Another monk who managed to escape the burning of the Temple was a young master named Jiang Nan. This monk fled south with the Qing army in pursuit. His original name is lost to us. In an effort to hide from his enemy, he changed his name. After crossing a river that marked the edge of China, he chose the name Jiang Nan, which means "South of the River". It was south of this river that he would spend the rest of his life.
For 50 years, Jiang Nan wandered further and further south with only one mission in life: to pass on his art to a worthy successor. One night, near the border between present-day Thailand and Malaysia, he encountered a young medicine-man who was demonstrating Kung Fu to attract customers to his mobile roadside stall. The monk observed the young man every night for 6 nights. On the 7th night, after the crowd had dispersed, the monk approached the young man. Without any aggression in his voice, the monk said, "Not bad. But despite all the applause, what you showed was not real kung fu."
The young man was shocked. As a traveling medicine-man, he relied on his kung fu to ward off bandits and thugs who would frequently challenge him. And yet this old monk was telling him that his kung fu was useless!
The monk continued. "Don't take my word for it. If you like, we can put it to the test with some friendly sparring."
The young man agreed, eager to prove himself. But to his amazement, the 80-year-old monk beat him easily. Even when the young man stopped pulling his punches and attacked with full force, the monk handled him as if playing with a child. Recognizing the signs of true mastery, the young man knelt before the monk and begged to be accepted as a student.
With a smile, the Venerable Jiang Nan said, "Yes, on one condition." The young man bowed lower and said that he would do anything. Raising the young man's head and looking into his eyes with a smile, the monk said simply, "Start from scratch."
That young man was named Yang Fatt Khun.
When Yang Fatt Khun was in his 70s, he accepted a young man as a student. This man was already well trained in the martial arts and earned his living as a professional Muay Thai fighter. That man was named Ho Fatt Nam.
At first, master Yang rejected the young Ho's requests to become a student. But one night, with the help of one of Yang's students, the young Ho snuck into the secret training hall. Prostrating before Yang with the traditional gifts, he begged to be accepted. Taking the gifts and placing them on the altar, Yang said, "This is Heaven's Will."
Each year, master Yang held a grand sparring competition among his students in order to choose his top ten disciples. From an unranked position, Ho Fatt Nam gradually rose to a top position. When master Yang announced his retirement, he named Ho Fatt Nam as his successor.
A young Wong Kiew Kit was one of the last students to learn from master Ho. When he first begged to be accepted as a student, master Ho had only one request: "Start from scratch."