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This
account of the history of Wing Chun is based on stories
as told by Master Ip Ching.
Legend has it that Wing Chun
was developed by Ng Mui, a Buddhist Abbess at the Shaolin
Monastery of Mt. Sung in Honan Province. During the rule
of Emporer K’angshi in the Ching Dynasty (1662-1722),
the Manchu government grew fearful of the growing power
of the Shaolin Monastery and attacked it. After several
failed attempts, the Manchu army finally succeeded in burning
the monastery to the ground. The surviving monks fled and
scattered, among them Ng Mui. While taking refuge at a Shaolin
Temple on Mt. Tai Leung, Ng Mui met Yim Wing Chun, the daughter
of a merchant in a nearby village. Yim Wing Chun had attracted
the attention of a local bully, so Ng Mui took Yim Wing
Chun under her tutelage and instructed her in Kung Fu. The
system Ng Mui had developed and taught to Yim Wing Chun
took advantage of the various weaknesses that Ng Mui perceived
in other Shaolin systems. As time passed, the system of
Kung Fu would become known as Wing Chun, after Ng Mui’s
first student.
Now,
whether or not Ng Mui and Yim Wing Chun existed or not,
we do not really know. The earliest practitioner of Wing
Chun who is documented in the history of Chinese opera books
is Tan Sau Ng, of whom it is said his tan sau technique
was “peerless throughout the land.” Little else
is known of Tan Sau Ng.
Wong
Wa Bo was an actor in an opera which traveled on the “Red
Boats” who knew Wing Chun (some say he learned it
from Leung Lan Kwai). During his travels, he made the acquaintance
of Leung Ye Tay, who worked the boats with his pole; that
is he pushed the boats in the waterways. Leung Ye Tay was
also a student of Kung Fu, and had learned the Lok Dim Boon
Kwan (six and a half strike pole) from Gee Shin, who was
reputed to be one of the five elder monks who escaped the
burning of the Shaolin Monastery. Wong Wa Bo and Leung Ye
Tay exchanged techniques and together they refined the pole
techniques by applying Wing Chun principles, such as centerline
theory, economy of motion, chew ying (facing), and the like.
Leung
Ye Tai eventually taught the Wing Chun system to Dr. Leung
Jan of Fatsan, located in Southern China. Leung Jan was
a pharmacist by occupation and enjoyed a good, cultured
life. Leung Jan became an accomplished Wing Chun fighter
and brought public attention to the art of Wing Chun. Leung
Jan passed his knowledge onto his two sons, Leung Chun and
Leung Bik, and to a street vendor by the name of Chan Wa
Shun. Chan was reported to be a man of the streets and not
well educated, and had numerous opportunities to use his
Wing Chun skills. Chan Wa Shun took on 16 disciples with
the last one being the 13 year old Ip Man. |

Ip
Man |
Ip
Man, who grew up to become a police officer in Fatsan, studied
with Chan Wa Shun until Chan’s death. Ip Man initially
did not teach his Wing Chun to the public, only to his two
sons, Ip Chun and Ip Ching. During World War II the Japanese
invaded China and plundered the Ip family estate. In 1949
Ip Man moved to Hong Kong and began to teach Wing Chun for
a living. In addition to his two sons, Ip Man had many famous
students, including Bruce Lee (Lee Jun Fan), Wong Shun Leung,
Hawkins Cheung, Tsui Sheung Tin, Moy Yat, and William Cheung.
Around 1970 Ip Man retired from actively teaching, passing
away in 1972 at the age of 81. In 1968 Ip Man had founded
the Hong Kong Ving Tsun (Wing Chun) Athletic Association,
which carries on his memories and teachings to this very
day.
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Ip
Man had two sons, Ip Chun and Ip Ching, to whom he passed
on his legacy and teachings of Wing Chun. Ip Ching began
his training at a young age with his father, but was forced
to pause his training when Ip Man moved to Hong Kong. In
1962, Ip Ching moved to Hong Kong after graduating college
and once again took up his Wing Chun training under his
father. Ip Ching retired in 1994 and devoted himself to
teaching Wing Chun full time. He continues to teach lessons
privately at his home and at the Ip Man Ving Tsun Athletic
Association school in Hong Kong.
Sifu
Sam Hing Fai Chan has studied Wing Chun under both Masters
Ip Chun and Ip Ching, however the bulk of his study was
under Master Ip Ching. A member and certified instructor
through the Hong Kong Ving Tsun Association, Sifu Chan was
also a founding member and former director of the United
States Ip Ching Ving Tsun Athletic Association, and has
acted as an interpreter on numerous occasions for Ip Ching’s
U.S. visits. Sifu Chan is also founding member and current
director of the International Wing Chun Martial Art Association,
and is much sought after for his Wing Chun knowledge. Sifu
Chan has been teaching Wing Chun at his Kwoon in Grand Rapids,
MI since 1976, which is one of the largest Wing Chun schools
in the United States. |
Ip
Ching

Sam
Chan with Ip Ching
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