Antonio Graceffo

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Shan Lai Tai Kung Fu (Part 3)

http://youtube.com/watch?v=5pNFM40bxZs
 
This is the next in a series of 'Martial Arts Odyssey' episodes shot inside of Burma, at Loi Tailang, the headquarters of the Shan State Army. While the army fights to help the Shan people survive and gain independence, Master Kawn Wan struggles to keep his people's martial art alive, and to teach it to the young. See the refugees: orphans, soldiers, and teachers who practice Lai Tai, the Shan art of Kung Fu, so that their cultural heritage will survive.
 
The video features an in depth interview with young kawn Wan, as he explains his theories of martial arts and of cultural survival.
 
The Burmese government, the SPDC, killed his family and burned his village, but they couldn't break his spirit. Kawn Wan wages his private war for the benefit of his people.
 
Enjoy the video, for free, on youtube http://youtube.com/watch?v=5pNFM40bxZs
 
Please, say a prayer for the people of Shanland and all of Burma.


Be the Hero of Your Life Story

“The key to immortality is first living a life worth remembering.” This quote has been attributed to everyone from St. Augustus to Bruce Lee. I don't know who actually said it, but it rings with a powerful truth. At cocktail parties, when people find out that I am a published author, they often say to me, “I also want to be a writer, but I don't know what to write about.”


New Burma Video: Interview with Antonio Graceffo on Taipei Radio

http://tw.youtube.com/watch?v=OqcO16az6R8

For the last seven years Antonio has been working as an adventure and martial arts author in Asia. in 2007 and 2008 he went into Burma with the Shan State Army. This radio interview on English Radio, Taipei, takes place while he is attending emergency medic training in the Philippine.
This video was produced by Andy To.

Enjoy the video. And please, say a prayer for the people of Shanland.

Kung Fu Panda and The Brooklyn Monk

“Your training is a lonely war.” When you train, you battle yourself. You wrestle your internal demons forcing your mind and body to bend. We all know the story of the sculpture who was asked how he carved such a perfect warrior from stone. He answered, “The warrior as already there, I just removed the excess stone.”

Nursing the Shan

On a bamboo bed in a dark clinic at Loi Tailang, a woman sits with her three children. One has a severe foot burn, which is all infected and ugly looking. It is very common for children in the rural villages to be burned when cooking pots overturn on the fire at the centre of their hut. At the Loi Tailang temple there is a young monk who was horribly disfigured by similar burns which cover his face and head. A health worker explained to me that in the villages burns are often treated with a poultice of cow dung or with oil, both of which worsen the effects of the injuries.


EMS Duty in Tondo

“How do you shower on a twenty-four hour shift?” I asked, noticing that there was no plumbing in the radio shack, where I was told we would be sleeping. “We can use the hose from the firetruck. Answered the chief.” Suddenly, I wasn't sure if EMS was really the best career for me.

A Day in Loi Tailang

All over the village boys are fashioning bows from natural materials, preparing to compete in the big archery contest. Small children kick a Tagrow ball, a small hollow ball made of rattan. I pull out my camera, but the mothers quickly tell the children to hide their faces. Photographing people who are planning to live permanently at Loi Tailang is OK. But photographing civilians who plan to return to Burma is a No-no. If the photos get into the wrong hands, THEY, the SPDC, could find out that they have ties with the Shan State Army, and kill them. 


In Shanland: Tragedy to Triumph

See it on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eL7B4OlPog

Leun Liang saw his family murdered and his village burned. He has every right to complain about his life. Instead, he reinvented himself, transitioning from victim to teacher. Now, he lives at Loi Tailang, teaching and taking care of the young orphans.

Hear him tell his own story of repression and suffering at the hands of the SPDC, the junta that rules Burma.


Ambulance Duty in Manila

After graduating EMT-B (Emergency Medical Technician, Basic) course, I started duty, volunteering on an ambulance crew in Quezon City, Philippines. I have to put in 250 hours of service before I return to school for the next round of advanced training. The emergency call volume in the whole country is pretty low, with the crew only going on about two and a half calls per day. Since Filipinos are exposed to so many more dangers than people in the west, one would expect to have more calls per capita, not less. Vehicles are not inspected. Buses, completely overloaded with people, often drive, without breaks and slam into motorcycles, carrying a family of five. And, of course no one wears a helmet. Electrical wires are installed with little or no forethought. Outside the houses there are massive tangles of fizzing, sparking wires, pirating electricity, just waiting to shock someone or burst into flames. Poor people don’t have any preventative medical care, only going to the hospital when it is too late to save them. A huge percentage of them smoke and drink alcohol. Vegetables are overcooked or non-existent, and pork fat is a favorite dish, served on a heaping mound of rice.

The Cyclone is new, but the Suffering is Old

Rape, murder, forced labor, slavery, human mine detectors, torture, detention, mass execution: the sad life of the Shan ethnic minority. Guest Producer ‘Any To’, of the United States, using my videos, photos and radio interviews, has created a summary video, explaining the suffering of the Shan minority people.

Watch it on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrh7OjKCaPg

Please say a prayer for the victims of the cyclone and for the people of Shanland.