Persian Meels from Iran

I have to say that I am very impressed with Persian Meels following my visit to Iran, but first some background.

Persian Mils from Iran

Large Clubs by Cobbett and Jenkin

Cobbett and Jenkin CoverWhen I first discovered Indian Clubs, it was via the book published by Cobbett and Jenkin in 1905.
The book has detailed plans for four clubs referred to as A, B, C, and D. I had these clubs made up by a local woodturner here in Perth, Western Australia.
Club A, at 26″ in length is a very long Indian Club.
Club B, C and D are big clubs, I always considered, mistakenly I might add, to be Persian Meels.

Not Persian Meels rather Short Jori

After visiting Indian and Iran I became aware that these clubs were different, the Cobbett and Jenkin Clubs were not Persian Meels.

I think that the Cobbetts were derived from the Jori club from the Akharas of Varanasi, as the handling and weight distribution are very similar, the major difference is that they are shorter and do not have iron collars at the base.

Please do not think that I am discounting the Cobbett and Jenkin Clubs, that could not be further from the truth, as they were instrumental in my learning how to swing big clubs.

Persian Meels from Iran

Over the past weeks I have been consumed with my new Persian Mils, since getting back from this years Indian Club World Tour, the lighter Mils 4.5kg, 6kg, 7kg and 8kg, are great and swing beautifully. The 10kg clubs are a massive challenge.

I follow the Zurkhaneh discipline of holding the clubs in front of the body with wrists below 90° aiming for 100° degrees and avoiding body contact.

First Impressions of Persian Meels

Persian Meels are made with one club heavier than the other, the heavier club is intended for the dominant arm, be it left or right.

  1. The pear-shaped design of the clubs moves the weight towards the fat end and further away from the handle, this feature alone has major handling effects.
  2. The club feels as if it falls faster during the backward cast.
  3. It forces you to work harder in the upward pull, bringing the club back to the front.
  4. The weight position makes it harder to balance at the front of the body, compared to a fuller-bodied club like the Cobbett and Jenkin.
  5. The transfer of body weight during swings has to be efficient, you have to make sure you stay in the centre of the arc to maintain balance when the club comes to rest.
  6. The narrow shoulder of the clubs really encourages a very tight cast over the shoulder and massive triceps extension.

The lightest meels I possess weigh 4.5kg each and are a fantastic size for learning and experimenting. I witnessed many Pahlevans performing some very interesting movements during their Zurkhaneh sessions, some of which I emulate in this video.

The heavier Mil 6kg, 7kg, 8kg and 10kg (individual weights) are more restricted movement-wise but challenging in their control due to the heavier weights.

This is very much about my first impressions of the Persian Meels, and there will be many more comments to follow.


Read More…

Yours in Club and Gada Swinging

How to use Drum Beats for Training with Indian Clubs 1

Paul Taras Wolkowinski

11 comments… add one
  • Simon hunt Sep 29, 2014 @ 6:30

    Just watched your video and I’m truely inspired. I’ve been swinging indian clubs for a couple of years ( mike Simpson’s ) and have just bought a pr of Persian mils.
    Good to know they are ment to be differing weights..
    Thanks for a great video, one that I will watch again and try to emulate….
    Simon.

  • simon Oct 2, 2014 @ 7:01

    Hi Paul,
    I’ve a set of mikes clubs of British military style fron 1kg to 7kg.\
    My mils are from a guy in london called Radek who made them.\
    Have to say I just think they are great but heavy at 7kg, gets the grip burning.
    Love your 4.5kg clubs, shame they are not available here io the uk.
    I’m subscribed to your YouTube channel so will view the other mil one….
    Cheers
    Simon

    • Paul Taras Wolkowinski Oct 7, 2014 @ 17:42

      Hi Simon,
      Thanks for your email. Your meels are very heavy for a starter pair, you would do well to get some at about 4kg.
      I have been doing serious battle with Persian Meels since my return, learning lots of new things.
      The biggest revelation is the small meels button, and the body contour of the meel when held up against the body.
      Many pictures show the meel held with the small finger or pinky under the button, this hold allows the meel to drop down in the front of the body to 100 degrees, roughly waist level. In this position the pear shape of the meel hugs the contour of the body and allows for the hand to be close to the body, which is quite restful. Then the hand can follow the body shape up and cast over the shoulder. Totally amazing, I have been swinging both Persian Meels and my Cobbetts and the difference is astounding.
      For example, I struggle with the 7kg Cobbetts and comfortably swing Persian Meels at 8kg, why? The Cobbetts are fatter, so you have to hold them further away from the body, which puts a lot of strain whole arm, and especially the biceps.
      The handles are also different, Cobbetts parallel and fat encouraging a firm grip, Persian Meels conical which makes the Meel slide and catch on the third finger during the back swing, a relaxed loose grip. The exercises also feel different and I am aching across my back now, rather than the fore arms and biceps. So the physical focus is totally different.
      I am now convinced that the Cobbetts were derived from the long Indian Jori Club.
      The Persian Meel is ancient, but very new to me, very exciting and totally unexpected.
      Will follow up with a video soon. All the best. Paul

  • Mick Jun 20, 2021 @ 14:39

    Hi Paul
    I just saw your article and experience on persian meels, I’m from Iran and use to take my 3 years old son to zorkhaneh, and now we are in Perth, he is 40 years old and we remember those days.
    May I have the details of local wood turner please?, I’m looking to get one light weight made to start with.
    Keep Enjoy exercising the 2400 years sport instruments.
    Cheers
    Mick

    • Paul Taras Wolkowinski Jun 21, 2021 @ 10:52

      Hi Mick, Thank you for your message. It would be best if we could meet at my place in Perth, and you can decide which meels you would like. I make all my own clubs apart from the meels I imported from Iran, I have made templates from those meels and can reproduce them. Let me know when you are free. Best Regards. Paul

  • Bahman melikniya Mar 16, 2022 @ 13:16

    Hi there I looking to buy a pair of Iranian meels , could you please provide me with your contact information
    Thanks bahman

  • Rouz Dec 12, 2023 @ 22:42

    Hi
    I’m looking to buy a Iranian Meels
    If you can help me with.
    Thank you

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.