Pivotal Role of Leung Bik
Though it is mentioned that Leung Jan taught Wing Chun to his second son Leung Bik, we know little of Leung Bik. However it has been written that Yip Man learned from Leung Bik after the then young Yip Man lost in a match to the elderly Leung Bik. It is unfortunate that today we cannot trace what has happened to Leung Bik or that he was ever in Hong Kong . This lack of historical record has cast doubt on the story of Yip Man learning from Leung Bik.
Sifu Chow Tze Chuen does recall that during his discipleship, Yip Man once mentioned that he had learned from Leung Bik but did not elaborate further. Sifu Chow further recalls that a pair of banners were hanged in his kwoon at Lee Tat Street stating his learning from Chan Wah Shun and Leung Bik. He forgot the exact wording of the banners. Why the figure of Leung Bik is so interesting is that Yip Man attributed the refinement of his advanced skills under the tutelage of Leung Bik.
Wing Chun in Hong Kong
Different reasons have been forwarded for Yip Man 's permanent migration to Hong Kong where from his once exalted position as the son of the wealthy class he descended to be another unknown face among the sea of poverty. Recently another it has been suggested that Yip Man was forced to leave China not because of the coming of the Communist government, but because he killed a person with a kick during a match.
Whatever the reason for leaving his homeland, Yip Man would have been another statistic in the immigration figures except for martial artists such Leung Sheung, Lee Man and Lok Yiu who recognised the skills of Yip Man and asked him to be their teacher at the Association of Restaurant Workers of Hong Kong .
From this small start in 1950, another class was later opened in Stanley Street in 1951. This was the beginning of the spread of the effectiveness of the Wing Chun system as a combat art through challenge matches. During this time students from outside the restaurant trade also joined in. In 1955, introduced by Law Bing, Sifu Chow Tze Chuen joined the Yip Man 's class in Lee Tat Street , Yau Ma Tei.
By 1957 the school had moved to Li Cheng Uk Estate in Kowloon from Yau Ma Tei. Many of the early students had already left Yip Man to open their own school by this time and due to the distance from central Hong Kong , few of the early students came to visit as frequently. The backward living conditions did not help; basic necessities such as water had to be carried from a common tap. Sifu Chow who was working as a bus driver brought in a number of workers from the transport union to join the school. 1961 saw a final move to Castle Peak Road where Yip Man taught until his retirement. |