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Training
with An Edge! Who
Else Does Pekiti Tirsia?
If
you feel that Pekiti Tirsia is a supreme FULL
COMBAT FIGHTING ART with the right answers for
the modern-day Warrior, then you are not alone!
PEKITI
TIRSIA IN LAW ENFORCEMENT The
majority of Police Officers and law enforcement
personnel in the United States, Europe and Asia
have viewed the Police Training Film "Surviving
Edged Weapons" which was produced by Calibre
Press of Chicago USA, accepted and recognized
worldwide as the best training tape on Edged Weapon
awareness which featured Grandtuhon Leo T. Gaje,
Jr. as technical advisor. If it comes to Blade
Awareness and Tactical Knife Defense this police
training film qualifies as world standard.
The
Safety Baton System, which Grandtuhon Gaje has
developed out of Pekiti-Tirsia Kali, is a training
method especially developed for Law Enforcement
Officers and Security Personnel, which is setting
standards in the field of application of intermediate
force. Dr. Kevin Parsons, Exec. Director of the
US Justice System Association, said: The Safety-Baton
System is " without question the most dynamic,
the most innovative and certainly the most effective
system that in almost 20 years of police training
it has been my pleasure to review."
Grandtuhon
Leo T. Gaje is certified and acknowledged by the
US Criminal Justice System Training Association
and the United States Police Defensive Tactics
Training Association. Since Grandtuhon Gaje is
now living in the Philippines he is training the
Philippine National Police in the use of the Safety
Baton Pekiti
Tirsia is the system of choice, practiced by numerous
United States federal, state and local police,
including FBI, SWAT, DPS Troopers, Narcotics Agents,
Border Patrol and Corrections Officers.
PEKITI
TIRSIA IN THE MILITARY & THE WAR ON TERROR
A
more detailed article on Pekiti Tirsia’s
relationship with the U.S. and Philippine Military
is presented in the article below from www.pt-go.com
Experts from the following branches of the Armed
Forces agree that Pekiti Tirsia is the best option
for personal and national security!
*
United States Marine Corp. *
Philippine Force Recon Marines *
Special Action Force (SAF) Commandos of the Philippine
National Police *
Crisis Response Group (CRG) Counter-Terrorism
Task Force of the Philippines 1998
was a historical landmark year for the Pekiti-Tirsia
system in the Philippines. In the history of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, Pekiti-Tirsia
was to be the first authentic Filipino combat
system and martial art adopted as official warfighting
doctrine. For three years previous, the Force
Reconnaissance Battalion of the Philippine Marine
Corps researched the different Filipino combat
systems/martial arts being practiced in the Philippines
to specifically find the knowledge and essence
of Bladed weapons combat. The marines of the Force
Recon Battalion completed several combat skills
courses and interviewed numerous instructors,
but found none that taught combat with the live
blade and that could teach a system to special
operations forces applicable to their operational
environment and requirements. Combat marines and
soldiers are armed with an array of edged weapons
including the bayonet, bolo, entrenching tool,
fighting knife, and the multitude of improvised
weapons found on the battlefield. As the recognized
elite of the elite, the Force Recon Marines sought
to set the standard for skill and instruction
in close quarters combat. The battalion commanding
officer, Major Natalio C. Ecarma, met with Mataas
na Guro Tim Waid who had been residing in the
Philippines and training with Grand Tuhon Gaje
since 1993. As the Director of SURVIVAL EDGE SYSTEMS
/ Pekiti-Tirsia Tactical Training Institute, and
himself a former marine, Guro Waid introduced
the unit to the history, training methodologies,
and effectiveness of the combat bladefighting
system of Pekiti-Tirsia Kali. Guro Waid detailed
the unparalleled, international professional recognition
that Grand Tuhon Leo T. Gaje had brought to the
field of military and law enforcement tactical
training and demonstrated the use and employment
of combat edged weaponry carried by operators
on special operations missions. Guro Waid conducted
an intensive six-month instructor’s candidate
course in the Military Edged-Impact Weapon System
for Close Quarters Combat/CQC graduating thirty
(30) students in June of 1998. The
Commandant, then Major General Ponciano s. Millena,
recognized the Pekiti-Tirsia system as the official
Close Quarters Combat/CQC doctrine of the Philippine
Marine Corps. Grand Tuhon Gaje and Guro Waid presented
a framed Ginunting / Combat Bolo to General Millena
forging the brotherhood of Pekiti-Tirsia and the
Philippine Marines. The
Force Recon Marines have reinstituted and revitalized
the historical use of authentic Filipino Bladefighting
technology within the Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP). Today, they are recognized as the leaders
and subject matter experts (SME) in the use of
Edged-Impact Weapon Strategy and Tactics within
the AFP and now train all foreign special operations
forces and ground force military units conducting
joint training exercises and combat operations
against insurgents and terrorists groups in the
Philippines. Since 1998 they have proven the superiority
of the Pekiti-Tirsia system against other military
close quarter combative methods including the
US Marine Corps Martial Art Program (MCMAP), SCARS
method of US Navy SEALS, and the LINE method of
US Army Special Forces. As in yesteryear when
the Filipino instructed famous US military units
of WWII including the Marine Raiders, Army Alamo
Scouts, and led a successful guerrilla warfare
campaign against the Japanese invaders by battalions
armed with the Bolo, the Filipino fighting man
is again recognized as the military Master of
the Blade.
The
Heritage of the Past and the Legacy of the Future
Article
first appeared in the November 1998 issue of Citemar6.
