Tuesday, September 13, 2011


HIMALAYAN GUARDIAN Sept 14, 2011
Pang Lhabsol celebrated throughout Sikkim
Himalayan News Network
Gangtok, Sept 13: Once in a year the Sikkimese people collectively pay obeisance to their guardian mountain deities and yesterday the annual Pang Lhabsol was celebrated throughout Sikkim.
The traditional ritualistic lama dances known as chham were performed in several monasteries, including Pemayangtse, Rabang and Lachen monasteries in west, south and north districts respectively.
In the capital, prayers were offered at the royal Tsuklhakhang monastery and also at the venue of the ‘Statue of Unity’, where Governor BP Singh was also present.
A dance competition among ethnic communities was also organized in the capital which had the participation of several schools and clubs.
While Pang Lhabsol is being celebrated as ‘unity day’ by the people who recall the solemn oath of brotherhood observed by the ancestors of the indigenous Bhutia-Lepcha communities – Lepcha chief Thekongtek and Bhutia ruler Khye Bumsa – in the 13th century, this autumn festival is traditionally observed as the day when the Sikkimese people pay obeisance to their guardian deities – Khangchendzonga and Yabdu – and pray for peace and prosperity of the land.
Peace process to conclude in a month: Prachanda
Biratnagar, Sept 13: Chairman of the UCPN-Maoist, Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ has said on Sunday that the peace process would be concluded in a month which thereby expedites the constitution writing.
Before returning to the capital city following a three-day personal visit to the region, chairman Dahal told journalists at Biratnagar that his party has been flexible to take the peace process to a logical conclusion.
Responding to a query, chairman Dahal said as the Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML have also been positive for peace and constitution, both the task would be concluded on the fixed date.
He stressed for unity among the big political parties for peace and new constitution.
Media reports in India and Nepal wondered whether the Maoist leader visited Siliguri this week as the former PM was reportedly missing after a function in Gorkha district in Nepal.
Nepal detains 20 Tibetans for illegal crossing
Kathmandu, Sept 13: Police in Nepal say they have detained 20 Tibetans who trekked the treacherous Himalayan trail for more than two weeks from their mountain homes.
Police spokesman Binod Shrestha said the 15 men and five women were detained Monday after they crossed the border, AP reported.
They are aged 18 to 21 years old and are being transported to the capital, Katmandu.
Tibetan refugees who are detained in Nepal are generally handed over to the United Nations' refugee agency. The U.N. helps them on their journey to the Indian town of Dharmsala where the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama lives.
Hundreds of Tibetans trek into Nepal every year to visit Dalai Lama. They walk route to avoid Chinese border guards.
China’s rule in Tibet is undemocratic: exiled Tibetan PM
Arvind Sharma
Dharamsala, Sept 13: The newly-elected Prime Minister of Tibetans in exile, Lobsang Sangay, described the Dalai Lama as a “true democrat” and a “magnanimous people’s leader.”
His statement on the Tibetan spiritual leader came during the 51st celebrations of Tibetan Democracy Day. Stating that he was “fully committed” to the Dalai Lama’s “vision of a democratic and secular” Tibet, Sangay said, “I can say with confidence that our exile democratic administration is far superior to China's colonial rule in Tibet.”
“Tibetans in Tibet live under harsh autocracy while those of us in exile enjoy democracy”, he added.
In another dig at the Chinese authorities, Sangay said, “While I have the mandate of the Tibetan world, the Party Secretary of “Tibet Autonomous Region” (TAR) is hand picked by Beijing, and has never been a Tibetan. We are part of a democratic family in the world, China is not. “
“The Kalon Tripa is the legitimate representative of the Tibetan people, while China’s rule in Tibet is undemocratic and illegitimate,” he added.
Referring to the democratic process among exiled Tibetans, Sangay said, “The time has now come for us to demonstrate that we can survive and indeed thrive independently with our new responsibilities. We must actively participate in the democratic process by ensuring that our leaders remain accountable and true to the democratic spirit.”
