Classroom lesson 路 Sport馃嚠馃嚛 Indonesia

Pencak silat - Indonesia's martial art

Part dance, part defence - taught in schools across the country

What is it?

Pencak silat is the traditional martial art of Indonesia. It is hundreds of years old and is so important to the country that UNESCO has placed it on its list of 'living traditions' that matter to humanity. Many schools teach it as part of PE.

Tell me more

Pencak silat looks a bit like a slow, flowing dance. Movements are smooth and curved, and many include low stances where the student bends their knees and balances carefully. It teaches self-control, balance, and respect - students bow to each other before practising, just like in karate or judo.

Each region of Indonesia has its own style. There are around 800 different schools of silat across the country. Some are fast and snappy, others are gentle and slow. Most use moves inspired by nature - the tiger, the snake, the eagle, even the way a tree bends in the wind.

Pencak silat is performed in pairs or alone, often to music. Big competitions are held all over South-East Asia and at the Asian Games. The performers wear loose comfortable trousers and a sash, sometimes with bright traditional patterns.

Children start learning as young as six. Lessons begin with stretching, breathing and balance. New students spend weeks learning just to stand correctly before they learn any moves. Teachers say balance and patience are more important than being fast.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might 'how to stand still' be the first lesson in a martial art?
  2. 02What animal would you choose to inspire your own moves, and why?
  3. 03Why might 800 different schools exist across one country?
Try this

Classroom activity

As a class, try three 'animal stances': tiger (low, palms forward), eagle (arms wide, on one leg), snake (smooth, low to the ground). Hold each for 30 seconds. Discuss: which felt strongest? Which felt hardest to balance?