|
Russian Martial Art, The Art of
Survival, A Way of Natural Living
Introduction to Russian Martial Art
No rank, no rules, no pre-orchestrated movement, no limitations (except for
the "Law of Nature"), Russian Martial Art is a system of education in human
biomechanics and the study of human behavior under extreme situations.
Students of Russian Martial Art are guided to introspect their vision to
explore their full human potential. The learning environment is based upon
ease, equality and enjoyment. Movement is natural and free, and acquirement
of skill is based on the study of Russian folk dances, Slavic folklore, and
natural laws of interdisciplinary kinesiology, biomechanics, and
psycho-physiology.
In Russian Martial Art, the main goal of a person is to render the adversary
harmless while minimizing losses for both self and foe. Students learn to
work efficiently in any situation that requires defense, prevention of
aggression, or conflict resolution. This is how the Russian Martial Artist
returns to the original Law of the community of life. Learning Russian
Martial Art, students acquire great power as fighters, but more importantly
as a human beings, increasing ones value for health and life, for both self
and others. Both in combat and in life, students treat other creatures with
awareness and compassion. When necessary, firm action is issued, but never
in a callous or careless manner, and when all other option have been
considered. "You life is not your alone; it belongs to your friends, family
and community" (ibid. Alexander Ivanovich Retuinskih), or as is said in the
Cossack Cadet Code: "The life of your friend is always more valuable than
your own. You can die yourself, but rescue your friend." This is the crux
and cornerstone of Russian Martial Art: the preservation and harmony with
the community of life.
The folk wisdom of ancient Slavic martial traditions dates to the activity
of the proto-Indo-European nomadic warrior-hunters of approximately 5,000
BCE, passed recorded from father to son in families for generations of
pre-Soviet Russia, and then only among the elite combat specialist
subdivisions ("Spetsnaz") of the former USSR. Only one Americans in history,
Scott Sonnon was inducted as an instructor of this long, noble heritage in
the attempt to bring the world together in fraternity. The training system,
in America, for people of sound mind, improves quality of life, through
Russian health system, sport science advancements, and elite combative
preparation. In the year 2000, one of the sportive derivations of Russian
Martial Art, named Sambo, will be an Olympic sport.
History of Russian Martial Art
Russian Martial Art has a martial evolution which can basically be divided
into four periods of influence. The first period of influence can be
considered the period of tribal combat. Predating the advent of recorded
history combative sports and grappling contests were constantly being held,
particularly during holidays and celebrations. The forefather of Russian
Martial Art, these skills were passed on from father to son, and comprised
tribal rites of passage, from childhood to adulthood.
Between the sixth and tenth century combative sports influenced the
connection between tribal combat and hand-to-hand combat skill due to the
incessant attacks from the peoples of the North and the West. In particular,
a scholar by the name of Prokopiy Caesarean noted the Eastern Slavs to be
fearless fighters, rather skillful in close quarter combat. During this same
period, the Gothic historian, Jordan, also wrote about the Slavs being
courageous warriors.
Not unlike the Chinese, who had their own patron saint of the martial arts
known as Bodhidarma, the Slavs, too, had their patron deity, known as Peroun.
Martial contests and games held in his honor, led to the inevitable creation
of a Slavic school of martial art. The effectiveness of this school of
combat was proven by the victories of both Mstislav the Daring over Rededia,
the prince of the Kosog people, and of Nikita Kozhemiaka over a Hercules of
the Pecheneg people. It is important to note that these sports were
conducted without individual competitive success in mind, but for the mutual
benefit of the tribe and for celebration.
Also, not unlike Chinese martial art, which were outlawed by the Chinese
government during certain periods in history, so too was Russian martial art
denounced, this time by religious groups. Religious prohibition, however,
could not uproot the continued development of the Russian martial
traditions. On the contrary, it was during religious holidays that brave
warriors continued to compete in "Wall-fighting" on the ice, Russian
fisticuffs, stick fighting, and other weapons skill.
The second influential period in the evolution of Russian Martial Art, known
as the Norman period existed from the ninth to the thirteenth century. This
period, with the refinement of metallurgy, saw many developments in the
Russian martial traditions. Warriors adopted the use of the kolchuga (mail
shirt) for body armor, the myech (long straight sword), the shelm (round,
hemispherical iron cap) as helmet, and the long, almond shaped "kite"
shield. The evolution that occurred during this period was a direct result
of enemy attacks from the Western and Northern peoples. The need to adapt to
this particular threat demanded the creation of flexible martial tactics,
both in preparation and in application.