CBI  to seek Interpol help in Bhutan lottery scam
Sikkim officials questioned on irregularities
Himalayan News Service
Kochi, Sept 13: The CBI will seek the help of the Interpol to question the officials of Bhutan Government in connection with the illegal lotteries scam of Kerala which is said to have caused a drain of `80,000 crore from the State. The agency will soon make a formal request to the Interpol in this connection.
The decision to extend the probe into the illegal lotteries scam to Bhutan was taken by the agency on the basis of the discovery that Santiago Martin, the “lottery king” who was the operator for Sikkim and Bhutan lotteries in Kerala, had carried out several irregularities in the business, a national daily reported.
Investigating officials had visited Gangtok in this connection and had questioned several Government officials there. However, the CBI has to get the assistance and permission of the Interpol for any such action to be carried out in Bhutan. Sources expected to get such clearance without any difficulty.
The investigators had confiscated hundreds of documents proving irregularities during raids in premises owned by Martin and his close relative John Kennedy in several parts of the country. The agency has served notices to the business partners of Martin asking them to appear before the investigators for questioning.
The CBI had taken over the probe into the illegal lotteries scam, which had become a huge issue in the last Assembly election in Kerala, after a directive from the Kerala High Court on May 24. The court order had come on a petition filed by Congress leader VD Satheesan, who had taken up the issue as a political weapon against the CPI(M)-led LDF.
Editorial
BHATTARAI’S CHALLENGE
Take The Middle Path
A country that ousted its monarch to ensure restoration of full-fledged democracy Nepal did itself a favour by electing Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai as its new Prime Minister. It is ironic that even when the Maoists are the largest party in the Parliament they failed to have their own man as PM and had to choose non-Maoists to lead the country for some time. As chief of the Maoist party Prachanda was the natural choice for the PM’s post. But non-Maoist parties and their MPs made it impossible for the Maoist chief to lead the country as PM. Bhattarai could and should have been elected to the highest post earlier. This would have enabled the Parliament to draft the new constitution on time. However, his choice is welcome and one hopes that the alumnus from JNU will be able to strike a fine balance and take the middle path in dealing with Nepal’s two giant neighbours.
The madhesi  parties, which want a federal structure for Nepal, are likely to extract their pound of flesh by supporting Bhattarai who has promised to give a new constitution to the country within at least six months. In a democracy the voice of the majority must prevail. However, Nepal faces a tricky situation with the Indian-origin Nepalese gradually gaining the upper hand politically. Bhattarai must also note that China’s growing interest in developing Nepal’s economy is keenly watched by New Delhi. There is a general feeling among a large section of the Nepalese that Indian influence in Nepal’s internal politics, which is growing, is unacceptable. While stating that “Nepal is not anti-Indian,” Bhattarai is firm on the belief that guarding Nepal’s sovereignty “should not be seen as being anti-Indian.”
“Woeser is one of the most eloquent and fiercest critics of Chinese oppression in Tibet
Tibetan writer Woeser receives Prince Claus Award for outstanding cultural achievement and influence
The well-known essayist and blogger Woeser, who lives in Beijing, has been awarded a Prince Claus Award by the Netherlands-based Prince Claus Fund for her outstanding achievements in the field of culture.
The Prince Claus Awards are presented annually to individuals, groups and organisations in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean for their outstanding achievements in the field of culture and development and the positive effect of their work on their direct environment and on the wider cultural or social field. A press release by the Prince Claus Fund yesterday announcing the news, stated: “We are delighted to honour Woeser whose writings offer a unique perspective on the complexity of the current situation in Tibet.”   
