Product Description
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In China it is known simply as Taiji village. It s real name is
Chenjiagou. When you first arrive at Chen village, you are struck
by how unremarkable it is. Set in the remote countryside of
central Henan, it appears to offer very little. That is until you
check one fact. 3,000 people live in Chen Village. 2,500 practice
Tai Chi Chuan. Like most of rural China, Chen village suffered
badly during the cultural revolution and today, it is still a
poor village populated mostly by farmworkers. Yet as the
birthplace of Tai Chi Chuan it is one of the most significant
locations in Martial Arts. Ive been here a long time now and Ive
met people from all over the world in this little village in the
middle of Hunan, China says Joseph, a student from the UK... and
they ve all got something in common, they re all interested in
Tai Chi. The Chen family, standard bearers of Chen style for 400
years, continue to teach Tai Chi Chuan at the school in the
center of the village. Chen style was at an all time low until
fairly recently and although most of the villagers practice,
outside China, the Chen style was not popular. Chen Xiaoxing who
heads the Chen school says Nothing worked well until the school
was trensferred to me privately ... we may not be as big as
Shaolin temple but we average 200 students every day. Outside
China, Chen Tai chi has spread rapidly due to the elder brother
Chen Xiaowang, 19th generation lineage holder of Chen Taijiquan.
Today, Chen Xiaowang teaches at Chen Tai Chi at schools all over
the world and returns to Chen Village only for seminars and
induction of new disciples. Chen Xiaoxing prefers to stay in Chen
village and run the school. He famously stated I really have no
need to leave Chenjiagou. Everything I need is here. In the
village more schools have now opened due to Chen s rise in
popularity, the largest is run by Chen Bing. In teaching in
America and Europe and talking to students who wanted to stay in
Chen Village, says Bing, I know they needed a school with better
facilities. Adds Chen Xiaowang, The conditions in our day were
very bad and life was unstable but now the conditions are much
better. In this journey to Chen village we discover how
the present generations of the family have rescued the Chen style
from obscurity and why every year thousands of Tai chi students
from all over the world make the long pilgrimage to a small
village in rural China. Hear the stories from the students own
words of living and training in the village and although they are
not expected to farm or work in the fields, they are expected to
live like anyone else does in rural China ... very hard and very
tough! Training here improves your Tai Chi so much says student
Daryl from Seattle... it s like going to the source, back to the
well where the water is sweeter. Joseph adds Just by being here
you imbibe a lot of knowledge of Tai Chi because of the
environment. All the while the documentary it is set to a
backdrop of the school Tai Chi classes taught by Chen Xiaoxing
and Chen Xiaowang with Chen Ziqiang, the school coach. As we
approach our dramatic ending with an induction of new disciples,
John a teacher from the UK says It was the most important day of
my life. Chen Xiaowang told me you are now part of the family, if
you lose balance come back here and we will take care of you. As
our journey unfolds, you will realize just how remarkable Chen
village and its people really are. Featuring Chen Xiaowang, Chen
Xiaoxing, Chen Ziqiang, Chen Bing, Chen Lidong and more. [Chen
Xiaowang is the standard bearer and 19th generation lineage
holder of Chen style Taijiquan. His grandher was the famous
Taijiquan grandmaster Chen Fake. Chen Xiaowang began his study of
Chen Style Taijiquan at the age of seven under his her, Chen
Zhaoxu, and late
Review
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Taijiquan. The word itself conjures up many images, from
imperial bodyguards to octogenar- ians cultivating long life amid
trees in parks. The art has affected millions of people during
the past century and all owe Chen Village a dept of gratitude for
preserving this national treasure. As the birthplace of
taijiquan, scholars have a strong interest in Chen Village.
Practitioners think about it as an inspirational local where
spiritual, medical, and martial traditions were blended into a
unique art named after the pro- found philosophical idea of taiji
and associated with the Chen family name. Many will never have
the rtunity to visit Chen Village and can only guess of its
physical layout, social atmosphere, and to what degree taiji is
practiced there. Jon Braeley pro- duced and directed this film
about the village, providing us with an experience second only to
being there ourselves. A camera close-up shows two young men
engaged face-to-face in a two-person practice. They hold a ball
between them that s designed with the yin-yang symbol. While
delicately holding the sphere, their hands turn, roll, and flow
in unison. The camera slowly backs away, showing the shifting of
weight from leg to leg, with waists turning to direct their
movements. There is no commentary. The director lets you watch as
if you were there to see for yourself how taiji is actually
practiced. The camera backs further away and you can now see
there are at least six pairs of practition- ers in uniforms
designed with white fronts and black backs. However, the flair
does not distract from the fact that they are mutually moving,
shifting, and stepping atop posts at a height roughly three feet
off the ground. They are developing skills. The main instructors
of the village are introduced individually and then they can be
seen together visiting large tombs housing Chen Family ancestors.
Perhaps this is Tomb Sweeping Day, a national holiday where
family members pay respects to their deceased relatives.
Offerings are made of fruit, drink, spirit money made for the
ritual, and incense. These gestures express gratitude for what
all the ancestors have done to benefit their offspring. In this
case, part of the heritage is taijiquan. You can imagine the
feeling of entering Chen Village for the first time. The film
shows its rural setting as the road bypasses fields on flat land
and the first buildings at the village s edge. About 2,500 of the
3,000 inhabitants practice taiji. Most are surnamed Chen. About
200 are masters. What role does taiji play in the lives of the
residents and the visitors who have come here specifically to
study? Only so much can be seen from strolling down the streets.
