Youfu Li, the head judge for the NTD International Traditional Chinese Martial Arts Competition, started learning martial arts from a young age.
In the popular imagination, Chinese martial arts are often reduced to a kinetic spectacle—gravity-defying leaps, rapid-fire strikes, and the cinematic clash of steel. We watch with bated breath as action heroes display abilities that seem to blur the line between human skill and fantasy. Yet, strip away the wire-work and the special effects, and one is left with a profound question: Is this art form merely a mechanism of violence, or is it a vessel for a deeper, more ancient wisdom?
Master Youfu Li, a champion martial artist and the head judge for the NTD International Traditional Chinese Martial Arts Competition, suggests that the answer lies in the etymology of the practice itself. In Chinese, martial arts are called Wu Shu. The character for “Wu” is a compound of two distinct pictographs: one meaning “to stop,” and the other representing a “weapon” (specifically a ge, or dagger-axe).
Thus, the foundational philosophy of authentic martial arts is not to inflict violence, but to cease it. “Wu means to stop violence with a weapon,” Li explains, tracing the concept back to the Yellow Emperor. It is a discipline where the ultimate mastery is not the destruction of an enemy, but the preservation of peace—a paradox where one cultivates the capacity for lethal force precisely so it never needs to be used.
Over centuries, as the necessity for hand-to-hand combat on the battlefield waned with the advent of modern weaponry, Wu Shu began its sublimation from pure combat technique into cultural heritage. It evolved into an aesthetic pursuit, a language of the body that speaks through rhythm, speed, and flow.
Today, traditional martial arts are often encountered as “routines”—sequences of movement that function like a visual composition. “It’s like performing a show,” Li observes. “There must be a beginning and an end, rhythm, speed, attack, and defense.” When executed by an experienced practitioner, these movements transcend athleticism to become art. The coordination of the body, where every muscle and tendon unites to direct force in a singular direction, creates a visceral beauty that resonates across cultures.
This universal appeal is potent. Li recalls meeting a young boy in the Czech Republic who was practicing “Wusong De-Shackles Boxing,” a rare and complex style almost lost in its homeland of China. The boy had learned it from a German teacher, illustrating how the aesthetic and spiritual gravity of Chinese martial arts has transcended borders, captivated by the sheer beauty of the form.
However, the beauty of the movement is hollow without the moral scaffolding that supports it. In the realm of traditional Wu Shu, character is paramount. When a master selects a disciple, integrity is the primary qualification, often valued above raw physical potential. This creates a lineage of “chivalrous spirit”—the courage to stand against injustice and the self-confidence that negates the need for petty aggression.
Master Li invokes the historical example of Han Xin, the brilliant general of the Han Dynasty, to illustrate the highest tier of martial wisdom. As a young man, highly skilled in combat, Han Xin was challenged by a local bully who demanded he either fight or crawl between his legs. Despite possessing the skill to defeat—or even kill—the antagonist, Han Xin chose the humiliation of crawling.
He recognized that a frivolous street dispute was beneath the dignity of his skills and carried unnecessary risk. Years later, this same capacity for strategic restraint allowed him to win a decisive war without a direct massacre. Facing the army of Xiang Yu, Han Xin ordered his troops to sing the folk songs of the enemy’s homeland at night. The melancholic melodies broke the enemy’s spirit, causing mass defections and ending the conflict.
“He won a battle without moving a single soldier,” Li notes. This aligns with Sun Tzu’s apex strategy in The Art of War: to subdue the enemy without fighting. In modern life, this translates to conflict resolution—evaluating situations to avoid harm to oneself and others, proving that the sharpest sword is the one that remains in the scabbard.
Beyond the external conflicts, martial arts is also a dialogue with one’s own physiology and spirit. The practice is often categorized into external styles—such as Chang Quan or Shaolin, which demand the explosive vigor of youth—and internal styles like Xing-yi and Ba-gua, which focus on structure and intent.
Yet, regardless of the style, the authentic tradition emphasizes the cultivation of Qi (energy) and the stillness of the mind. It is not merely physical exercise; it is a moving meditation. Master Li points to the importance of meditative practices that regulate breathing and allow the meridians to open. When the mind settles, the blood vessels expand, the heart’s workload decreases, and the body finds a state of restoration.
For Li, who practices Falun Dafa meditation to refine his inner strength, the physical and the spiritual are inextricable. The coordination required to focus all bodily forces into a single strike is the same focus required to align one’s character with the principles of truth and compassion.
As the NTD International Traditional Chinese Martial Arts Competition returns to New York, it serves as more than a contest of skill. It is a revival of this “divinely inspired” culture—a reminder that the ultimate goal of the warrior is not to conquer the world, but to master the self, stop evil, and promote goodness.
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