Located in the heart of the prairies, our Saskatchewan branch serves as our headquarters for all of Western Canada and is the oldest Chung Wah branch outside of China.

The downtown branch was established by Master Lee in 1984. Supervised and maintained by several senior students over the years, the branch is now under the direction of Dr. T. R. Mrazek, a longtime disciple of Master Lee.

In 2000, the branch relocated within the brand new Chinese Cultural Centre.
This was a positive step, continuing an ongoing good relationship with the local Chinese community. Coinciding with the grand opening ceremonies, Master Lee brought a team of top students from Ontario, as well as a team of Shaolin Kung Fu monks from China to commemorate the occasion. Special exhibition performances were held in Regina and Saskatoon. This was among the highest calibre Chinese martial arts the province had ever seen and was received with great enthusiasm by the community.

Although the capital city of Regina has a very small population, per capita, it has a very large Chinese community. Furthermore, Regina has twinned universities and cities within the province of Shandong, China. Saskatchewan is twinned with China’s Jilin province.

Our Saskatchewan branch is the longest running Kung Fu school in the province. In its history, the branch has held two of the largest and most successful open martial art tournaments to date, welcomed dignitaries from Canada, United States, China and Europe, taught thousands of students, won hundreds of gold medals and performed countless times for the local community. In 1996 the branch established the Guiness World Record for the world’s longest distance lion dance.

The Western Headquarters is a gentle contrast to the constant excitement of our Eastern counterpart. Quiet and peaceful, the centre facilitates assisting in major research projects and publications. Students enjoy training while looking forward to pivotal activities throughout the year, such as lion dancing, tournament competition, our multicultural festivals and Chinese New Year.

Long term goals include exp