Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Who is China's first national-level female martial arts referee
Who is China's first national-level female martial arts referee
Wang Jurong has two national referee certificates for archery and wushu, and is the only person in China with two national referee qualifications.
Wang Jurong, born in 1928, Hui nationality, a native of Cangzhou, Hebei Province, was the first female coach of China's Youth Wushu Team, who accompanied Premier Zhou and Vice Premier Chen Yi on a visit to Myanmar in 1960, where she performed traditional Chinese martial arts such as Chajuan and Taijiquan for the Burmese people at a high temperature of 40 degrees Celsius. Her father, Mr. Wang Zhiping, was a famous patriotic martial artist in China. After the death of Mr. Wang, she adhered to her father's will and made efforts to promote Chinese Wushu to the world, and went to Japan four times to give lectures and performed and filmed a TV film of "China Zhenzhong Taijiquan" for compatriots in Hong Kong, which was translated into four languages: Chinese, Cantonese, Japanese and English, and she performed and filmed a TV film of "Simplified Taijiquan and Taijiquan" for the people of Shanghai, which the audience is still asked to return. In recent years, she organized the martial arts taught by her father as well as the preserved materials into books and unreservedly dedicated them to the vast number of martial arts enthusiasts, and the "Twenty Methods of Boxing" written by her was translated into three languages, namely, English, French, and Japanese; the monographs of "Double Swords of the Dragon and Phoenix", "Danfeng Kungfu", and "Thirteen Taipao Kungfu of Shaolin" became the readers' most sought-after books; and the book of "Practicing Kungfu and Nourishing the Body" was made into video and audio recordings and widely issued.1988 In 1988, she and her husband, Professor Wu Chengde of the Orthopedic Traumatology Department of the Shanghai College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, co-authored a 350,000-word book entitled "Wang Zi Ping and Martial Arts".
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