   Tsering Jampa, Executive Director of the International Campaign for Tibet in Europe, said: “This award is richly-deserved; Woeser is one of the most eloquent and fiercest critics of Chinese oppression in Tibet, who has demonstrated breath-taking courage in documenting the struggle to preserve a unique and precious cultural identity. This important award also honours many more Tibetan writers and intellectuals, many of whom are serving long prison sentences and have endured torture simply for expressing the truth in their work.”
The news of the award coincided with the 18th International Book Fair in Beijing, of which the Netherlands is the host country. Jampa said: “We are working together with International PEN in the Netherlands and Amnesty International in raising awareness about Tibetan writers in prison. The Prince Claus Award for Woeser draws attention to their importance as they seek to peacefully articulate their concerns, and voice the sense of anguish, loss and dispossession due to the repression in Tibet today. We have urged Dutch writers at the Book Fair to hold these individuals in their thoughts and to speak about them whenever possible.”
Professor Tsering Shakya, an expert in contemporary Tibetan writing, compares Woeser's situation to that of the late Russian dissident writer, Alexandra Solzhenitsyn, saying: "It is the duty of courageous writers to speak of the unspeakable and lift the veil from the dark corners where horror is hidden...The events of March 2008 created a new memory and it will be narrated from generation to generation. Today, memory is no longer hidden...but advertised in cyberspace to share with the rest of the world - and in this respect Woeser occupies a unique position as chronicler of modern Tibetan memory. Her blog [and writings] have become the voice of Tibet."
Woeser was born in Lhasa, but grew up speaking Chinese after her father, who served in the People's Liberation Army, was transferred to a Tibetan area in Sichuan Province. As a member of the privileged elite, she was later admitted to a Chinese literature program for minority nationalities. It was only when she moved back to Lhasa as a young woman, where she worked as an editor for the leading Tibetan literary magazine, that she began to discover the reality of Tibet's past and to learn about Tibetan Buddhism. While in Lhasa, Woeser (who, like many Tibetans, is known by just one name) began to document the effects of religious repression, massive immigration of Chinese and unbalanced economic development.
In 2004, after her book 'Notes on Tibet' , was banned, she was informed that all her working hours would be devoted to political re-education. She moved to Beijing, and she later married Wang Lixiong, an author and commentator on Tibet who has been outspoken in his support for human rights and his willingness to take seriously the needs and concerns of Tibetans. In various ground-breaking essays, Wang Lixiong has outlined why he thinks that the Dalai Lama is the key to resolve the question of Tibet, and in March he was a signatory to a letter urging dialogue between Chinese leaders and the Dalai Lama, so as to "eliminate animosity and bring about national reconciliation".
  Woeser has published almost daily updates and comments online since March 2008, when an overwhelmingly peaceful uprising across the Tibetan plateau transformed the political landscape. At the height of the protests, more than 3 million internet users visited Woeser's blog, and her daily updates were translated into numerous languages. The personal stories she includes in her writing - the blind monk who committed suicide, the lama who was beaten when he tried to prevent a protest from escalating - bring home to the outside world the reality of the current crackdown in Tibet and its deeper significance.
'Tibet's True Heart', Woeser's new collection of poetry, translated from Chinese and with comprehensive notes, can be purchased online for $22 plus shipping from Ragged Banner. (International Campaign for Tibet)