With the third period of influence beginning in the thirteenth century, the
influencial exposure to an Eastern, Mongol and Tatar influenced style of
weaponry began to take form. During this time sabre, the Cossack Shashqa
(long sword that is halfway between a 17th century saber and a 14th century
shamshir [scimitar]), round shields, and eastern style body armor appeared
in general use. A special Cossack weapon was also developed that is terribly
lethal against the Eastern threat: the Nagyka (lead-filled short whip). The
influence is most certainly the result of confrontations between the
Cossacks (the semi-nomadic frontier warriors of Russia) and Ghengis Khan and
his Golden Horde. The four hundred-year occupation of Russia by the Horde
had tremendous impact on the evolution of Slavic martial traditions.
It must be understood that this was an evolution, not an adoption or
internalization of foreign doctrines, which took place during the
occupation. For example, the Slavic word, "yar", signified life's strength
and its manifestation. Considering themselves descendants of Dazhdbog, the
god of sunlight, they lived by a solar calendar and in combat they used
their "yar" strength or energy, which was manifested in their solar plexus.
In eastern martial traditions, internal energy or chi has its own focal
point, which is located in the lower portion of the stomach, the dantien.
Human biorhythms also followed the lunar cycles. However, this coexistence
led to the eventual understanding of the enemy. To defend against an enemy,
one must know one's enemy. Much was learned from this period of occupation.
At the beginning of the seventeenth century the third period saw the gradual
introduction of Western influences, conversely the influence of the Oriental
styles slowly diminished. The continuing refinement of firearms inevitably
led to the exclusivity of Russian Martial Art. The case being that it is
much easier to teach someone how to fire a pistol, than it is to teach him
how to be proficient with autokinetic movement (human biomechanics). At this
point, skills began to be taught exclusively by old families that remained
true to the heritage of ancient Slavic martial traditions.
It is interesting to note that in Western Europe, Musketeers were
distinguished and separated from spearmen, which resulted in significant
disadvantages during battle; one warrior had only a defensive weapon or only
an offensive weapon. For the Russian Martial Artist, whose training is based
on natural movement, any weapon could be employed for any melee objective.
This period served to fortify the exclusivity of Russian Martial Art.
Besides firearms, the Russian Martial Artist possessed an array of diverse
weapons; the latter ones, respectfully called "honest weapons," were
preferred over firearms. As Suvorov's old saying goes, "The bullet is for
the fool, the bayonet for the good guys," and reflected one of the important
tactical goals of combat--movements which quickly transfer to the venue of
hand-to-hand combat, where the Russian Martial Artist possessed a marked
advantage.
The fourth and final period of influence, known as the Global period, begins
this century with the advent of the October Revolution and the introduction
of the Bolshevik regime. During their regime, the Bolsheviks wanted to
repress all nationalistic martial traditions of native lineage. The result
of this was the creation of a group assembled by Stalin to develop a combat
system and national sport that would unite the Soviet State under one
combative tradition and one national sport. The sport was Sambo. Russian
Martial Art is the mother of Sambo, but due to the influence of foreign
"tricks", Sambo soon became a mere curriculum of techniques lacking any high
degree of depth and substance. At higher levels within the military, among
the elite combat subdivisions of the Special Forces ("Spetsnaz"), Russian
Martial Art remained in practice under the concealed title of Combat Sambo
Spetsnaz. Even though classified with the label of "absolute secrecy", the
training was often referred to merely as "The System".
The contemporary training of Russian Martial Art, culminating from each of
these periods of influence and development, is known as ROSS - "All-Russian
Native Self-Defense System". ROSS is the national training system of Russian
Martial Art, approved and recognized by the National Olympic Committee of
Russia as the only representative of Russian Martial Art, within Russia and
abroad.
