Tuhon
Gaudiosa Ruby - The Queen of Filipino Martial Arts
Grandmaster and Founder of the Comjuka-Kali System Headquarters
in El Paso, TX.
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COMJUKA-KALI SYSTEMS IS...
. . . Is a blend of Comjuka, (Filipino Combat-Judo-Kali), Master
Ner Reodicas Laban Tulisan, and the late and greatly missed
Master Edgar Sulites Lameco Escrima. Tuhon Gaudiosa Ruby received
permission from Master Ner and Master Sulite to incorporate their
arts with Comjuka. Incidently, Tuhon Ruby is accredited by the Filipino
Consulate General, Alfredo C. Lanuza, for bringing Comjuka to the
United States.
MARAMING SALAMAT PO SI TUHON! COMJUKA-KALI
SYSTEMS IS...
. . . Is a family based and shared combative martial art that is
comprised of combat weapon fighting, unarmed combat, combat ground
fighting, as well as Filipino customs and cultures.CONCISELY PUT
Comjuka-Kali Systems is a multi-opponent, weapons and grappling
orientated martial art that primarily utilizes an attackers force
against them so that size, strength, and gender is not an issue.
It is also based on HUMAN physiology and was developed out of mortal
necessity and dates back as far as the 7th century.
Comjuka-Kali Systems is to be used ONLY when there is no other choice
and you, or someone elses life depends on it.
KALI PHILOSOPHY
Maniwalla Kami Sa TAGUMPAY, Hindi Sa BIGO (We Believe in Success,
not in Failure )
Maniwalla Kami Sa KALUSUGAN, Hindi Sa SAKIT (We Believe in Health,
not in Sickness)
Maniwalla Kami Sa BUHAY, Hindi Sa KAMATAYAN (We Believe in Life,
not in Death)
Brief History of Kali & Comjuka-Kali
Systems
KALI is an ancient Filipino art of self defense which was originated
and developed by the Filipinos several hundred years before the
coming of the Spanish to the Philippines. KALI is also known as
ARNIS or ESKRIMA. KALI consists of different fighting forms with
the use of different weapons; the single stick, double sticks, sword
and dagger, dagger and dagger, and empty hands. Aside from these
weapons, KALI also uses the Kama (sickle) and the Gonzo (hay hooks)
which are the favorite weapons of COMJUKA.
KALI was the martial art that
made the Americans invent the Colt .45 Automatic, just to stop
a jurementado, a Filipino Muslim skilled in the art of KALI, from
killing American soldiers during the Filipino-American conflict
of 1900 in Mindanao island before the two countries had been allied.
KALI has hundreds of styles
in the Philippines and is practiced throughout the country in
Luzon Island, the Visayan Islands, and Mindanao Island. Each province
has its own style of self defense in KALI. Some of the styles
are named after the founder, others after the place where the
style came from such as Toledo style, Batangas style, Pangasinan
style, Bohol style, Cebu style, and the Pampangan styles in Pampanga,
a province in the northern island of Luzon where COMJUKA was developed
and practiced.
COMJUKA, meaning Combat-Judo-Kali,
was changed to Combat-Judo-Karate during the time of the Japanese
occupation in W.W.II. The Filipinos did this so that the Japanese
would allow them to continue to teach the art. COMJUKA had been
practiced secretly and handed down father to son for hundreds
of years by the Pampangoans until the Japanese occupation. COMJUKA
is now returned to its original meaning Combat-Judo-Kali by Tuhon
(Grandmaster/Founder) Ruby as the forefathers of COMJUKA had intended
it to be.
The supreme Master and Director of COMJUKA in the Philippines had
a trusted student to whom he passed on his knowledge. This student
was a Grandmaster. He imparted his knowledge of COMJUKA only to
selected students that he put his trust and confidence in. Among
his selected students was Gaudiosa Swanby, who is now Tuhon (Grandmaster/Founder)
Gaudiosa Ruby of the COMJUKA-KALI systems. Tuhon Ruby has trained
in the art of COMJUKA rigidly under the Grandmaster in Pampanga
for many years until she mastered the art and was commissioned to
promote and propagate the art of COMJUKA to people with good moral
character for the purpose of self defense, self discipline, self
confidence, and to promote good health. Tuhon Ruby then founded
the art in America and developed forms and a system of minimum requirements
for each belt ranking and thus, earned the title of Grandmaster/Founder.
Tuhon Ruby has taught the Security Police and Hand to Hand Combat
Course at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines, at two military
bases in West Germany, in Cheyenne, Wyo., Aberdeen, Tacoma, and
Ft. Lewis, Wash., Titusville, Fla., Andrews AirForce Base, Maryland,
and Wichita Falls, Texas. Tuhon Ruby was proclaimed the Queen of
Filipino martial arts by Grandmaster Leo T. Gaje in El Paso, Texas,
1989.
Tuhon Ruby is a member of the National Kali Assoc. Of the Philippines
and LAMECO Eskrima Intl., headed by Tuhon Edgar G. Sulite, author
of three books on the Filipino Martial Arts, they are, "The
Secrets of Arnis", "The Advanced Balisong-The Filipino
Butterfly Knife", and "Grandmasters of Kali, Arnis, and
Eskrima". Tuhon Rubys school is the headquarters for
the United States Kali Association Incorporated.
Tuhon Ruby is currently teaching the Pampangan art of COMJUKA, the
art of LAMECO Eskrima, and Laban Tulisan in Texas. She has received
permission from her masters of LAMECO Eskrima, Edgar Sulite, and
Laban Tulisan. Ner Reodica, Jr., to add their arts to her COMJUKA
school. She calls her school the "Filipino-American School
of Combat Arts, COMJUKA/KALI Systems". She teaches together
with her husband, Punong Guro Gary Ruby (Head Instructor, 8th Degree
Blackbelt).