Official publication of the Philippine Marine
Corps. In
this year of the Republic of the Philippines National
Centennial Celebration, 1998, the Armed Forces
of the Philippines (AFP) reclaims it true martial
heritage with the Philippine Marine Corps Force
Reconnaissance Battalion designation as the modern
BOLO BATTALION. The Filipino Bolo has been the
trademark combat weapon for generations of Filipino
warriors and heroes from Datu Lapu Lapu to the
founding fathers of the Katipunan and now of the
Force Recon Marines. Today, the Force Reconnaissance
Battalion is the only unit in the Armed Forces
of the Philippines that trains, equips, and operates
utilizing the traditional combat weapons, tactics,
and skills of Kali. Kali, the true and authentic
martial art of the Filipino is a systematic art
of combat bladefighting based on the science of
strategy and tactics. The
chronicles of Philippine history have recorded
the victories of the Filipino Fighting Man in
the defense of freedom, independence and democracy.
Victories achieved by the use of the weapons and
tactics of Kali. Kali prevailed against the finest
European steel when Datu Lapu Lapu, the first
Filipino hero, felled the famed Spanish conquistador
Ferdinand Magellan in 1521. The Filipino Bolo
was feared throughout the history of the Spanish
occupation and the art of Kali brought many regional
victories in the revolts against Spanish subjugation.
Generals Artemio Ricarte, Gregorio Del Pilar,
Antonio Luna, and other heroes of the revolution
against Spain lead their troops to battle with
Bolo in hand. The Bolo of Andres Bonifacio, hero
of the Katipunan, symbolizes that gallant struggle
that lead to the declaration of the first Philippine
Republic. The American era brought respect for
the fighting tenacity of the Filipino in such
great measure that it influenced the adoption
of the .45 Caliber automatic pistol for the U.S.
Armed Forces. During World War II the American
military recognized the superiority of Kali for
close quarters combat. In 1942 the United States
Marine Corps enlisted Filipinos to teach combat
bladefighting with the knife, bayonet, and other
hand-to-hand combat skills to the elite Marine
Raider Battalions that spearheaded the war against
the Japanese in the central Pacific. Most significantly,
the First (1st) Filipino Regiment of the US Army
became recognized as the original BOLO BATTALION.
This unit, along with others such as the Philippine
Scouts and other guerrilla units established the
modern military legacy of Filipino Kali during
the liberation of the Philippines when they fought
blade to blade and blade to rifle and defeated
the finest units of the Japanese Imperial Armed
Forces armed and trained in the art of the Samurai.
From
this heritage of the past the Marines of the Force
Reconnaissance Battalion continue the Kali legacy
of the future. The battalion, under the command
of Major Natalio C. Ecarma III officially adopted
the Pekiti-Tirsia Kali system as the unit’s
formal doctrine for close quarters combat. Approved
by the Commandant of the Philippine Marine Corps,
Major General Ponciano S. Millena, the Pekiti-Tirsia
Military EDGED-IMPACT WEAPON SYSTEM marks the
first time in more than fifty years that the indigenous
fighting art of Kali has been formulated for modern
combat and officially recognized as tactical warfighting
doctrine. The
Pekiti-Tirsia Military EDGED-IMPACT WEAPON SYSTEM
is a combative skills program in Close Quarters
Combat (CQC) tactical doctrine specifically formulated
for military special operation forces. This system
provides the operator complete strategies, tactics
and skills for the use of combat weaponry in the
entire operational continuum of modern combat
from high intensity conventional war through the
full spectrum of unconventional warfare.
The
Military EDGED-IMPACT WEAPON SYSTEM/CQC parallels
military combat doctrine to locate, close with
and destroy the enemy by fire (Edged-Impact weaponry
offensive and counter-offensive strikes) and maneuver
(footwork and mobility) or repel the enemy’s
assault by fire and close combat.
The
Military EDGED-IMPACT WEAPON SYSTEM is comprised
of: 1.
Combat Bolo /CQB/ Close Quarters Bolo
2.
Combat Knife /CQK/ Close Quarters Knifefighting
3.
Combat Empty-Hands /CQE/ Close Quarters Empty-Hands
4.
Combat Bayonet /CQB/ Close Quarters Bayonet
5.
Tactical Weapons Disarming /CQD/ Close Quarters
Disarming 6.
Tactical Weapons Retention /CQR/ Close Quarters
Retention Trained
in this complete system of Close Quarters Combat/CQC
and armed with the Combat Bolo, the Force Reconnaissance
Battalion leads the Special Operations Forces
of the Armed Forces of the Philippines in tactical
operational capabilities. Tasked with the missions
of conducting air, ground, and amphibious reconnaissance
for the three Marine Brigades and Regional Commanders
as well as direct action operations such as raids,
counter-terrorism, and hostage rescue, all Force
Reconnaissance Marines are qualified combat parachutists
and divers and are graduates of the Force Reconnaissance
Qualification Course, Army Special Forces Qualification
Course, or the Scout Ranger School.
Presently,
the Battalion is composed of a Headquarters and
Service Company and three (3) Force Reconnaissance
Companies, the 61st, 62nd, and 63rd. Each company
is composed of three (3) recon platoons and one
(1) sniper platoon. The battalion is headquartered
at Marine Barracks, Naval Station, Fort Bonifacio
in Metro Manila, where the H&S Company and
two recon companies are stationed. Each company
is deployed on a rotational basis to Cotabato
City, Mindanao in support of the Second (2nd)
Marine Brigade. The Philippine Marine Corps maintains
the majority of their forces in Mindanao and the
Sulu Sea due to their continued victories against
the numerous enemy forces and organized criminal
elements that remain active in this historically
war torn region. Today,
the Marines of the Force Reconnaissance Battalion
enter the arena of warfare trained in the strategy
and tactics of Kali and armed with the Combat
Bolo, the symbol of victory, heroism, and excellence
of the Filipino Fighting Man.
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