Schedule: 7h00
AM to 8h00 AM
Classes
from Monday's to Saturday's.
Personalized
training.
Kailari course with
Kerala government regitestered Certificate.
Teacher Vijukandan Nair.
The Activity Hall is in a rooftop with palm leaves, with view to the surrounding tropical nature.
Kalaripayattu:
Is
an Indian
martial art from
the southern state of Kerala.
One of the oldest fighting systems in existence, it is now
practiced in Kerala and contiguous parts of Tamil Nadu and among
the Malayalicommunity
of Malaysia. It was originally practiced in northern and central
parts of Kerala and the Tulunadu region
of Karnataka.
Kalaripayattu
includes strikes, kicks, grappling, preset forms, weaponry and
healing methods. Regional variants are classified according to
geographical position in Kerala; these are the Northern style
from Malabar region
in north Kerala, the Central style from inner Kerala and the southern
style from Travancore region
of south Kerala. The southern Payattu system is now extinct and the
Tamil style of "Adi Murai" is classified as the southern
kalarippayattu.
The
northern style was practiced in Kerala primarily by
the Nairs and Yatra Brahmins,
as well as the small Chekavar subcaste of the Thiyyas,
some Muslims and Christians. The southern style, called Adi
Murai,
was practiced largely by the Nadars and
has features distinguishing it from its other regional
counterparts.Northern kalaripayattu is based on elegant and flexible
movements, evasions, jumps and weapons training, while the southern
"Adi Murai" style primarily follows the hard impact based
techniques with priority in empty hand fighting and pressure point
strikes. Both systems make use of internal and external concepts.
Some
of the flexibility training methods in northern Kalaripayattu are
applied in Kerala dance forms
and kathakali dancers
who knew martial
arts were
believed to be markedly better than the other performers. Some
traditional Indian dance
schools still incorporate kalaripayattu as part of their exercise
regimen.
Kailari explanation from Wikipedia.
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