Role of Church in Myanmar

US Church leaders pay solidarity visit to Myanmar

Myanmar was visited by an ecumenical solidarity team representing the World Council of Churches (WCC) from 4 to 9 August 2011 as part of the Council’s commitment to involve churches in conflict situations. This was a follow-up to a WCC Living Letters team visit to Myanmar in late 2010.

The five participants in the international ecumenical solidarity team included WCC Central Committee members, Asian church representatives from neighbouring countries and WCC staff.

The members of the solidarity team were given opportunities to understand the social and economic realities of the people under the new political dispensation in the country.

Prior to the visit to Myanmar, the members of the delegation visited a refugee camp in Thailand populated by hundreds of Myanmar citizens who had to flee from conflict zones in Myanmar and who crossed the border to Thailand where they are now waiting for grants of asylum in other countries.

Rev. Rothangliani Chhangte, a member of the WCC Central Committee representing the American Baptist Churches (ABC) in the USA observed that the international community needs to be more conscious of the problems in Myanmar, especially the plight of refugees who are seeking asylum in a third country.

At the last Central Committee meeting, Chhangte made an intervention on the need for ecumenical accompaniment to address the plight of Myanmar citizens and the situation of internally displaced people, refugees and migrant workers from Myanmar. Upon her return from Myanmar, she stated that a “re-opening of the registration process in refugee camps in Thailand is much needed. There are more than 150,000 refugees living in crowded camps along the Thai-Burma border."

"In 2005, the Thai government allowed the UNHCR to register people who wanted to be resettled in a third country." However, she added, "This was a one-time registration, and since then the Thai government has resisted requests to re-open registration. The United States has resettled the bulk of the refugees along with a few European countries, Canada and Australia.”

Chhangte coordinates the work of the ABC dealing with migrants from Myanmar in the United States. She reports that “the American Baptist Churches currently have more than 100 congregations across the USA with sizable numbers of Myanmarese who have migrated to the US. More than 80,000 Myanmar refuges have migrated to the U.S since 2006.”

Semegnish Asfaw, who coordinates WCC Living Letters team visits, said that “the members of the solidarity team noted that the youth and women were not so hopeful about their future, given the current situation in the country, although there has been a political change recently. After the long years of conflicts and political stalemate in the country, many young people think that their future seems pretty gloomy.”

The team heard stories of human trafficking, especially of women and young girls. Hundreds of women have been trafficked to neighbouring countries in recent years for forced marriages or forced labour.

In a meeting with church leaders in Myanmar, the visiting delegation heard that since the last general election in November 2010, “Myanmar is slowly evolving towards a more democratic state. However, the new political trend is to introduce changes in a rather slow process which may not be appreciated by the people, who have suffered long enough.”

Dr Mathews George Chunakara, director of the Commission of the Churches on International Affairs of the WCC, said that “the church leaders in Myanmar are concerned about the resumption of the conflicts in several states where Christians constitute a large segment of the population.”

According to Mathews George, “Over years the Myanmar churches have played roles in peace and reconciliation, and the effectiveness of that witness is visible in ceasefire agreements in areas like Kachin state, where the ethnic Kachin tribes represented by the Kachin Independent Army and Kachin independence organizations were in conflict with the Myanmar military for years. However, ceasefire negotiations have stalled since the end of June, posing a serious threat to any reasonable political changes in the country.”

Church leaders reported that in Kachin state, several thousand people have been displaced as a result of the conflict that broke out in past weeks, and people are facing serious food shortages as well as the spread of diseases including malaria.

The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, from the [Lutheran] Church of Norway. Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland. (WCC)

