Postby SzabolcsWaldmann » Tue Mar 07, 2006 12:13 am
Okay folks, but if you look at our training stuff, it is self defense in the very sense, but not - or not completelly - for our times, is it? You could have defended yourself in the 15th century probably, but that does not necesserely teach you how to survive a _real_ bar fight with knives or whatever. Or a _real_ ambush with 3 people against one. Hoping that you would find a stick or an iron bar you could use as a 'sword' is probably futile, speaking of the art of the sword. Dagger fight is okay if you face a dagger or have one yourselves. Wrestling and historical unarmed fight can be okay. But what you miss in my opinion is that it's a martial art, teaching how to fight. Fight is not self-defense, fight is illegal and will be punished by the law, if you use it. I strongly disagree with the modern law system of self-defense, but one has to live with it. And while it can be different from state to state, how they interpret the word "self-defense", breaking a man's whatever after a hand-lock is not self defense any more, as far as I was told and basing on situations what I've heard of. We have a lawyer here, of course hunagrian, and the system we use can differ from the one in the states; yet essentially self-defense should mean the defense from imminent danger. One points a gun at you, yo kick his weapon from hand or whatever, and finish the move in a hand lock - everything what's happening afterwards will be questioned by the court. If the lawyer of the assilant can prove you had a better opportunity than doing him 15th century harm, you could end up in jail. Please correct me if I'm wrong with this.
That's why i believe that actually no martial art in the world is valid self-defense. A self-defense system should IMHO involve many other factors as well, from psychology, victim mindset, right up to noticing danger in the first place. Then moves, which are _really_ useful if a 160kg bull tries to crack your head in a barfight. I belive there are a lot of moves in historical european martial arts which could be used in the creation of such a system, but not all.
Final notes: many of the fechtbuchs deal actually with juristical duels (gladiatoria, talhoffer for example) or old-style swordsmanship sport (Meyer). All those systems base on the fact that you have one opponent, whose intentions are clear and you can actually prepare yourself for the fight.
If you are drinking in a bar and Todd lurks at you from behind (you missed him when entering the bar - first self-defense error) and hacks you to pieces with a barchair, that's probably a different situation.
I would very much like to read your opinion about this. Please take no offense.
Szab
Order of the Sword Hungary