The malays' rally cry from the ancient times is always to fight to protect, for the sake of our religion, race and nation. We only shed our blood for Agama, Bangsa, Negara. We are a gentle race with adab (courtesy and manners), but if provoked, if attacked, our spirits will be called out and we will rise as one. We have a line on the earth that shouldn't be crossed. We are tolerant but not when it comes to our religion, our King and Sultans for they are representing our race, and our country. If we are provoked too much to a point, we can enter into a state of 'amuk' or mengamuk, a trance state where one is focussed on destroying all the enemy witout fear of death. That person will only stop when all the enemy is down. May Allah protect us all. Syukur alhamdulillah. Salam from Malaysia.
Wtf 😮 this is interesting beyond word's. . Bruce Lee r.i.p explained something like that in his book and this man decided to record it. Wow It's like these guys are reading your mind.. one love
Training some drill may not make you be the best martial artist, atleast to safe our life or minimize injuries. Firearms illegal in Most south east Asian country, and "blade culture" still strong and it happen often. Just search "begal" or "carok" and you will know what is looks like.
bro kamu faham english ngak ,apa yg guru maul jelaskan tiada kaitan dgn tenaga dalam yg dijelaskan ini tentang menbaca gerakan dan jarak musuh dia sebutkan dia melihat pada bahu untuk menebak arah serangan
You can't "read a knife attack". You can do training exercises like this and eventually learn how your individual class mates swing around a knife but these exercises will not in any way prepare you against a real life knife attack. If anything exercises like this will give you a false sense of security. Chances are you won't even see the knife before it hits you.
hmmm, this guy comes from a culture , which has knife attacks in combat ( for generations upon generations ) So, let's humbly assume that only the fittest survived. Couldn't we ?
Really depends on how skilled you are vs your attacker. Some people are really crap, especially when angry/drunk etc. Let us know if you have a better method. There is no full-proof defence but is that a reason to not learn anything? Anyone who has any sense of confidence at all when they have a knife pulled on them is doing well.
yes, because you think a knife attack, just attention to a knife only. while in silat is trained to read attacks from the opponent's shoulder movements n opponent's steps, n so trained the correct reflect (if you unconsciously touched the fire, what would you do? stay still, or jump as far away as possible, or just shift your body slightly to avoid further injury) in silat always pay attention to all body movements. silat also practice alertnes about the sound around (useful if conditions are ambushed or hunting). why someone can type a sentence on the laptop without looking at the keyboard? why someone can know a animal just from the sound? ..in silat is very important about awareness, positioning n refference points. ..to increase our chances to survive....
@@Bengun67 How many knife attacks has he survived? If the answer is none then the culture he grew up in has no bearing on the practicality of these techniques. You could say the same about literally everyone alive today, we are ALL descended from the fiercest of humanity, Vikings, Samurai, Gladiators, Mongols etc... Doesn't mean any of us have inherited their fighting ability.
@@tommoore7348 As it happens, yes I do have a couple of superior techniques that are FAR more likely to help you survive a knife attack assuming your attacker is generous/sloppy enough to alert you to the presence of their knife in time for you to react. 1. RUN. 2. Learn to negotiate your way out of hostile situations before your attacker has decided he needs to hurt/kill you at all costs. Now I know what you are going to say, you can't always run or negotiate, what happens when you're backed into a corner? I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news but once you are backed into that corner the attacker is in full control, it will be luck that gets you out alive, the focus should always be on ensuring you AREN'T backed into said corner. And yes, unfortunately sometimes that simply isn't possible. If your attacker wants to stab you, most likely its going to happen before you even know it. Now if you do manage to "read their shoulder movements" before they throw a wild, elaborate swing like the ones demonstrated in the video, I refer you to technique number 1, THAT IS THE BEST POSSIBLE TIME TO RUN. Don't under ANY circumstances do what the instructor in this video does and raise your hand towards the knife. Presenting a limb to be cut is suicide. I'm not saying learn nothing, quite the contrary, "verbal judo" is the best "street fighting" technique any of us can learn to navigate our way out of survivable hostile situations. What we shouldn't be doing is teaching people techniques that have no basis in reality, false confidence in many cases is more dangerous than knowing nothing at all. I am willing to be proven wrong. If anyone can show me one piece of CCTV footage where somebody survives a knife attack using anything resembling Silat techniques that will at least prove that in CERTAIN scenarios, the techniques have practical application. We can then investigate that person's background and determine whether it is realistic to extrapolate their fighting ability onto the majority population - i.e. are they from a military background? If so, is it reasonable to assume a civilian will react to a life or death situation the same way as someone who has been in such situations before? And most relevant to this particular video, were they able to "read the knife attack" before it happened? Either way, the case for teaching civilians empty handed knife defense is a difficult one to justify if you are legitimately concerned with the safety of your students.
