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Leo Gaje

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Leo Gaje
BornLeopoldo Tortal Gaje Jr.
(1938-05-05) May 5, 1938 (age 86)
Philippines
StyleFilipino martial arts
Pekiti-Tirsia Kali
RankGrand Tuhon
Notable relativesGrand Tuhon Conrado Tortal (grandfather)
Websitegrandtuhonsupremo.com

Leo Gaje (born May 5, 1938) is the grandson and heir to Conrado B. Tortal and the present Keeper of the Pekiti-Tirsia Kali System.[1][2]

Gaje was born in the Philippines on May 5, 1938. Starting at the age of six, he was taught Pekiti-Tirsia, by his grandfather Conrado Tortal, a system founded by the Tortal family in 1897. In 1972 he moved to the United States and shortly after began to teach his family martial art fighting system. Up to that point, it was a fighting system that had never been taught outside of the Philippines.

Today, Gaje continues to teach his art of Pekiti Tirsia to students of martial arts, personal security, law enforcement and militaries worldwide. He has been featured on the covers of several top martial arts magazines. He is a member of the Martial Arts Hall of Fame and the Karate Hall of Fame.[3]

Gaje has trained notable martial artists such as Dan Inosanto, Eddie Jafri, Tom Bisio, Erwin Ballarta, William McGrath, Philip Gelinas, and Greg Alland.[4] Inosanto said about Pekiti-Tirsia Kali, "In the field of strategic knife defense, the Pekiti-Tirsia System of Kali is one of the most progressive, practical and sophisticated systems of tactical knife self-defense and edged weapon awareness that I have encountered."

Gaje, Inosanto, and Jafri were responsible for the creation of a fusion style martial art that incorporated the styles of the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia called Madjapahit as a style of Silat. Inosanto later coined the term Maphilindo for the style to represent the style's origin and founded Maphilindo Silat.

References

  1. ^ "Commandos from Marines Force Recon Company subdue BIFF guards hand-to-hand". InterAksyon.com.
  2. ^ "Grand Tuhon Leo T Gaje Jr".
  3. ^ "International Karate & Kickboxing Hall of Fame". wujiaquan.com.
  4. ^ Lloyd, Leo (April 7, 1978). "Filipino Martial Art Of Arnis Found Helpful to U.S. Police". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. p. 13C.