The original royal family lines of pre-Soviet Russia, during the century of
Soviet oppression, were not without alternatives for their sons. Entering
their sons into the most grueling and dangerous military teams in the USSR,
the Spetsnaz, allowed them to hide the ancient Slavic martial traditions
under the appearance of "Combat Sambo Spetsnaz." The sons of the royal
families continued their training among the special operations units of
Spetsnaz in order to select elite, trustworthy individuals with which to
share the truth about the origin, nature and characteristics of Russian
Martial Art. The difference between Sambo and its mother, Russian Martial
Art, becomes easily distinguishable to the experienced practitioner. One
family, the Golitsin family, survived the entire lifetime of the Soviet
Union. Prince Boris Vassilievich Golitsin, in particular, trained few
individuals including the Founder of ROSS, Golitsin's student prodigy,
Commander Alexander Ivanovich Retuinskih. Prince Golitsin attended the
induction ceremony of the founding father of the American Academy for
Russian Martial Art and Combat Skill, Scott Sonnon, to give special insight
and training and to offer his personal blessings to Commander Retuinskih's
decision to induct Sonnon as a student of Russian Martial Art.
The Global period of influence dealt with the nature of combat during this
century. Therefore, weapons adopted by the Russian Martial Artist included
bayonet-equipped AK47 machine gun, the earlier SKS rifle, even earlier
carbine, the spetsnozh (special forces knife/bayonet), entrenching tools
(shovels), throwing knives, batons, military belts (used as whips and
immobilizing shackles), pistols, sword (European sabre and Cossack shashqa),
axe. The many wars and battles of this century are a horrific testimony to
the effectiveness and longevity of the Russian Martial Art; its vanguards,
the trainers and elite operatives of the Russian Special Forces, waged
campaign after campaign with epochal success. This period of influence
eventually evolved, once again, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union
into a form of civilian empowerment and rejuvinated cultural heritage and
pride.
The first non-Russian in history inducted into this heritage in the hopes of
propagating this Global period of influence was Scott Sonnon, Executive
Director of the American Annex to the Federation (http://users.success.net/karamazov,
amerannex@redrose.net) and Executive Director of the American Academy for
Russian Martial Art and Combat Skill (http://www.redrose.net/amerross,
amerross@redrose.net). Now, a British Annex has been formed in the same hope
of introducing Russian cultural martial traditions Great Britain. The legacy
in the Americas is gaining potency as Mr. Sonnon continues to spread the
message throughout the continent.
Characteristics of Russian Martial Art
A metaphor for understanding martial art may be found in medicine: the two
approaches, allopathic and homeopathic. The allopathic approach combats the
symptom; the homeopathic approach amplifies and utilizes the symptom in the
therapeutic process. The homeopathic approach is seen in very few forms of
martial art, for it orients not on attrition, not on conquering and
controlling adversary, but on non-resistance and amplification. The
homeopathic approach does not resist force (symptom or foe). It does not
impose force against force or resist force with subsequent force, but finds
alignment with the nature of the conflict, empowers it, and guides it to
resolution. Only three martial art forms appear to practice this approach:
Aikido, Tai Chi Chuan, and Russian Martial Art.
The acumen of Russian Martial Art, as a result of the homeopathic approach,
is based upon a unique amalgam of the concepts of non-violence, cooperation,
non-resistance and plasticity.
One could interpret Non-violence as being present in certain esoteric
Chinese schools of martial art, in soft, natural movement, as well as in the
flowing motion of the Morihei Ushieba's Art of Peace. In the coordinated
search for harmony of Aikido and in the soft, sensitive Pushing Hands of Tai
Chi Chuan, one can see indications of the homeopathic approach, of
preferring internal force over external muscular power. However, Russian
Martial Art differs from both the Art of War, which we have seen above, and
the Art of Peace, such as Tai Chi Chuan and Aikido. This should be obvious
for War and Peace are corollaries of the same doctrine. Non-violence is
perpetually confused with Peace. Peace is the cessation of War; and War
exists only in the culture of the practitioners of ad baculum (Might Makes
Right). A bobcat killing a rabbit is not violence or warfare, though the
doctrine of ad baculum would attempt to convince you so. A bobcat killing a
rabbit is seen as violent, and therefore not peaceful, and therefore 'bad'
or 'evil'. Since War is seen as an innate human condition, and not as the
cultural creation it truly is, survival is misperceived as warfare.
Non-violence refers to neither War nor Peace, which were exclusively
fashioned by a specific culture of humans, not to be found anywhere else in
the community of life. War and Peace are two wheels of the same cart,
trudging along unstable in its anthropocentricity, ignorance, and doom.
