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  • #89949

    Re: Slow Progress

    Yes for ” book smart ” people still needs to learn the correct movements from experienced instructors. thumbsup

    #89946

    Re: Different Dans in Krav maga

    I talked with an IDF veteran today about how closely fasting is bound around Purim and defending yourself both physically and spiritually. Fasting has several good health benefits cleansing your system and filling your body up with more oxygen for physical fitness exersices. The last step is to break the fasting and eat an meal in preparation for a bloody battle on the battlefield or a fight in the sports arena.

    #88730

    Re: Different Dans in Krav maga

    :woohoo: This old thread brought a smile to my face. 😎

    #87410

    Re: Different Dans in Krav maga

    I ran into a IDF veteran who works with the Israeli embassy the another day and we were talking about being physically fit and the martial arts. He is on the Israeli judo team. Not somebody you want to mess around with. His agility, speed and reaction time is un-believable watching him from a safe distance as he went through his hand to hand combat demonstration at slow, medium and fast speeds. He did not even break a sweat and he was not even breathing heavily at all. Truly a frightening man to watch from a safe distance. His footwork is like feather on air. That is a top notch physically fit man right there. We talked about this thread at length. He said some things with Krav Maga could get better with time. 😎

    #86650

    Re: For the First Time Ever: Official IDF Krav Maga Tutorial

    quote TheDarkKnight:

    http://youtu.be/S7ArFlExjws

    They uploaded the newest video in the series!

    Saw that and I thought of Lions & how naive he is about the arabs. Tried to make him understand how it is different over there. :banghead:

    Maybe a trip to Israel would open his eyes to the realities of being Jewish. Pow-Pow :box:

    Victory over the arabs. :woohoo:

    #86649

    Re: What martial art books do you read ?

    Has anyone read this book ? Thoughts ?

    http://www.amazon.com/Judo-Unleashed-Essential-Techniques-Intermediate/dp/0071475346/ref=pd_sim_b_3

    #86559

    Re: Fist Hardening.

    I do not know why the Japanese do that either.

    Some of you may be interested in the history of boxing which is actually much older.

    http://www.amazon.com/Boxing-Jewish-Sport-Excelsior-Editions/dp/1438436084

    Boxing has been going on since biblical times. It was not called boxing in the days of ancient Israelites being warriors to protect the Abraham David & Solomon kingdoms.

    #86545

    Re: The round kick in Krav Maga: old way vs new way. Pros and Cons.

    Wondering what today’s biomechanics research is going to show when it comes to the leg’s bones, the muscular ligaments and foot placement right down to the toes will show ?

    #86515

    Re: Fist Hardening.

    On a different subject of fist hardening. Boxers usually do not harden their fists even in the old days when bare fisting contests were held in the 1800-1900’s.

    This one is a Jewish boxer.

    The Auschwitz Boxer – A Surviving Holocaust Story
    A Holocaust survivor recalls “Prisoner 77,” who boxed his way into survival at the notorious Auschwitz death camp.

    By Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
    First Publish: 12/26/2012, 7:36 AM

    The memory of Prisoner Number 77 still brings hope to the heart of Auschwitz survivor Tadeusz Sobolewicz as he remembers how his friend boxed for bread in the notorious Nazi German camp.

    The story of fellow inmate and boxer Tadeusz Pietrzykowski has been all but forgotten nearly seven decades after the end of World War II, AFP reported.

    The very idea of sport at Auschwitz seems preposterous.

    The camp was set up by the Nazis in southern Poland after their 1939 invasion to hold and kill Polish political prisoners, and was to become a hub of the Holocaust, during which the Nazis murdered six million Jews.

    Polish author Marta Bogacka, in a new book “The Auschwitz Boxer”, has brought the story of Pietrzykowski, little known outside Poland, back into the spotlight.

    To Sobolewicz, 89, it still seems like yesterday.

    “The first bout took place on a Sunday in March 1941 next to the Auschwitz kitchens, between Tadeusz Pietrzykowski and the German ‘kapo’ Walter Dunning,” he told AFP, using the term for the common criminals deployed by the Nazis as overseers.

    A rumor went around that Dunning, a former middleweight professional who had fallen foul of the law, was looking for an opponent in exchange for a loaf of bread and some margarine.

    Pietrzykowski, a pre-war bantam weight at the boxing club Legia Warsaw, rose to the challenge. “Teddy, as the Polish media nicknamed him before the war, must have weighed about 45 kilos (99 pounds), and Walter around 70 (154 pounds),” Sobolewicz said.

    In peacetime, the maximum fighting weight in Pietrzykowski’s category was 54 kilos, and 75 kilos in Dunning’s.

    In June 1940 Pietrzykowski had been on the first train convoy of 700 Polish political prisoners deported to Auschwitz — a former army barracks in the city of Oswiecim. “So he was already very thin after eight months of backbreaking work and malnutrition,” Sobolewicz said.