Producer Braeley goes beyond the superficial by interviewing
leading masters, plus Chinese and foreign students. In addition,
he provides many film sequences of taiji prac- tice. All age
groups are shown practicing, usually in groups of similar age
range. The interviews provide ins of what it is like for
foreigners to live and study in Chen Village. Small, rural,
farming villages in China are usually quite poor and lack modern
conven- iences. Foreigners often choose to stay in large hotels
outside Chen village, and only come to the village to study.
Village life is not exciting, but those who stay in the village
can find it very peaceful compared with big city living. The
simple lifestyle is conducive to introspection. It also lets one
stay focused on daily taiji practice, which leads to rapid
development in knowledge and abilities. Chen Village provides a
unique location for meeting like-minded people from around the
world. Foreigners meet other foreigners, locals, and also others
from all parts of China. Many are knowledgeable about taijiquan s
history and practice. Interviews with leading masters give an
overview of the art. They say that Chen Wangting --Journal of
Asian Martial Arts Magazine
The new documentary by Jon Braeley, Chen Village, is a beautiful
and fascinating journey inside the birthplace of Tai Chi. I
bought the DVD and eagerly watched it a few nights ago when it
arrived. in high definition, the documentary includes
interviews with westerners who have traveled to Chen Village to
study, and it shows a disciple ceremony in which Grandmaster Chen
Xiaowang accepts new disciples. Chen Village (Chenjiagou) is
located in Henan Province. It s a very poor village with 3,000
residents. It s estimated that 2,500 of them practice tai chi,
and 85% of them have the Chen surname. You see parts of the
village here that you havent seen before. When you think of the
birthplace of Tai Chi, you might think of beautiful Chinese
buildings, and there are a few that meet the description, but
Chenjiagou is a dirt-poor farming community. It just happens that
they are the best in the world at their art. The documentary
features Chen Xiaowang, his brother and head of the Chenjiagou
tai chi school Chen Xiaoxing, Chen Ziqiang (son of Xiaoxing) and
Chen Bing (a nephew of Xiaowang and Xiaoxing). It s exciting to
watch, considering I have met and trained with three of the four,
and Chen Xiaoxing stayed in our home for a week back in 2006. Its
also fascinating to see the Chen Xiaoxing s school since I
received a certificate in 2005 as a recognized instructor
connected to the Chen family school. I didn t know until seeing
this DVD that Chen Bing now runs his own school, and he has built
it with foreign students in mind. Some students have been
reluctant in the past to travel to Chen Village because living
conditions are not very good compared with our standards. Chen
Bing decided to build a school that is more welcoming to
Westerners. I was disappointed but not surprised to hear Chen
Bing say that foreign students are usually trained differently
than the Chinese not as tough because they can t take it, and
most of them, he says, are interested in the aspects more
than the martial aspects. Are you listening, people? They don t
consider us to be very serious because we focus on the wrong
things. Real tai chi is not about or meditation it s about
fighting, and it requires a lot of blood, sweat and tears to
become proficient. If you re not sweating, you re not practicing
right. Chen Ziqiang is interviewed, talking about how only one in
a hundred students even those from the Chen Village are able to
persist long enough to become really good at tai chi. I ve been
teaching now for a dozen years and that is something that becomes
clear very quickly when you teach the fact that for every 100
people that come through the door, only one has the determination
and passion to achieve their goals. The interviews with the
western students are very interesting. They find themselves in a
very simple environment when they stay at the Chen Village a much
slower and far less technological lifestyle. A few of the
comments go a little over-the-top, as you can imagine from people
who are dedicated enough to spend a year or two living there. One
student actually breaks down and cries when he speaks about his
devotion to Chen Xiaowang. I understand the devotion, but I tend
to look at these masters as people who are the best at what they
do like Tiger Woods, Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan, all worthy
of tremendous respect. I don t look at them as gods. My wife
watched the documentary with me and strongly objected to the
disciple ceremony where the disciples were kneeling and bowing in
worship before Grandmaster Chen. I didn t react as strongly
because I understand why they re doing it, but it was fascinating
to see a ceremony like this after hearing about it. When you
become a disciple it s a very serious relationship, supposedly
like being admitted to the family, and yet there --Internal
Fighting Arts Magazine
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About the Actor
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Chen Xiaowang is the standard bearer and 19th generation lineage
holder of Chen style Taijiquan. His grandher was the famous
Taijiquan grandmaster Chen Fake. Chen Xiaowang began his study of
Chen Style Taijiquan at the age of seven under his her, Chen
Zhaoxu, and later with his uncles Chen Zhaopi and Chen Zhaokui.
Recognized as one of four "Buddha's Warrior Attendants" the four
outstanding exponents of the 19th generation in Chen village or
Chenjiagou. Today, Chen Xiaowang spends most his time outside
China, teaching at Chen style seminars and training camps all
over the world. Chen Xiaoxing, the younger brother prefers to
stay in Chen village and runs the Tai chi school. He famously
stated, "I really have no need to leave Chenjiagou. Everything I
need is here." His commitment to remain in a rural environment is
both practical and spiritual. Chenjiagou's physical isolation
provides an increasingly rare environment for undiluted,
non-commercialized martial training. The village attracts
outsiders from within China and the globe seeking a focused
training experience that has remained largely unchanged for at
almost four hundred years.
About the Director
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The director, Jon Braeley, has over 25 years experience
travelling and documenting martial arts in Asia. He is a
professional photographer and filmmaker with a passion for China
and Japan and their culture. Empty Mind Films has earned a
reputation as the leading documentary filmmaker of the Asian
genre and of the Martial Arts. It is committed to telling the
stories of the world s top masters of Martial Arts and the
philosophies and cultures of China and Japan. Their films are
authentic, accurate and full of realism, and feature real masters
of their art. Empty Mind Films does not need to sensationalize or
glorify persons or styles in our documentaries. In this way, they
are regarded as the most accurate independent film source for
traditional Martial Arts.
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