the Laojia Yilu
routine. Chenjiagou can be very cold at the end of November. It is situated on
flat, open farmland, so there’s little protection from the cold northern winds
that regularly blow in. That year it was so cold that the group weren’t
interested in buying souvenirs when we got the chance to go
into the nearby Wenxian, but all got excited to see some thermal underwear. The largest
pair I could get were about two sizes too small and for the next few weeks it
felt like training with a spring-loaded crotch!
Chenjiagou Winter 2003 - it was as cold as it looks! |
The first
group was eight strong and was joined by two Chinese guys who were in the school
at the time – a Xingyi guy who soon picked up the colourful nickname of
“Handsome Horse” and a Sanda practitioner.
Since then we have returned to the village just about every year, often twice a year, to study and learn from Chen Xiaoxing’s personal brand of old-school training. To date most of the students from our advanced class have been to the Chen Village School to train with him - some many times. As I write the next group is chomping at the bit for this year's trip in October.
Since then we have returned to the village just about every year, often twice a year, to study and learn from Chen Xiaoxing’s personal brand of old-school training. To date most of the students from our advanced class have been to the Chen Village School to train with him - some many times. As I write the next group is chomping at the bit for this year's trip in October.
Over
the years each trip has had different characters and has left different
memories. One year we were
Training in Chen Dehu's garden |
disturbed
a few times during training by the regular groups of Taiji tourists who came to
look around the village (before getting back in their buses to go to the next
place of interest). Chen Xiaoxing was clearly losing patience with the
interruptions when he simply said “follow me" and marched off. We followed him out of the
school, down the street and into the house that belonged in the past to Chen
Dehu. We went through the building into the garden where Yang Luchan had
famously learned from Chen Changxing. In
a traditional martial art like Chen Taijiquan its vital that you appreciate the
system’s history and your own part as a link between past and future
generations. Training that afternoon one could feel a palpable sense of this
history. This is the place that Chen Changxing, the fourteenth generation
gatekeeper and famous “biaoshi” or merchant guard, trained. Lying on the floor
was a stone that he is said to have used to sharpen his weapons and another
that was used for strength training. Perhaps it was here that he
synthesised the Laojia routines we practise today from the original forms of
Chen Wangting?! In another corner is a
well into which Chen Zhaopi had thrown himself, unable to bear the persecution
he suffered during the dark days of the Cultural Revolution. Chen Zhaopi is credited
with reviving Taijiquan in its birthplace after decades of poverty and natural
disaster had seen it almost disappear.
Chen Xiaoxing - UK 2012 |
The story of Chen Village Taijiquan can be traced back to Chen Bu, the first generation ancestor who founded the village at the beginning of the Ming dynasty in the fourteenth century. In the ensuing years many people played their parts in the Chen Village story: there's Chen Wangting who created Taijiquan; Chen Fake who took the family art from the Village to Beijing; Chen Xioawang in the current generation who took Chen Taijiquan out of China on a global scale. Our school has played its own part in the Chen Village School story. CTGB brought both Chen Xiaoxing and Chen Ziqiang to the UK for the first time. Exciting events as they happened,but both of them are now familiar figures to all the students in the school! At this watershed moment in our school's history I'd like to publicly thank all the people who have helped in our journey so far -and all those that have quietly supported the regular classes and workshops, the seminars with the teachers from Chenjiagou, training trips to Chenjiagou...
2013 UK seminar with Chen Ziqiang |