Kung Fu Academy Of Chicago

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Kung Fu Academy of Chicago

Master Kwan demonstrating with two students on fighting dual attackers.

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Description of Praying Mantis:

The Praying mantis is a carnivorous insect that takes up a deceptively humble posture when it is searching for food. At rest, the mantis' front forelegs are held together in a posture resembling prayer or deep thought. These front legs are equipped with rows of sharp spikes that the mantis uses to hold its prey.

The mantis waits motionless for an appropriately sized insect (though larger mantises have been known to eat small reptiles and birds) to come within range. The mantis often patiently waits until the insect is close enough, then strikes with its forelegs, capturing the insect. However, sometime the mantis actually pursues the insect by creeping closer. It is surprising how slowly and fluidly the mantis can move. As the mantis approaches, it often sways back and forth, perhaps mimicing the foliage swaying in the breeze that it resembles. When the time is right, the mantis suddenly leans foward and its front legs snap out and grab the insect.

The mantis almost always starts eating the insect while it is still alive, and almost always goes straight for the insect's neck: this way, the mantis makes sure that the struggling of the insect stops quickly.

Mantises are famous in many cultures. In some cultures, they are considered holy. Some believe that if you are lost, and you see a mantis, that you should go in the direction it is facing: that will lead you home. Others think that the mantis always 'prays' facing Mecca. The mantis is also famous for its almost human mating habits -- when the male and female are done mating, the female eats the male...

Praying mantises in North America are usually green or brown, and adult insects range in size from 2 to 6 inches. Common mantises in the United States include the Chinese Mantis and the Carolina Mantis. Mantis babies usually hatch from their frothy egg-masses in late April or May, or whenever the weather begins to warm up, depending on the region. Mantis babies are wingless, but otherwise resemble the adults (this is an important distinction in classifying insects). By August, mantises that have survived are adult, and by September or October, most of them die.

In the bodies of some species of mantis there is a hollow chamber. A fairly recent discovery is that these chambers provide the mantis with a means for detecting one of their most feared predators: bats. Apparently, the mantis in flight will drastically change its flight pattern (often hurling directly to the ground in a crazy spiral) when certain frequencies of sound are 'heard' by the mantis. This was established in an experiment involving some mantises, a very large gymnasium, and some sophisticated cameras and recordings of bats. The researchers discovered, as well, that the louder the bat noises were played, the more drastic the mantis' flight pattern would change.

 

Master Kwan posing with some of his students during a break from training.

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Master Kwan (left) conversing with Grandmaster Hsu Fan Yuen from Tai Chi Academy (center) and Master Andrew Lee from Bei Shaolin (right)
 Master Kwan has been actively involved in Chinese Kung-Fu since the seventies. Traveling to and from British Hong Kong during that era, he returned to the United States specializing in the martial arts style of Nothern Shaolin Seven Star Praying Mantis Kung-Fu. However his goal of establishing a traditional martial arts school in America did not stop him from training with Grandmaster Chung-Li in Asia. During the creation of the Kung-Fu Academy his knowledge of Kung-Fu flourished while remaining an assistant to Ming-Choy-ly. Instructing traditionally within the confines of Chicago's "Chinatown" district until the mid eighties, Master Kwan participated in ceremonial Lion Dancing, hosted various private as well as college seminars, and become one of the conerstones within the Midwest Black Belt Federation (MBBF). As a well known Midwest Circuit promoter, Master Kwan's contributions to Asian martial arts have earned him various awards from Tom Letuli, Greg Manson, and Chuck Norris (Kick Drugs out of America).
Moving to the Rogers Park area in the late eighties Master Kwan continues to teach his martial arts style to those which are diligent enough to undertake the arduous training involved. Today, even as an experienced Sifu he continues to train with some of the most recognized martial arts masters of China.