Osh,
You write:
"This is the only point I have issue with, FMA wasn't nearly wiped out in PI, in fact the history of FMA in PI (during the 20th century) is rich with stories of the Manongs - The likes of Tatang, Islao Romo, GM Jose Mena, the Saavedra's, Anciong, the Canetes, the Tortals the list goes on and on. FMA was alive and kicking in PI and still is"
We have a point of contention. So, I will attempt to evidence my original statement that FMA was virutally wiped out.
1) "Long Ago Arnis was a dying Filipino marital art...(pg 9) "kali declined in popularity as early as 1596...and eventually basnned the practice of the art in 1764" (pg 11) Modern Arnis by Remy Presas, 1974
A manong (elder) to you is different than a manong (elder) to me. My point of reference is my father's generation that came to America in the 1920's and to my Grandfather who came to Hawaii in circa 1910.
When I was growing up in the 1950's and 1960's most of the manongs were too old to practice what I knew then as escrima. Though, at 14 I began to learn the "five strikes" from one of the younger manongs.
Trust me, back then...there was virtually no FMA. You only had a handful of teachers. Today, most young people take for granted that FMA has always been popular and fruitful.
My opinion...and I stress opinion is that: 1) the Europeans wiped out most the "ancient methods". 2) next the Americans after the Pilipino-American War of 1896 (better known as the Spanish American War) continued to decimate any methods of combat to control the colony of the Phillippines 3) that those early manongs who came to the US circa 1910 brought with them methods of fighting that took seed and spread back to the Phillippines.
This opinion is provocative and is based on 1) being there 2) oral history and 3) the little written history that exists. In fact, people may write books about the subject, they may "tell stories". But, the truth is that there is so little to go on.
Remy Presas in his book alludes to the fact that yesterday's FMA was dying. Today there is a resurgence. In the early 1990's, I too went to the Phillippines to look for the mother art. Up and down the Phillipines most people I asked said "what's that? I didn't know there existed a Pilipino martial art".
Yet, today, everybody claims a linage, a title and secret knowledge. Though, I did find some schools that figured it out...lure the europeans...lure the americans...big bucks. The result is that I have seen Filipinos who learned their FMA in the United states after years of karate...became masters of FMA...and then built temples in Cebu to lure the europeans and americans.
So, (when I ask people do you want to hear the the truth...) and this truth goes for chinese, japanese, indian marital arts etc etc, is that everybody tells stories to make themselves look good...including me.
Is this bad. Heck no. In tribal times, we sat around the campfire telling our stories of bravery. Was their truth in that bravery...very certainly...Yes. The world is certainly better or worse, depending on your opinion for the words "running amok, butterfly knife, yoyo, leatherneck, and 45 pistol"
Best wishes my Brother
Tuhan Joseph T. Oliva Arriola