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Our story continues in the late 19th Century in
the city of Fut San, Canton Province, Southern China. A famous Wing
Chun instructor, Master Chan Wah Shun, was teaching a small, exclusive
group of students. In fact, his tuition was so high- few ounces
of silver, a tremendous cost at the time-that Wing Chun Kuen had
become "the rich man's kung fu."
The Master's school was located in a compound
owned by a rich family. A seven-year-old child from this family,
Jee Man (later known as Yip Man), watched the classes with a burning
desire to learn. The boy kept pestering Chan Wah Shun to learn,
but he did not take it seriously. In addition to the tuition, the
Master required a level of seriousness from his students that he
never expected a young child to have.
Yip Man went to his family and begged them for
silver to pay Chan Wah Shun to teach him. They finally gave into
the pleas after they saw how desperately he wanted to learn Wing
Chun. Then the boy approached Chan Wah Shun with several taels of
silver (a huge sum of money at that time), and asked the master
to take him as a student. Chan Wah Shun, already an old man, had
not planned to accept any more students, but he was so impressed
with the young boy's passion that he opened his door to Yip Man,
the last disciple he would ever accept.
Master Chan developed such a liking for Yip Man
that he became his favorite student. Yip's elder kung fu brothers,
including Ng Chung So, Lu Yu Ji and Chan Yu Min, were also completely
won over by the boy and all looked after him. Six years later, as
he was near death, the old Master ordered Ng Chung So to teach Wing
Chun to Yip Man. Yip learned from Ng Chung So for three more years.
At the age of sixteen, Yip Man traveled to Hong
Kong to study English at St. Steven's College. There he was introduced
to Leung Bik, second son of Chan Wah Shun's teacher, Leung Jan.
Yip Man studied under Leung Bik for three more years, fully mastering
the art of Wing Chun.
Master Yip Man attended an annual parade in Fut
San with a female cousin. A military officer was attracted to her,
and saw that her companion, wearing delicate, traditional Chinese
clothing, looked more like a gentleman than a fighter. Emboldened,
he made rude advances to her. Yip Man, unable to tolerate this behavior,
used of the Wing Chun simultaneous attack and defense techniques,
knocking the officer to the ground. The officer drew his revolver,
but before he could shoot, Yip grabbed the barrel and used the strength
of his thumb to force open the cylinder, thus rendering it useless.

For a number of years, Yip Man worked as a police
investigator. He continued to hone his skills and was known as a
formidable fighter. However, he did not teach martial arts until,
after the Nationalist government fell; he moved to Hong Kong and
established a Wing Chun school. His student base grew as the school
moved around several time. Among his students in the 1950's were
Chan Shing (Chris Chan) and the late Bruce Lee.
Even at seventy, Yip Man had the strength of a
young man. One night, as he was taking a walk, two young hoods with
knives tried to rob him. He used the Pak Sao technique to knock
one hood's knife up and out of harm's way, while simultaneously
kicking him backwards. Then he kicked the other youth before he
had time to figure out what to do.
Yip Man was an innovator who varied his method
of instruction according to the knowledge, talents, habits and interests
of the individual student. He was also very selective of his students,
as was his orginal Master, Chan Wah Shun. This is illustrated by
one of Master Yip's famous quotes: "No doubt it is difficult
for a disciple to select a teacher, but it is even more difficult
for a teacher to select a disciple."
It is impossible in a short treatise to encapsulate
Grandmaster Yip Man's contribution to Wing Chun. However, some basic
principles can be observed. He remained true to the underlying tenet
of traditional Wing Chun: that the art should remain direct, practical
and simple, without fancy embellishment designed more to impress
than to serve as an effective fighting technique. Without Grandmaster
Yip Man, the Wing Chun system would most probably still be a very
secret art taught only to a few, trusted individuals.
Written by: Joe Vaughan
Edited by: Sifu's Ken Chun and Tito Pedruco
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