Leopoldo
Tortal Gaje, Jr. is the Supreme Grandmaster of
the Pekiti-Tirsia Kali System. Originally taught
to him by his grandfather, Grand Tuhon Conrado
Tortal, to protect the family land, Tuhon received
his inheritance, not of money, but of knowledge.
Moving to the USA in 1972 from his home in Bacolod
City, Negros Occidental, Philippines, it was not
Tuhon Gaje’s intention to teach. But after
discovering how much more effective his tactics
were, by providing martial arts instruction to
a group of children, Tuhon Gaje opened his formerly
secret family martial art to the world with a
growing desire to share the beauty and effectiveness
of his art and culture.
Highly motivated
with each success, Tuhon Gaje soon became a pioneer
teaching authentic Kali to a variety of enthusiasts
in the both the USA and Europe, where he introduced
full contact stick fighting to the Filipino Martial
Arts community as well as a higher standard of
performance. During his passionate work and many
years of promoting the Filipino Martial Arts,
he has been featured on the covers of a variety
of popular magazines such as Inside Kung Fu and
Official Karate Magazine. Furthermore, he was
is awarded membership in the Martial Arts Hall
of Fame in 1987 and the Karate Hall of Fame 1988
as the only non-Karate member.
Pushing himself
to make a greater impact on the community, Tuhon
Gaje revolutionized the training methods of U.S.
Law Enforcement. He soon became internationally
known for his work as technical advisor and in
the 1988 video "Surviving Edged Weapons,"
reviewed as "the finest law enforcement training
video ever made."
Dr. Kevin
Parsons, National Training Director for the Justice
System Training Association and the United States
Police Defensive Tactics Training Association,
stated, "The techniques of Leo Gaje have
revolutionized the use of force." He also
said of Tuhon Gaje’s teachings, "These
tactical training programs are the most progressive,
effective and advanced methods for the application
of intermediate force, liability reduction and
officer survival available to the law enforcement
community today".
Tuhon Gaje
developed the Safety Baton System and the Edged
Weapon Awareness / Strategic Knife Defense programs
from traditional Kali to better serve Law enforcement
needs resulting in a great improvement in officer
performance and departmental liability reduction.
Further promoting
the art of Kali and serving the community, Tuhon
Gaje also developed training programs appropriate
for military use. He institutionalized Pekiti
Tirsia as the official combatives program for
the Philippine Marine Corps and Special Action
Force of the Philippine National Police. He developed
even more training programs for a variety of security,
law enforcement and military departments in the
Philippines. His efforts spread outside the Philippines
as Tuhon Gaje has introduced Kali to the U.S.
Marines and Navy as well as a variety of special
forces and VIP / presidential protective details
in Asia, Europe and the USA.
Today, Tuhon
Gaje continues to spread his art of Pekiti Tirsia
both to students of traditional Kali as well as
the Personal Security, Law Enforcement and Military
community for the benefit of all those involved.
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has
given special recognition to Tuhon Gaje for exemplary
achievement for the worldwide propagation of Pekiti-Tirsia
and the indigenous Filipino Martial Arts.
Learning
from Tuhon Leo T. Gaje Jr.
Tuhon
Gaje emphasizes the Philosophy of Kali so students
benefit from both the physical strengthening as
well as the positive mental development, confidence
and empowerment learned from Kali. By following
the Philosophy of Life he teaches, one applies
logic, reasoning and judgment to his own development
and thereby takes responsibility for his own growth.
Using the Thought Provoking Process, a method
based on Filipino culture, Tuhon Gaje encourages
the student to develop his critical thinking and
evaluation skills by leaving certain questions
unanswered and guiding the student to discover
the solutions. Students initially apply these
skills to the martial arts, but once one begins
to learn, then the skills become a part of everyday
life.
Tuhon Gaje’s
contributions to the art include organizing Pekiti
Tirsia so that learning is easier. He compartmentalized
methods so relative techniques and strategies
could be more easily isolated and practiced then
assimilated back into the whole system. He also
renewed teaching methods to be more effective.
No longer do students have to learn solely by
the "wisdom of pain," wherein one is
pounded during training until finding an escape
or counter. That is the old way from his early
years, and by itself, is not appropriate for many.
Also, Tuhon Gaje has greatly developed the intellectual
understanding of the art and reputation of quality
by developing effective methods to communicate
the principles of Kali.
When it comes
to training with Tuhon, application is the key.
In combat with edged weapons, "A mistake
is a blunder," resulting in death so Kali
is an "art of perfection." One trains
footwork, body mechanics and striking methods
for coordination. One is taught to flow, bridging
movements and techniques and responding to attacks
by reaction conditioning. It is from this flow
that advanced training begins and application
is learned "blow by blow." Techniques
and their counters are learned during the flow
of movements by testing their function on the
fly. A sense of adaptability is developed which
fine-tunes the mental acuity and response time
of a student. Attacks are varied and techniques
are performed differently in order to prepare
the student to apply his principles to something
previously unstudied. Learning becomes streamlined
and the absorption of new tactics and strategies
becomes quick. A new technique becomes reaction
and function immediately.
Ultimately,
the motivation and support Tuhon Gaje imparts
to his students has in the past and will in the
future continue to take them to new levels of
success and performance beyond what once seemed
possible. Training personally with Tuhon Gaje
is indeed an inspiring and challenging experience.