Non-resistance is often confused with passivity and submission. However,
once again, this is the myopic lens of a warfaring people imposing the One
Right Way of Might Makes Right upon natural behavior. Also, contrarily,
there is the opposite pole, within this culture, that advocate, pacifism
(until a "just" war or until an "unjust" crime must be stopped, conditions
that threaten the cultural lifestyle, but that were created by it and are
inextricably intertwined in it). Pacifism is as abhorrent as aggression,
Peace as detestable as War, since both are complementary of the same
cultural construct. It is this culture, the Totalitarian Agriculturists,
that only when situations are 'Right', expresses no need for 'Might'; or
more appropriately, to ensure that situations stay Right there is a silent
threat ["Cold War"] of Might, and proactive employment of Might to ensure
future Rights. As long as this culture of aggressive/passive is not
threatened, or questioned, and as long as all other viewpoints are silent
(or better, extinct), there will be Peace. True Non-Resistance is ‘going
with the flow’ of life. Non-Resistance does not create force, nor oppose
force. In this culture, societies go to War in the name of Peace. In this
light, it is easily discernible that Pacifism is not Non-resistance; it is
merely another form of resistance: resistance through non-action, the silent
caveat of action, and proactive resistance to create a future state of
Peace.
Cooperation is thought by this culture to promote singularity, when, in
actuality, the true goal of Cooperation is diversity. Cooperation is not
done in the name of ludicrous altruism, but simply as a matter of biological
necessity. There is no concept of magnanimity, no mercy, nor of vengeance or
righteousness. In the absence of the cultural paradigm of War/Peace, a
dolphin assisting a human under shark attack is no more and no less noble
than the rabbit who, though striving valiantly, gives up his life for the
bobcat. Cooperation is only possible when we no longer attempt to conquer,
control, and rule the World, imposing upon it the cultural concepts of
'good' and 'evil'. True Cooperation is only possible if we exist as equal
members in the community of life. Our life does not belong to us alone; it
belongs to the community of life.
Russian Martial Art is distinctly different from all other forms of martial
art in the value of complete Plasticity. Not merely the absence of
resistance, not merely the presence of cooperation, nor merely the position
of non-violence, plasticity is pure adaptability, pure malleability. The
concept of Plasticity is the appreciation that combat, like life, is dynamic
and comprises infinite variables, both internally (infinite scenario
variations) and externally (infinite scenario volume). Logic and research
shows that survival access to an exact, appropriate response to a threat
requires an infinite number of possible maneuvers. The most accurate, recent
studies on functional neuromuscular pathways indicate that approx. 8,500
-10,000 repetitions would be required to ingrain merely ONE non-native or
"foreign" bio-mechanic (physical activity not specific to a particular
individual) into the muscle memory of a human musculo-skeletal frame. This
is only for one "technique" (or called "tricks" in Russian Martial Art).
Thousands upon thousands would be required in order for an individual to
sustain survivability.
Therefore, Russian Martial Art reminds us that we are capable of
spontaneous, innovative, original response to every conflict situation. A
master of Russian Martial Art is, as a result, though completely vulnerable,
utterly impregnable. Not untouched, on the contrary, the Russian Martial Art
master maintains contact until a threat is inoculated (made harmless). The
master absorbs blows effortlessly, contorts the body to accommodate the
threat, manipulates through sensitivity to the subtle alterations in the
application of the threat. The premise is that if one understands how humans
function in the under extreme duress (Survival Arousal Syndrome) and if one
knows the principles of survival, one can create innovative appropriate
reposes to any conflict. "No techniques. Pay attention to the principles,"
is the cry of the Russian Martial Art trainer.
As the President of the International and All-Russia Federation states in
the field manual of Spetsnaz hand-to-hand combat, "All you must do to defeat
adversary is stand there. From any position, any move." Survival Combat is
too organic to compartmentalize it into regions of address. In order to move
freely, unadulterated by abrasive designations of static training, one must
see no barriers, one must possess no limitation, no impossibilities. Due to
this concept, and in contra-distinction to all Eastern Martial Art forms,
the center of gravity is not 'hara' (located two inches below the navel;
called the 'lunar plexus' in Russian Martial Art). The center of gravity is
the solar plexus, granting greater mobility and plasticity to the
practitioner. Stances, as a result, are relaxed and varied, and as are there
no fixed stances, there are no fixed "tricks". No techniques, no stances, no
sequences, no kata, no ranges, no rules....
