
PANANANDATA PRACTITIONER. Amante P. Marinas, 81, teaches students a
type of martial art known as pananandata at his Spotsylvania County,
Virginia home on July 6, 2021. Marinas has been practicing the technique
since he was eight years old. (Peter Cihelka/The Free Lance-Star
via AP)
From The Asian Reporter, V31, #8 (August 2, 2021), page 10.
81-year-old carries on a Filipino martial arts
tradition
By Rob Hedelt
The Free Lance-Star
SPOTSYLVANIA, Va. (AP) — When he was growing up in the Philippines,
Amante Marinas was fascinated with watching his great uncle practice
martial arts.
At eight years old, Marinas began to learn the movements and forms of
the long-pole martial art of pananandata. Working alongside his uncle,
he came to believe that such workouts were important to his mind and
body.
Marinas is 81 now, and on a good day, puts in three to four hours
working out in his Spotsylvania County backyard. There, he deliberately
practices hand-fighting, as well as martial arts with a long pole and
short sticks, throwing knives, an ax, a blow gun, and a bow and arrow.
The discipline and work ethic he hewed to as a chemical engineer
means he not only works out each day, but keeps a log of every minute
spent — and every knife, ax, and arrow sent into targets.
"I’ve thrown knives close to 1.5 million times, and shot the blowgun
800,000 times," he said.
Marinas moved from his native country to New York City in 1973,
moving on from the long-pole discipline of his great uncle to other
fighting styles using different weapons. He taught himself those new
disciplines, seeking out whatever sources existed to help him in his
instructional journey.
"I learned how to throw knives in my basement in Staten Island," he
said. "There, I had to throw sidearm so it didn’t hit the ceiling.
Before long, he was teaching other people who were drawn to his
workouts at Flushing Meadows Park in Queens. Seven of his books on
martial arts have been published since moving to the area in 1997, and
they detail styles of Filipino martial arts not fully covered before.
They include The Art of Throwing, Blowgun Techniques, and
Archery for Beginners.
Marinas continues to give private lessons in pananandata, which he
said is a fighting system from Central Luzon in the Philippines.
He’s had more than 100 articles published in martial arts magazines,
some featuring photos of him and his son, Amante Jr., a New York City
police detective.
I visited Marinas recently at his home, where he showed me the
workout and practice stations he’s created in his backyard. He uses
hanging pieces of wood and large soda bottles as targets for his long
pole and short sticks, and there are targets for knives, axes, and
arrows safely tucked around the yard.
"The notes I kept in learning and practicing each of the disciplines
were invaluable in writing the books," he said. "After the first one or
two, I kind of had learned the process."
Marinas said that once he moved to Spotsylvania County — his sons had
attended the University of Mary Washington and he had other relatives in
the area — word got out that he taught martial arts and students sought
him out.
"I now teach one or two students at a time, here in my backyard," he
said. "Most of my students are retired officers of some type, one a
retired police captain, another a U.S. Army vet, still another a retired
air marshal."
He keeps teaching and writing because he likes to pass along what
he’s learned, and because he’s been lonely since his wife died of cancer
a few years ago. He also enjoys the company.
His students call him "Po," an honorific for an older person in the
Philippines, and he doesn’t just see them as students.
"I treat them as friends, and look forward to them coming to learn,"
he said.
He’s taught some students for a long time — one woman has been with
him since 2000.
Marinas said he had a group of air marshals come to learn to use
extendable batons, and a police captain who wanted to learn disarming
techniques — all skills in his martial arts wheelhouse.
"We have fun, as I will challenge them at times, telling them that if
they stick four knives in a row, I’ll treat them to coffee," he said
laughing. "Then they come back at me and ask if two hits will get them
half a cup."
He even designed his own style of throwing knives, and said he has
several finished manuscripts he still wants to get published on fighting
styles and weapons he hasn’t fully covered yet.
"I’d like to get to having 20 books published. I’m a half dozen or so
short of that now," he said. "I hope that works out, but if the
manuscripts I’ve finished don’t get published, I’ll just leave them to
my grandchildren. I enjoy the writing and it keeps me sharp."
I can attest to that after watching the spry 81-year-old going
through his workout, despite an infected left hand that kept him from
hitting the bullseye with an arrow.
But he came pretty darned close, and a follow-up shot found dead
center despite pain from holding the bow.
"I’ll get this fixed up and be back on target again soon," he said.
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