    “He was the smaller of the two, but he was agile and fast. He had an incredible punch, aimed right for the stomach, and knew how to duck his opponent’s blows. He won the fight and got his bread and margarine. You have to admit that the Germans kept their promise.”

    More fights were to follow.

    Pietrzykowski threw himself into them, knowing full well that he risked death by starvation.

    For his fellow inmates, every blow he struck was a source of pride and hope. “We were elated. We said to ourselves, ‘As long as there’s a Pole punching a German in the face, Poland’s not finished’,” Sobolewicz said.

    After Germany’s defeat by the Soviets at the Battle of Stalingrad in early 1943, the camp guards from the Nazis’ notorious SS sought ways to forget that the tide of the war was turning, Sobolewicz said. They watched the matches — pitting prisoners between themselves as well as against the kapos – and placed bets.

    After the first scratch bouts, the camp authorities let the boxers build a proper ring and allowed them to make gloves, according to Bogacka’s research.

    Pietrzykowski notched up some 40 fights, and around 20 more after he was transferred to the Neuengamme camp in northern Germany in 1943. He survived the war, passing away in 1991 in Bielsko-Biala in southern Poland.

    His most celebrated Auschwitz match was against Schally Hottenach, a 96-kilo German. He won with a second-round knockout. That bout inspired the 1963 film “The Boxer and Death” by Slovak director Peter Solan.

    Auschwitz’s twin death camp of Birkenau was purpose-built nearby in 1942.

    Jews from across Europe — often told by the Nazis that they were being resettled” in the East — were sent there directly by train to be murdered in its gas chambers. The new arrivals had a meager chance of surviving thanks to the “selection”, where the SS picked out individuals deemed suitable for forced labor because of their peacetime professions.

    Boxers were on the list.

    Jewish middleweight Salamo Barouch, from Greece, was one who survived as a result, though he is not known to have faced Pietrzykowski in the ring.

    The camp also saw football matches.

    “The kapos wanted to amuse themselves. They played football amongst themselves, but taking on players of a different nationality brought an extra edge,” said Kazimierz Albin, who escaped in February 1943 and joined the Polish resistance. “And for us, being on the team meant getting extra food rations and being given lighter forced labor, so it was a chance to survive,” recalled Albin, 90.

    Adam Cyra, a historian at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, said a football pitch was set up to the right of the Birkenau train ramp. “For people who were about to die, the vision of prisoners playing football against the kapos was meant to be reassuring,” he said.

    A million Jews perished at Auschwitz-Birkenau, along with tens of thousands of others including Poles, Roma and Soviet prisoners of war, between 1940 and its liberation by the Red Army in January 1945.

    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/163582#.UN4-QHy9KSN

    #86514

    Re: Fist Hardening.

    This one is by a Japanese karate master Soke Takayuki Kubota 10th dan Gosoku-ryu karate performs tameshiwari and conditioning exercises.

    You may want to turn the volume up as he goes through his karate punching routine.

    Imagine how dangerous he was in the prime of his life. I do not know if he was in the Japanese army during WW 2 but that is one seriously dangerous dude even in his old age.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hH8xH_CrwvY

    Pre-WWII Goju Ryu Training

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RU3SX2ZfTUA

    #86507

    Re: Fist Hardening.

    The N.Y. Times features an article called ” Character Study “.

    You might find this interesting. Please keep in mind in ancient Japanese times where feuds going centuries back would harden their hands & feet in preparation to do battle. This type of thing is not necessary.

    Be sure to watch the multimedia video clip …

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/17/nyregion/johnny-devincenzo-77-steel-pole-puncher.html?_r=0

    #86499

    Re: Classic forum quotes from members.

    There are so many things that have been said over the years. Curious to see what classic quotes you come up with from my previous posts. Might be pretty interesting & funny or relevant. thumbsup

    #86452

    Re: new gun/knife disarms

    For those who live in the big cities like NYC , get yourselves to one of these organizations & train very hard and earn your belt ranking requirements. I wish I lived in the big city and for those who have the opportunity should train very hard. The Krav Maga organizations mentioned above are working toward one goal. That is to further the martial art of Krav Maga.

    #86451

    Re: home study/training?

    This is a free & great online resource to help you understand the mechanics of how martial arts work that you can study at home.

    http://www.flashmavi.com/

    #86399

    Re: Racist unwittingly targets Cage Fighter.

    Most establishments have security cameras rolling and if you know the place of business has cameras rolling like on the train. 1/2 of the battle has already been won. He did the right thing and if the situation called for deadly force to be used to protect his family. I have no doubt the former Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion Gustavo Falciroli would have taken care of business to protect his family.

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 325 total)
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