Wing Chun

Legend has Wing Chun Kung Fu being developed by a Shaolin Nun. Wing Chun is an art mainly for females, people of smaller stature. Women being smaller, may not over power their attackers. The theory behind Wing Chun is that it uses the redirection of force to counter attacks and relies on the center line for offense and defense. Wing Chun is a close range fighting style that emphasize sensitivity, redirecting attacks, and quick direct strikes. Although there are no flashy moves, three forms and two weapons. Wing Chun has a large following around the world. Introduced by Yip Man and made popular by Bruce Lee, a basis for his Jeet Keun Do. 

"Grandmaster Yip Man spent his whole life as champion of the cause of Wing Chun Kung Fu. He was responsible for advancing Wing Chun Kung Fu to its eminence today. He was the first Sifu ever to open a Wing Chun school accessible to the general public.
Yip Man began with his training under Chan Wah Soon, the first of three Wing Chun masters to instruct him. He started his training at a very young age. Chan accepted him as both his youngest and his final student. Yip Man trained under Chan until Chan's death in 1905, thereafter continuing his Wing Chun with Ng Chung So, one of Chan's top disciples. After two more years of study, Yip Man left Fatshan for Hong Kong and enrolled in St. Stephen's College at Stanley to pursue an academic education.

While enrolled at St. Stephen's, a classmate, hearing of Yip's training in kung fu, dared him to challenge an old kung fu practitioner living on a boat anchored in Hong Kong Bay. Yip Man accepted the dare and duly sought out and challenged the old man. The old man accepted his challenge and, despite Yip Man's growing reputation as an unmatched fighter, beat him handily. Only after his defeat did he discover that the old man was actually master Leung Bik, a direct descendant of the original Wing Chun lineage reaching back to Wing Chun herself. After the melee, Leung took Yip Man as his only student in the art and advanced his Wing Chun even further, both expanding his theoretical grounding in the art and refining his technique.

He returned to Fatshan at age 24 and found a position as the Captain of the Local Police Patrols of Namhoi. Yip Man worked as a law enforcement officer for several years, teaching Wing Chun in his spare time, but always, in accordance with Wing Chun tradition, restricting his lessons to a just a few carefully selected students.
He continued in this manner until China succumbed to the Communist revolution in 1949. Historical accounts seem to concur that he felt forced to flee mainland China and return to British-occupied Hong Kong as a consequence of the communist uprising. In any case, at the age of 54 he abandoned his family home and fortune to seek sanctuary off shore.
Reaching Hong Kong alone and destitute, facing certain poverty, Yip Man quickly fell back on his martial arts expertise to earn a living. He decided to break with the Wing Chun tradition of limiting instruction to a select few and opened a public Wing Chun school in the union hall building for restaurant workers.

However Yip Man established his teaching practice in Hong Kong, he managed to create with it the seeds of a martial arts revolution that, through the efforts of some of those he taught, would take root in countries spanning the world. Though Yip Man himself never taught outside the Chinese sphere of influence, his disciples carried his Wing Chun around the globe. Bruce Lee was one of them. Perhaps no other name is spoken in Wing Chun circles with greater reverence than that of Grandmaster Yip Man. A teacher of the art until his death in 1972, Yip Man is often credited with moving Wing Chun from an obscure fighting system known only in China to a world-renowned style of kung fu studied by thousands."
Written by Robert Ciapparelli

Wing Chun Instructors - Master David Chan, Sifu Barrie Schulha, Sifu Johnny Kwan, Sifu Edmond Poon, Sifu George Born

"Grandmaster Yip Man" 

Master Chan's Sifu