
Pradal Serey, the ancient fighting style of the Khmersfrom Angkor Watto Cambodia's TV Channel 5 |
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Pradal
Serey, or Khmer Boxing, means "free fighting style" in Khmer
language.
It is believed to be the oldest of South East Asia's ancient martial
arts.
Bas-reliefs at the Bayon, in the ancient city of Angkor, show
Khmer soldiers displaying combat techniques involving knees, elbows and
kicks. Even though any written record of Khmer boxing had been
lost for
centuries, it is believed by the Cambodians that this was the army's
standard combat style at the time of the Khmer Empire's maximum
expansion (9th century AD). ![]() Khmer boxing was on the verge of extinction, together with all forms of Khmer culture, during Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime (1975-1979). In order to rapidly create a new, ultra-Maoist society based on an Utopian, agricultural life as in the centuries before, the Khmer Rouge announced Year Zero and systematically destroyed the country's infrastructure. All "enemies of the revolution" were executed. These included teachers, aristocrats, educated people, monks, doctors, artists, foreign speaking Cambodians, actors, singers and Khmer boxing practitioners. Everybody else was sent for re-education to labor camps upcountry, which later became sadly known as the "killing fields". Millions died of starvation, diseases and summary executions. A big portion of the centuries-old Khmer cultural heritage, including pradal serey and its teachers, disappeared in only four years. Following the country's slow recovery from the 20 years-old civil war that erupted after the Khmer Rouge were ousted by the Vietnamese in 1979, Khmer boxing slowly resurfaced in small, private schools in Phnom Penh. Far from being commercial operations, such schools were created by survivors, to pass whatever was left of pradal serey to the new generations, thus keeping the country's heritage alive. Since 2003, Khmer boxing has been officially supported by the Government as an important part of the Khmer heritage and it's attracting a growing number of young athletes. Professional fighters now earn a living from sponsorships and cash prizes, but they're far behind their Thai counterparts in terms of income. On average, a professional Khme boxer earns 20 USD a fight, plus some goods from the sponsors, mostly Thai-based companies already involved in muay thai events in Thailand.
Cambodian authorities have been very vocal about the history of their native martial art, especially with their Thai neighbors. Whilst pradal serey was already around approximately one thousand years ago, no such thing as muay thai, or even muay Siam, was recorded at the time. Moreover, they argue that when the Khmer empire collapsed in the 12th century AD and Angkor was abandoned to the jungle, Siamese intruders captured Khmer soldiers and assimilated their captives' fighting style into their own army's standard. Thus pradal serey is, according to Cambodians, the true ancestor of muay boran and so of muay thai! Don't tell this to a Thai, though...
![]() khmer boxing, pradal serei, borei keila boxing stadium, phnom penh boxing stadium, E Pho Thoung, angkor wat, cambodian boxing |
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