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Loh-Chi-Lanhg™
The Masters of Stealth
P# 1
Loh-Chi-Lanhg’s history dates back to the Song Dynasty in China. Chi has the longest history of Loh-Chi-Lanhg, even though Loh was the founder. His history began about five hundred years after Fenhg Zun’s time. Like Fenhg, Chi’s forefathers were descendants of the mountain monks, who were members of the Shaolin Temple. They were also the offspring of the monks who migrated to Japan during the Qing Dynasty, and continued their Shaolin practice of Kung Fu.
Their history goes through the pass of time up until the late 1700s hundred, around 1795 AD, when Chi was born. Chi became one of the most outstanding monks ever known. By the time he was in his early teens, Loh had already founded a small organization called Tong-shido.
Yhen T’za Ghero had pinpointed Chi’s forefathers as monks who had migrated to Japan, taking with them the secrets of Shaolin, and T’za Ghero was totally against that. Their opposition towards the spreading of their heritage is what made them go to Japan, to find and eliminate the traitor monks (by T’za Ghero’s standards), so that the secrets of the Shaolin Temple would remain sacred.
T’za Ghero didn’t want the secrets of Shaolin taught to outsiders. They feared that if the secrets were passed on to anyone other than the chosen ones, their enemies could use Shaolin’s kung fu techniques to develop their own. Which later they would use it against T’za Ghero and their countrymen. This would jeopardize the very existence of their people and especially the sacredness of the Great Shaolin temple.
P# 2
Chi’s forefathers established many martial arts schools in Japan and earned great respect among all those who knew or heard about them. T’za Ghero would raid the martial arts schools in an attempt to stop them from spreading the teachings of the secrets of Shaolin. The martial arts masters and students would put up a good fight but would also take many losses, as T’za Ghero’s techniques were far too advanced.
Throughout their quest to weed out the traitor monks who migrated to Japan and Korea during the sixteenth century, T’za Ghero came across Japan’s most elite warriors ever known throughout history: the ninjas. The Iga, Koga and Fuma ninjas especially the Fuma ninjas, became T’za Ghero’s ultimate rivals.
However, even though the Fuma ninjas fought against T’za Ghero, just like the Iga and Koga ninjas, they were still enemies. The Fuma ninjas never joined Iga and Koga, for they were also fighting their own war. But the Fuma ninjas saw T’za Ghero as a greater threat, and were determined to drive them out of Japan at all cost.
P# 3
Eventually, the Iga, Koga and Fuma ninjas drove T’za Ghero out of Japan, in what was called; “The Great Ninja War". T’za Ghero never bothered returning to Japan, as they noticed that their enemies were fighting their own war among themselves. They decided to let them terminate each other.
After The Great Ninja War, Chi’s forefathers got breathing room to continue teaching and spreading the secrets of Shaolin. But they had not seen the last of Yhen T’za Ghero, for the Great Ninja War, was indeed not over.
The animosity and enmity between these three ninja clan (Yhen T’za Ghero, Loh-Chi-Lanhg and the Fuma ninjas), would be carried through the pass of time... far into the future.
To be continued...
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