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» The Taking of Tawang (Facebook post rehashed)
Sad
how ignorant and indifferent we are about our own history as a nation.
An interesting tale of how Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh became a part of
India in 1951. Reproducing an article which appeared on Kangla Online.
Khathing & the taking of Tawang
By Yambem Laba
TAWANG was lately in the news because of the unfortunate demise of
Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Dorjee Khandu, who hailed from the
area, in an unfortunate helicopter crash. But last year Tawang made
headlines for a totally different reason: China`s reassertion of its
claim over the area prompted Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to declare
time and again that Arunachal Pradesh was an integral part of India. The
Chinese claim is nothing new. In 1962, they attacked India and occupied
the entire area, almost reaching the foothills near Tezpur. The abrupt
Indian withdrawal then prompted Jawaharalal Nehru`s infamous statement
that `my heart goes out to the people of Assam`, meaning that the
Indian Army was withdrawing to defend the Indian mainland, leaving Assam
and the entire North-east to the Chinese.
Why that country withdrew thereafter is for contemporary historians
to ponder, but the fact remains that as late as 1951 the entire area up
to Dirang Dzong was under Tibetan administration, long after the Indian
tricolour had been hoisted at the Red Fort on 15 August 1947. Dzong in
Tibetan means a fort, where sat the magistrates or dzongpens to
administer the area. That is why the Chinese had once stated that Tawang
would have been their territory had it not been for Manipuri adventurer
Major Bob Khathing who, in 1951, occupied the area for India. The truth
is that while the McMahon Line was laid as early as 1914 between
British India and Tibet, with the Chinese refusing to participate in the
deliberations, it had never been demarcated meaning the border
lines were never laid out on the ground. That was when Khathing became a
legend in his own lifetime.
Born Ranenglao Khathing on 28 February 1912 in Manipur`s Ukhrul
district, he was a Tangkhul Naga. He studied initially at Sir Johnstone
High School in Imphal, completed his matriculation from Shillong and
later joined Cotton College in Guwahati. Though he failed to clear his
BA examinations in 1936, he was determined not to return home until he
had his degree. So he went to Harasingha in Assam`s Darrang district,
founded a middle elementary school and planted a tree that stands to
this day. He cleared his examinations in 1937, the same year SJ Duncan,
the British subdivisional officer of Ukhrul, asked him to come back and
teach. By 1939, Khathing was serving as headmaster of Ukhrul High
School, and when World War II broke out over Europe and soon found
reflections across Asia, he bade the blackboard farewell and enrolled at
the Officer`s Training School.
Commissioned into the 9/11 Hyderabad Regiment, he had General Thimaya
as his company commander and there was another person who was later to
became Chief of Army Staff, General TN Raina.
By 1942, Khathing was transferred to the newly raised Assam Regiment
in Shillong and became a captain. It was in the officer`s mess at
Jorhat that he acquired the name Bob. Apparently the Americans found it
difficult to pronounce `Ranenglao` and instead called him Robert, then
truncated that to Bob. It was also at this time that the Allied Forces
fighting the Japanese decided to raise V-Force, a guerrilla outfit like
Wingate`s famed Chindits but comprising hill people of the region, led
by an Allied officer. These people, because of the topography and their
ability to live off the land, sometimes operated 150 miles from the
nearest supply base and inflicted heavy casualties on the Japanese
behind their own lines, acting as a screen for the 14th Army of the
Allied forces.
Khathing was sent to command a V-Force group in the Ukhrul area, his
happy hunting ground. He shed his army tunic, shaved his head like a
typical Tangkhul tribesman, with a thick mane running down the middle of
his scalp. Mohawk style. On his back he carried a basket with dried
meat and salt, rations for two weeks, and concealed his gun in his
Tangkhul shawl. It is believed that he himself killed some 120 Japanese
soldiers. He was awarded the Military Cross and made a Member of the
British Empire.