As a result of the natural, homeopathic approach, there is a great disparity
between Eastern Martial Art and Russian Martial Art in more than just
operational strategy; there are differences in pedagogy and training
methodics..
In order to return to the state of non-violence, plasticity, cooperation and
non-resistance, the training process is more important than the product. In
training, the Russian Martial Artist fights without the aim to "win". This
is a concept misunderstood by both practitioners of the Art of War and the
Art of Peace alike. "It is the fight for movement's sake." Strategy teaches
to align with force, decompose the force, prolongate the application and
trajectory of force, and redirect the force. Years of uncoordination and
stress is unlearned through the rigorous bio-mechanical exercises of Russian
Martial Art. There is no stress or conflict management in Russian Martial
Art, nor stress or conflict reduction, but conflict and stress elimination.
A heavy concentration is placed upon learning the principles of survival:
the nature and climate of conflict, the doctrine and strategies of survival.
Mindfulness is emphasized instead of mindlessness of the Eastern martial
tradition ('mushin'). Mindlessness is necessary in forms of martial art that
are limited to specific abrasive diagrams of behavior and movement.
Mindfulness is available only to the philosophy that accepts no limitations
in behavior.
Due to an early understanding of the principles of survival, the Russian
Martial Art student gains an early autonomy and independence from the
instructor. The student, from the first day of training, exponentially
increases in skill and mental state, for Russian Marital Art is not about
Information, but Transformation. Practitioners of the Art of War and Peace
react violently to hearing this fact. All of the training in the Art of War
and Peace is founded upon practice of specific limited "tricks", or rather
on the monitored paranoia and slow-release of information.
The culture of the Totalitarian Agriculturists is based upon the concept of
'work'. Created by this culture, this concept states that the harder and
longer one struggles, the more noble the person becomes, and more wise and
enlightened and happy. The notion of 'work' is not advocated in this form of
martial art. Natural activity is endorsed, which is our biological heritage.
Russian Martial Art does not require the pharmaceutical accuracy of decades
of long, grueling "work" because the student does not learn limited tricks,
but concepts and bio-mechanics (how to become fully human again). The
student is not taught some artificial creation, the student is reminded of
the natural motions and natural happiness of children. This level of
happiness is held in contempt by the culture of 'work'. Observation of, or
participation in, Russian Martial Art conveys that the training is extremely
grueling. However, the curiosity for members of the Art of War and Peace is
that Russian Martial Art participants are continually, inexhaustibly
laughing, smiling during training: during activity others would perceive as
arduous ‘work’.
The most violent reaction of the practitioners of the Art of War and Peace
comes when they hear that the goal of the Russian Martial Art teacher is to
share with the student how to teach themselves. Every student is an
instructor. Every student is a master of their movement (our biological
heritage), because it is chosen to be that way. Authority and mastery is not
deferred to some external figure. Martial art is not something external to
be sought (and ‘worked’), nor a curriculum to be learned, nor secret tricks
to be discovered, nor massive brawn to be gained. Martial art is within each
creature, natural in some, completely Forgotten in the human culture of ad
baculum.
Benefits of Russian Martial Art
This ancient form of Martial Art is the Art of Survival. Students recapture
natural athletic and learning capabilities, which the Totalitarian
Agriculturists, the ad baculum attritionists, the seekers of power over
others, name them whatever, believe to be limited to only the 'virile youth'
who have not yet been introduced to the "real world", the world of
'responsibility', the world of 'duty and guilt', the world of 'work'. Mental
barriers learned over the course of a lifetime are broken down by
de-conditioning the mind to impossibility, by liberating the student from
the oscillating paradigm of aggressive/passive behavior, by confronting
culturally-imposed fears, by refining the natural awareness of the
hunter-warrior, and by eliminating the culturally-imposed barriers to
happiness, ease, grace, compassion, wisdom and harmony. The results of this
training are incalculable, though marked by increased stamina, improved
breathing capability, enhanced athletic ability, the elimination of
societally-induced stress, the permission to be the authority over ones own
mind, the permission to question and to doubt, and the development of a
spiritual firmness and strong physical presence that is the birthright of
all human beings. Every human is capable of returning to the Law of Nature,
Russian Martial Art, the Art of Survival, is one path.
Scott B.Sonnon
|