Prison shankings are basically assassinations, which are usually due to affiliations, perceived slights, etc. which basically have little overlap on knife assaults outside of prison except in cases where the victim is in a gang.
Even taking this into account, this is beyond the point. The point is that you train with an attack that telegraphs at first so you get used to the different parts of the body that will send the cue. Then you move on to shorter attacks, but still recognize the same body parts moving. This is a didactic, not a fair representation of an attack.
This applies to punching in general...
Yes, it does because there are several spots on the attacker's body that give you a bird's Eye View of the attacker's every move.
You must having good heart to winning the fight, without bad relationship of friends, neighborhood.. in poin of view from silat philosophy..
That was so good to watch him showing where the knife coming from.
Sir you are a gem to the martial arts community, Thank You!
He have sharingan
mokhtar mohamad H hahahhahahhah
Your comments killed me
mokhtar mohamad H no he has observation haki
Thanks a lot for posting this video!
Whoahhhh, you constantly amaze me Maul 😬👍
Nice tips!!
Jedi!
Damn..that's good tips..
so good
Amazing ❤❤❤
He has the force
The malays' rally cry from the ancient times is always to fight to protect, for the sake of our religion, race and nation. We only shed our blood for Agama, Bangsa, Negara.
We are a gentle race with adab (courtesy and manners), but if provoked, if attacked, our spirits will be called out and we will rise as one. We have a line on the earth that shouldn't be crossed.
We are tolerant but not when it comes to our religion, our King and Sultans for they are representing our race, and our country.
If we are provoked too much to a point, we can enter into a state of 'amuk' or mengamuk, a trance state where one is focussed on destroying all the enemy witout fear of death.
That person will only stop when all the enemy is down.
May Allah protect us all.
Syukur alhamdulillah. Salam from Malaysia.
salam serumpun. different country, one martial arts
Great
Nice capris
wow
Neo vs Smith 1999 final fight
Love u 2 see sir,,,,take it positively
No he has byakugan...from hinata hahaha
What…. The fuck? How?
Wtf 😮 this is interesting beyond word's. . Bruce Lee r.i.p explained something like that in his book and this man decided to record it. Wow
It's like these guys are reading your mind.. one love
What...???
SWITCH HANDS DAMMIT!
a
z
Apa ilmu ya yang di dapet
ilmu learn to speak englisg
Bullshit for self defense.
However he is a great teacher about Silat.
Training some drill may not make you be the best martial artist, atleast to safe our life or minimize injuries.
Firearms illegal in Most south east Asian country, and "blade culture" still strong and it happen often. Just search "begal" or "carok" and you will know what is looks like.
menebak gerakan lawan dengan energi tenaga dalam
tenaga dalamnya tingkat tinggi
bro kamu faham english ngak ,apa yg guru maul jelaskan tiada kaitan dgn tenaga dalam yg dijelaskan ini tentang menbaca gerakan dan jarak musuh dia sebutkan dia melihat pada bahu untuk menebak arah serangan
Mentaliti indonesia bro. Sikit² tenaga dalam. Langsung tiada pembelajaran efektif
Tenaga dalam itu pernafasan bro, klo di barat biasanya disebut energi, di jepang "ki" klo di china "chi/qi" sama semua itu
@@simonallison9007 tarekan tenaga itu adalah tenaga dalam... bukan sikit2 tenaga dalam
Aruk
You can't "read a knife attack".
You can do training exercises like this and eventually learn how your individual class mates swing around a knife but these exercises will not in any way prepare you against a real life knife attack.