With the war won, he was, on request by the late Maharaj Kumar
Priyabrata Singh, returned to Manipur in 1947 and joined the then
interim government as minister in charge of the hill areas. In 1949,
when Manipur merged with India following the now controversial merger
agreement, the interim government was dissolved and Khathing, by his own
admission, found himself `without a job for six months`.
That was when Sir Akbar Hydari, then Assam governor, asked him to
join the Assam Rifles as a stopgap measure. He served with the 2nd Assam
Rifles in Sadiya and by 1951 he was inducted into the Indian Frontier
Administrative Service as an assistant political officer. Summoned by
then Assam governor Jairamdas Daulatram, he was asked, `Do you know
Tawang?` He was then given a `secret` file to study and told to `go
and bring Tawang under Indian administration`. This task could not be
implemented by the British for 50-odd years.
On 17 January 1951, Khathing, accompanied by Captain Hem Bahadur
Limbu of 5th Assam Rifles and 200 troops and Captain Modiero of the Army
Medical Corps left Lokra for the foothills, bound for Tawang. They were
later joined by a 600-strong team of porters. On 19 January, they
reached Sisiri and were joined by Major TC Allen, the last British
political officer of the North East Frontier Agency. Five days later the
party reached Dirang Dzong, the last Tibetan administrative
headquarters, and were met by Katuk Lama, assistant Tibetan agent, and
the Goanburras of Dirang. On 26 January, Major Khathing hoisted the
Indian flag and a barakhana followed. The party stayed in Dirang for
four days, during which time they received airdrops. On 1 February, they
moved out and halted at Chakpurpu on their way to Sangje Dzong. On the
third day, they made a five-mile climb to cross Sela Pass and pressed on
to what was entered in Khathing`s diary as the `Tea Place` where
water could be collected from the frozen surface to make tea. By 7.30
pm, the party closed in on Nurunang.
On 4 February, they reached Jang village where two locals were sent
out to collect information and gauge the people`s feelings towards
their coming. The next day, the headmen and elders of Rho,Changda and
the surrounding villages of Jang called on Khathing, who lost no time in
explaining the purpose of his visit and told them in no uncertain terms
that they were no longer to take orders from the Tsona Dzongpens. That
day, he, Captain Limbu, Subedar Bir Bahadur and Jamadar Udaibir Gurung
climbed about half a mile on the Sela Tract to choose the site for the
checkpost and construct a barracks.
On 6 February they camped at Gyankar and Tibetan representatives of
the Tsona Dzongpens came to meet them. It was also Tibetan New Year or
Lhosar, the first day of the Year of the Iron Horse. In the evening it
snowed heavily and the villagers took this as a very good omen. Tawang
was reached on 7 February and two days were spent scouting the area for a
permanent site where both civil and military lines could be laid out
with sufficient area for a playground.
A place was chosen north-east of Tawang Monastery and a meeting with
Tibetan officials was scheduled for 9 February, but they had shown a
reluctance to accept Indian authority overnight. Khathing told me in
1985, when I`d accompanied him on his last trip to Tawang, that,
left with no option, he told Captain Limbu to order his troops to fix
bayonets and stage a flag march around Tawang to show he meant business.
By the evening it had the desired effect and the Tibetan officials and
elders of the monastery came to meet him. They were then given notice
that the Tsona Dzongpens or any representatives of the Tibetan
government could no longer exercise any power over the people living
south of the Bumla range.
On 11 February, Khathing visited the monastery, called on the abbot
and presented him and the other monks gifts that comprised gramophone
players, cloth and tiffin-carriers. The next day all the chhgergans
(officials) of the 11 tsos or Tibetan administrative units were called
up and a general order was issued directing them not to take any more
order from the Dzongpens or Drekhong or pay tribute to them any longer.
That afternoon, Tibetan officials and the Nyertsang called for time and
permission to exercise their authority till they heard from the Tibetan
government in Lhasa. Khathing put his foot down and told them the `area
is ours according to the Treaty of 1914` and there was no question of a
reply from their government in Lhasa and, hence, no extension could be
given. Thus did Tawang effectively become a part of India from that day
on.
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