Ghising and govt conspired against me because I opposed DGHC: Chattrey Subba
Darjeeling, Sept 13: Seventy one years old Chattrey Subba is considering taking sannyas from politics. However the rebel did not fail to criticize the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration (GTA- an administrative arrangement for the Darjeeling Hills) and pitched for the separate state of Gorkhaland. It was a day of mixed emotions at the Subba household at Raushey Bazar in Kalimpong on Saturday, the day after Chattrey's release from the correctional home after 10 long years. While the family celebrated his return; bail being denied to his son Santosh Subba in a different case, cast a long shadow on the revelry.
Subba had been arrested on March 24, 2001 in connection with the Subash Ghising assassination bid case. He was finally acquitted on September 9, 2011.
Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) leader Subash Ghising, then the Chairman of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council (DGHC) had been attacked at Saath-ghoomti under the Kurseong sub division, on his way back from Delhi. Two police drivers died in the attack along with a suspected attacker. Six others were injured.
“Whosoever raises the demand for Gorkhaland is either murdered as in the case of Madan Tamang or sent behind bars like me. Even the GTA deal has been clinched over Madan Tamang’s dead body. Blackmailing over the murder forced a compromise” alleged Subba.
“I believe that only Gorkhaland can resolve the crisis of the Gorkhas. I do not have faith in anything less. Because I opposed the DGHC earlier Ghising along with the government conspired and sent me behind bars. The attack on Ghising was orchestrated by Ghising and the government to put me behind bars. While in the Correctional Home the government had offered me a high power Council which I could head. However I did not accept their proposal hence I was forced to languish in jail. They even tried to kill me” alleged Subba.
He stated that while he was in the correctional home in 2003 he had a severe heart ailment and was shifted from the Jalpaiguri Correctional Home to a medical facility in Kolkata. “There they had kept me under heavy security without giving me a single medicine for my cardiac ailment. But seeing that I did not die they were forced to send me back to the correctional home in Jalpaiguri.
Subba used to head the militant wing of the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) during the violent agitation of the 80’s led by Subash Ghising. He however had parted ways with Ghising over the formation of the DGHC in 1988. He  had floated a new outfit Gorkha Liberation Organisation (GLO) Subba had vehemently opposed the DGHC and had given a call for the continuation of the separate state agitation.
“Councils and similar administrative bodies delay the main goal of separate State. It also does not fulfill the political identity issue not accords a political security to the Gorkhas. Only a separate state than ensure this” stated Subba.
When questioned on his future plans, Subba stated “My family members want me to retire from politics and I am planning to do so.” More than 10 years behind bars seemed to have dampened the rebel spirit.
Regarding his son Santosh Subba being arrested in the Kalimpong blast incident, Subba stated “If he is guilty he should be punished. If not they should not keep him behind bars like they did to me for 10 years after which they acquitted me. I have lost precious years of my life”
On July 26, 2011, the Kalimpong motor stand was rocked by a low intensity blast at around 3am in the morning with a stove allegedly planted below a North Bengal State Transport Corporation (NBSTC) bus having exploded. Santosh was arrested in connection with this case on July 31.
“I am happy that my husband is back home after 10 long years but I am also sad that my son is behind bars though he is innocent like his father” stated Monika Subba, wife of Chattrey Subba. (Hindustan Times)
GJM to honour Chamling on Gorkhaland resolution
Himalayan News Network
Gangtok, Sept 13: The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) will honour Chief Minister Pawan Chamling for passing a resolution in the Sikkim Legislative Assembly for creation of Gorkhaland.
Morcha chief Bimal Gurung, who was holidaying in west Sikkim with his colleagues last week, said felicitate Chamling with ‘Nagrik Samman’ on October 14. The felicitation function is likely to be held in Kalimpong, it is learnt
Gurung expressed his appreciation to Chamling for supporting the demand for creation of Gorkhaland and passing a resolution in the Sikkim Assembly recently.
Gurung said his party would not interfere in Sikkim politics and threatened to take action against party members who disobeyed the party’s diktat on this line.
A delegation of Morcha’s central committee led by party general secretary Roshan Giri met Chamling here on March 31 this year to thank him for passing the Gorkhaland resolution in the Assembly during the budget session on March 29.