If anything exercises like this will give you a false sense of security.
Chances are you won't even see the knife before it hits you.
hmmm, this guy comes from a culture ,
which has knife attacks in combat ( for generations upon generations )
So, let's humbly assume that only the fittest survived. Couldn't we ?
Really depends on how skilled you are vs your attacker. Some people are really crap, especially when angry/drunk etc. Let us know if you have a better method. There is no full-proof defence but is that a reason to not learn anything? Anyone who has any sense of confidence at all when they have a knife pulled on them is doing well.
yes, because you think a knife attack, just attention to a knife only.
while in silat is trained to read attacks from the opponent's shoulder movements n opponent's steps, n so trained the correct reflect (if you unconsciously touched the fire, what would you do? stay still, or jump as far away as possible, or just shift your body slightly to avoid further injury)
in silat always pay attention to all body movements.
silat also practice alertnes about the sound around (useful if conditions are ambushed or hunting).
why someone can type a sentence on the laptop without looking at the keyboard?
why someone can know a animal just from the sound?
..in silat is very important about awareness, positioning n refference points.
..to increase our chances to survive....
@@Bengun67 How many knife attacks has he survived? If the answer is none then the culture he grew up in has no bearing on the practicality of these techniques. You could say the same about literally everyone alive today, we are ALL descended from the fiercest of humanity, Vikings, Samurai, Gladiators, Mongols etc...
Doesn't mean any of us have inherited their fighting ability.
@@tommoore7348
As it happens, yes I do have a couple of superior techniques that are FAR more likely to help you survive a knife attack assuming your attacker is generous/sloppy enough to alert you to the presence of their knife in time for you to react.
1. RUN.
2. Learn to negotiate your way out of hostile situations before your attacker has decided he needs to hurt/kill you at all costs.
Now I know what you are going to say, you can't always run or negotiate, what happens when you're backed into a corner?
I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news but once you are backed into that corner the attacker is in full control, it will be luck that gets you out alive, the focus should always be on ensuring you AREN'T backed into said corner.
And yes, unfortunately sometimes that simply isn't possible.
If your attacker wants to stab you, most likely its going to happen before you even know it.
Now if you do manage to "read their shoulder movements" before they throw a wild, elaborate swing like the ones demonstrated in the video, I refer you to technique number 1, THAT IS THE BEST POSSIBLE TIME TO RUN.
Don't under ANY circumstances do what the instructor in this video does and raise your hand towards the knife. Presenting a limb to be cut is suicide.
I'm not saying learn nothing, quite the contrary, "verbal judo" is the best "street fighting" technique any of us can learn to navigate our way out of survivable hostile situations.
What we shouldn't be doing is teaching people techniques that have no basis in reality, false confidence in many cases is more dangerous than knowing nothing at all.
I am willing to be proven wrong.
If anyone can show me one piece of CCTV footage where somebody survives a knife attack using anything resembling Silat techniques that will at least prove that in CERTAIN scenarios, the techniques have practical application.
We can then investigate that person's background and determine whether it is realistic to extrapolate their fighting ability onto the majority population - i.e. are they from a military background? If so, is it reasonable to assume a civilian will react to a life or death situation the same way as someone who has been in such situations before? And most relevant to this particular video, were they able to "read the knife attack" before it happened?
Either way, the case for teaching civilians empty handed knife defense is a difficult one to justify if you are legitimately concerned with the safety of your students.
too bad knife attacks don't usually happen at that distance.
Ask inmates in Prison or just watch some videos.
ComplexBlackness are you going to prison ??
In normal life All the knife attack not aim to kill you but to steal your money
Go read Rory Miller's Meditations on Violence and see what a knife attack looks like in a "normal life".
Or "how to completely miss the point of a video"
Prison shankings are basically assassinations, which are usually due to affiliations, perceived slights, etc. which basically have little overlap on knife assaults outside of prison except in cases where the victim is in a gang.
Even taking this into account, this is beyond the point. The point is that you train with an attack that telegraphs at first so you get used to the different parts of the body that will send the cue. Then you move on to shorter attacks, but still recognize the same body parts moving. This is a didactic, not a fair representation of an attack.