Kali - Arnis - Arnis De Mano - Escrima
Kali is the oldest known form of self defense of the Philippines
and its use of weapons.
During the time of Christ, Hindu beliefs came to the Philippines
from Malaysia. By the fifteenth century the islands were inhabited
by people from China, India, Arabia, and other Nations who mixed
with the original Negretos who settled in the Philippines.
In the Southern Philippines there lived mostly Muslims called the
Moro, who used a wide variety of knives in their dance and other
martial skills.
On March 6th, 1521, a Spanish explorer, Magellan, arrived to the
Philippines and by the 27th of April he was killed on the island
of Mactan. His discovery of the islands brought other Spaniards.
After the Spanish occupation and the establishment of the capital
in Manila, many other Western nations came to the Philippines.
In 1896, about 400,000 Tagalog people from Luzon, the largest island
in the Philippines, revolted against the Spanish occupation which
led to the provisional republic in 1898. It was from this race of
people that the term Kali was derived to describe their martial
arts also known as Arnis. This system utilizes two bladed weapons.
Training was originally conducted in total secrecy and sticks called
muton replaced the blades for both safety and secrecy. Modern practitioners
use rattan sticks up to one meter in length. Techniques involve
either one or two sticks in a continuous striking action against
vulnerable parts of the body.
During the 1980's, point Eskrima was devised with a prescribed fighting
area, a scoring system, and body armor in many cases and National
competitions.
The prime target of an attacker in Eskrima is the hand or lower
part of the arm because if a vital point is attacked, the reflexes
of the injured person may still enable them to counter attack and
cause equal or greater damage, therefore the limb or hand holding
the weapon is the target. Getting rid of the weapon equals far less
of a threat.
When the Americans occupied the Philippines in the late nineteenth
century, there were many Filipino fighters who wore red headbands
and were armed with a blade and ran amok killing American Soldiers
who were armed with a .38 revolver. The red headband worn by the
Jurementado, a Muslim skilled in the art of Kali, signified that
he would not stop fighting until he himself was killed. Thus, the
Colt 1911 .45 caliber automatic was developed to deal with the Jurementado.
These events confirm the Eskrima policy to disarm the attacker first.
Unlike Japanese martial arts, Kali students are taught to employ
the techniques they are learning in a manner that seems natural
to them as opposed to a rigid memorization of very specific maneuvers.
This also prevents a predictable counter attack against the Kali
Warrior.
The psychology of Kali, Arnis, or Eskrima are radically different
from most of the other martial arts. This could be partly due to
the fact that for almost four hundred years, the Philippines were
a conquered country and the arts were outlawed, unlike Japan or
China where the arts were excepted as part of their culture and
could be practiced openly. But in the Philippines, the art that
existed dictated that the practitioner seize the opportunity of
the moment, to strike back suddenly with disguised movements.
Arnis, originally known as Kali, centers around three distinct phases.
The stick, blade, and empty hand combat. The term sinawali, a form
of play or techniques applied because the intricate movements of
the two sticks resemble the crisscross weave of a sewali, a pattern
used in walling and matting.
Three principle Kali training methods include the muestrasion or
pandalog, which teaches the artistic execution of swinging movements
and striking for offense and defense in repetitive drills.
The sangga at patama, or sombra tabak where striking, thrusting,
and parrying in a pre-arranged manner are taught.
Also the larga muton, or labanang totohanan, where two trainees
engage in freestyle practice, which is the ultimate phase of Arnis.
Two key principles to be learned in Kali are under the categories
of physical and psychological. Under the physical, the practitioner
must develop speed of hands and feet and agility for rapid delivery
and zoning, or evasion. Under the psychological principles, the
student must learn to remain calm and composed, and above all, develop
the will to fight AND WIN! "We believe in success, not in failure".
The skills learned in this lethal art are, close quarter, medium
range, and long range combat tactics as well as direct and indirect
combat primarily utilizing the kahoy (stick), the kutsilio (knife),
and or the empty hands. These weapons, and of course the empty hand
techniques, are very practical in today's society for self preservation
and the protection of others.
Kali has been around for centuries. It has been tested and proven
effective and practical and also develops both the mind and the
spirit for a healthy whole well being.
KALI
Kali is the oldest form of weaponry in the Philippines. It comes
from the word kalis, which implies the blade. The naturally graceful
and harmonious movements used in this art are characteristic of
the methods found in other Asian countries.
Kali is a very systematic art of combat fighting based in the science
of strategy and tactics. The fighting methods of Kali are ultra
advanced so that its fighting values always remain new. Kali does
not only imply the use of the stick, blade, or empty hand combat,
but is also a reflection of the Filipino peoples history,
philosophy, and culture.
The Filipino people represent the strong segments of the Majaphit
Empire that ruled Asia from the 7th to the 15th centuries. They
had a significant part in and made many contributions to the civilization
of the Pacific region.
The practice of combat fighting with the use of the blade is part
of their customs and traditions. The blade was inseparable in their
ceremonial systems. The application of the theories into the martial
arts skills and the will to live in freedom gained great victories
over the Spanish and American colonization's and the Japanese invasion
of the Pacific.
There are over a hundred related styles in Kali, and their principles
in combat are all based in a pattern of angles, which all attacks
fall into, regardless of style of weapon.
A combat system of Kali, the Comjuka-Kali Systems, a close quarter
in-fighting method, is a combination of higher techniques of Kali.
Comjuka-Kali Systems put a tremendous emphasis on the importance
of footwork. The theories of strategic defense, offense and counter
offense, have been tested and proven effective and accurate in many
different combat situations.
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