Youth body to hold open debate on ‘Black Bill’
By A Staff Reporter
Gangtok, Sept 13: TheAll Sikkim Educated Self Employed and Unemployed Association
(ASESE&UA) is likely to request Chief Minister Pawan Chamling to participate in a debate on the public order bill that he wants to re-introduce in the Sikkim Legislative Assembly soon.
The Association President, Nawin Kiran Pradhan, said the youth body wants an “open debate” and has urged the Chief Minister to come out openly for a debate on the controversial bill that the Opposition has dubbed as the “Black Bill” aimed at suppressing basic fundamental rights enshrined in the constitution.
“We also plan to invite eminent journalists, judges and intellectuals for the debate during a seminar soon,” said Pradhan.
“People are still confused about the Bill, so the association has decided to conduct a debate on the bill to know the real facts and acts of the bill,” Pradhan said. 
Though the association has said the tentative date for the proposed debate would be Sept 25 nothing has been finalized, said a member of the association.
After tabling the Sikkim Prevention and Control of Disturbance of Public Order Bill on August 11 Chamling was to forced to withdraw it on August 26 in the face of stiff opposition, resulting in a massive public rally here on August 24 sponsored by Nagarik Adhikar Surakcha Sangathan (NASS), which allegedly had the backing of rebel ruling party legislator and former minister PS Tamang.
Subsequently, the Chief Minister threatened to table the bill again after seeking support from the people.
Attacks on media condemned in Arunachal
Himalayan News Network
Itanagar, Sept 13: The Arunachal Pradesh Union of Working Journalists (APUWJ) and
Arunachal Press Club (APC) have strongly condemned attacks on mediapersons covering the recent 48-hour bandh called in the capital.
"We are not going to tolerate intimidation and threats anymore," said members of the media during an emergency meeting of the body held here on Thursday.
Mediapersons, including employees of TV channels, were intimidated during the bandh while stones were pelted at the residence of a newspaper's CEO. An IPR vehicle on press duty was also damaged during the bandh. These acts deserve strong condemnation, said the state's media bodies.
Condemning the repeated attacks on mediapersons in the state, the APUWJ and the APC called upon the people of Arunachal to come out in support of media and other professionals so they are allowed to discharge their duties fearlessly, without any intimidation or threats.
Remembering Jupiter Yambem on 10th anniv of 9/11
New York, Sept 13:  Born and raised in Imphal in Manipur, Jupiter Yambem, 47 lived the immigrant’s dream in America. At the top of his class in SUNY New Paltz, he was snapped up by some of New York City’s most famous restaurants, including the Rainbow Room and then Windows on the World, where he worked as a banquet manager. He thrived on the energy of New York and adored his curly auburn-haired American wife from Syracuse who he met in college in the early eighties and their son.
Jupiter Yambem’s wife, Nancy McCardle Yambem, remembers frantically calling her husband on September 11. He never answered. Everyone in the Windows of the World restaurant on the 107th floor of the World Trade Center survived the impact when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower at 8:46 am, but died when the tower collapsed after burning for 102 minutes.
On the 10-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks, Yambem and her son Santi whose name is pronounced Shanti, like others who lost family on September 11, 2001 carry the heavy legacy of that day.
“It has been ten years and we miss Jupiter. We will always miss him. He was amazing. We have a small Hindu shrine in our house to Jupiter,” said Yambem whose house is cluttered with photos of her college sweetheart.
Jupiter came to America at the age of 21 from India to work in a summer camp with children with visual impairment. After he got done with the camp he decided to stay on in America and went to college at the State University of New York at New Paltz.
“We met in college in 1981 and hung out with the same crowd. We started seeing each other in 1984 as a couple. We married in 1991 so I knew him — know him — for 20 years,” said Yambem still finding it painful to use the past tense.
 “Santi is trying to be as normal a kid as he can. He is in the 10th Grade now. He was in kindergarten when his father died. His life has changed greatly from being a five-year-old to a teen,” said Yambem about her tall boy who plays rock guitar and trumpet in the school band.
 “We have a home in Manipur. We go every two years. Santi has been since he was a year old. He is very familiar with Manipuri culture and his family back home. It is basically our second home.”
