
Discover how UTAR Kampar’s Wushu Club blends lion dance, sanda, and taiji into a holistic campus life
UNIVERSITY life is often measured by examinations and academic milestones — but for a growing community of students at Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR), some of the most meaningful lessons happen long after the lecture hall empties.
As evening descends on Dewan Tun Dr Ling Liong Sik at UTAR’s Kampar Campus, a different kind of education unfolds. Students in sportswear move with measured precision — some flowing with the controlled elegance of contemporary wushu, others engaging in focused sparring drills where every strike and evasive movement reflects years of discipline. A short walk away, near Learning Complex 1 (Block B), vivid dancing lions leap to life and a magnificent dragon soars through the air, guided by perfectly synchronised hands. The discipline is the same. The spirit is unmistakable.
These scenes belong to one collective: the UTAR Kampar Campus Wushu Club.
From a Handful of Enthusiasts to Over 150 Members
Founded in 2007, the club began as a tight-knit circle of Chinese martial arts enthusiasts. Over the years, it has grown into a vibrant multi-disciplinary organisation with three distinct divisions: the Lion and Dragon Dance Division, the Sanda Division, and the Taiji Pushing Hand and Contemporary Wushu Division — now boasting more than 150 active members.
Since its establishment, the club has competed across a wide range of tournaments including the UTAR Wushu Championship, Sanda King Open, LFC Cup Selangor Wushu Invitation Championship, International Wushu Tournament, Online Hero Wushu Competition, and the TAR UMT Cup Traditional Southern Lion Dance Invitational Competition, consistently producing commendable results.
Beyond the competition stage, the club is equally active in community service and cultural outreach — an extension of UTAR’s broader commitment to shaping graduates who contribute meaningfully to society.

Rebuilt From the Ground Up: A Chairperson’s Story
Few people embody the club’s resilience more than its current Chairperson, Kong Shao Xuan. A senior Business Administration student at Kampar Campus, Kong joined the club in 2022 during the recovery period following the COVID-19 pandemic — at a time when membership numbers were low and activities were sparse.
Drawn in by a lifelong fascination with lion dance, he chose to stay committed even when the club’s momentum was at its lowest. “During the time I joined, the number of members was low and club activities were very limited as everyone was recovering from the pandemic,” he recalled. “However, due to my persistent enthusiasm for Chinese culture, I chose to remain active and learned as much as I could.”
Today, what was once a near-empty storeroom has become a space brimming with equipment, driven by surging membership and a packed calendar of activities. Kong reflects on the transformation with quiet pride. “Being part of this journey gives me a strong sense of belonging and fulfilment. I hope the club maintains this momentum and develops sustainably — growing even stronger than before.”
The Yin and Yang of a Well-Rounded Education
The UTAR Kampar Campus Wushu Club is more than an extracurricular pursuit — it is a testament to what campus life can cultivate beyond academic achievement. Through the rigours of martial arts training, the intricacies of cultural performance, and the responsibility of club leadership, students develop teamwork, perseverance, cultural pride, and the kind of character that no textbook alone can instil.
Much like the yin and yang philosophy that underpins wushu itself — vigorous yet graceful, powerful yet precise — UTAR’s approach to holistic education prepares students to navigate a complex world with both competence and integrity.
UTAR currently offers over 140 programmes spanning Foundation Studies through to Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD degrees across disciplines including Business, Engineering, Information Technology, Medicine and Health Sciences, Creative Industries, Agriculture and Food Science, and more.
Prospective students and their families are welcome to visit the UTAR Open Day on April 4–5 and April 25–26 April 2026, from 9am to 4.30pm, at both the Kampar and Sungai Long campuses. For further information, visit www.utar.edu.my, or call 05-468 8888 (Kampar Campus) or 03-9086 0288 (Sungai Long Campus).
The Sun Malaysia

