Tributes

Grand Master Yap began his career back in the 1940s providing Feng Shui advice and services to countless business tycoons, politicians, members of the royal families, celebrities and spiritual leaders all over the world. He travels extensively to deliver his powerful talks about the life-changing secrets of Feng Shui, and helps countless numbers of individuals to improve the quality of their life and fortune.
(…)Yap Cheng Hai is widely regarded by many as the top Feng Shui exponent in the world today. Besides a handful of Chinese-speaking peers who remain permanently in China and Taiwan, there are hardly any Masters today who share the same stature and standing as Grand Master Yap's. Not only is the Grand Master a highly respected scholar of Chinese arts and culture, he is possibly one of the remaining few who can truly claim to have practised and applied the skills of authentic Feng Shui for more than half a century. His knowledge of, and technical skills in, Feng Shui, both academically and practically, are unmatched and unrivalled.
A biography on Grand Master Yap Cheng Hai would be incomplete without a word about his passion for humanity, charity, and philanthropy. Yap Cheng Hai regularly contributes to charity for the spiritual development of the Buddhist and Taoist faiths, and reaches out to many less fortunate people lending them a helping hand. He provides charity seminars to raise funds for the underprivileged, contributing funds and labor to ease their lives. He is recognized in many Buddhist associations throughout Asia for his contribution to their services and teachings. Yap Cheng Hai has been happily married for more than 50 years and is a proud father of four wonderful children and the grandfather of eight.

In the ancient times, a Chinese master students were his disciples and they tried to learn his trade secrets by observing his dealing during many years. Very often they would have to take care of things that were in no related to their subject o finterest. Teaching was not what we experience nowadays and teaching to westerners was clearly out of question for most.
Today thanks to Master Yap non Chinese can learn a highly regarded art and practice to the very high stardards he has set. This was made possible through indoor sessions but especially by accompanying him on site, looking at the way he sees nature at work.

His profound kindness, his constant readiness to consider his students questions, his great sense of humour, his ethic have set an example for us all and we wanted to pay tribute to him in these pages.