Jupiter held fast to his Indian roots. Keeping his Indian citizenship, he co-founded the North American Manipur Association (NAMA), consisting of a small group of Manipuri families that sought to promote and preserve their culture. NAMA has since expanded into a network of 40 Manipuri families and supports causes in Manipur.
Jupiter was a man with feet in two worlds and his last rites reflected his love for India and America. He was cremated on September 18, at the Cedar Hill Hindu Crematorium in New York and his ashes were scattered in India, along his favourite hiking trail in Tiger Hill, in Darjeeling. (Firstpost)
Hope DARJEELING
Come, take a walk with me and I’ll show you around
Jigme N Kazi
I’m happy that my first piece on Hope Darjeeling comes a few days after the West Bengal Legislative Assembly passed the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration Bill. By this time next year the GTA (hopefully) would be fully functional after the successful completion of its first elections early next year. For the people of Darjeeling and their sympathizers in India and abroad it is so important that those who run the GTA makes the new venture a real success. Otherwise we would witness the repetition of what has happened in the hills since the tripartite Darjeeling accord was signed in 1985. If this happens it would mean a total disaster and a person like me – and there are many such persons – would have to resign myself to the fact that Darjeeling – the place where I grew up and loved so much – is a lost case.
But we all have our hopes for Darjeeling to bloom and regain its past glory. And there are justifiable reasons for this. My days, years and a decade and half plus one year’s stay (1963-1979 -  with one year gap in Sikkim) in Darjeeling was more than wonderful. Being a sportsman, who loved and excelled in football and cricket, allowed me to move around and not to get  confined within the ‘old and friendly walls’ of Mt Hermon School (MH). The games and our other sporting and outdoor activities took us to Kalimpong and Kurseong, which are an integral part of Darjeeling hills. It is but natural that over the years I grew fond of places other than Darj itself.
One of my school friends once told me “absence is to love what wind is to fire; it enflames the great, it extinguishes the small.” Out of sight, therefore, is not necessarily out of mind. Ever since I finally left Darj in the winter of 1979 – after  ten years of schooling at MH (1963-1972), two years in college (TTC – 1974-1975) and four years of teaching at MH (1976-1979) – I have visited my second home several times and most of the time these visits were wonderful and exhilarating. Unlike Sikkim, where I reside, Darj makes me feel good and come alive. I don’t care much for the dirt, the crowd and local politics; I look beyond these things and take my breath of fresh air and return home refreshed, relaxed and rejuvenated. Given  an opportunity I’d rather settle in Darj than in Sikkim.
Jagjit Singh (SC 1971), a Hermonite who ran several hotels in Siliguri till very recently, always used to say, “We Hermonites are too emotional!” But what kind of emotion is this when most Hermonites (the name we give to ourselves) cannot get over this emotion even after 15, 20, 30 or even 40 years after saying our last good bye to our alma mater?
The answer came to me from Barry Ison, an ex-student and ex-teacher of MH from Australia, who continues to linger on in Bangladesh for some reason or the other. “It’s not emotion. It is passion,” he said and I knew he was right. Unlike emotion, which comes and goes, the depth of passion cannot be easily fathomed or forgotten.
Two college girls from Japan – Mari Kugue and Risato Hotta – were the reasons for my unscheduled trip to Darj this time (August). And for the first time I could take things a bit easy, relax awhile and move around in Darj at my own pace.
The girls were wonderful and very cooperative. As we wanted to touch the ground and feel the air the best way to do this was to walk. And walk we did. “We walked for 18 kilometers today,” said Mari after our walk to MH and back on the first day. Apparently, the distance that we traveled gets registered in their mobile! The next day we walked at least 20 kms covering the zoo, Shruberry Park and the Japanese temple.
During the short stopover at Surendra and Saroj Rongong’s (my former colleagues at MH who have now retired) Villa Everest hotel on the way back from the Japanese temple we enthusiastically talked about MH’s revival with the involvement of all Hermonites – past and present.
Founded in 1895 below Chowrasta in Darjeeling, Mt. Hermon started off badly when several of its students were killed in the tragic 1898 earthquake. But undaunted by the disaster Ms Emma Knowles, an American missionary and founder of the school, struggled on with faith in God and a strong sense of purpose and determination. The outcome of her struggle and sacrifice was Queen’s Hill School, later re-named Mt. Hermon in 1929. Lord Lytton remarked that the present school building, located in a 100 acre land below Singamari, was one of the finest buildings in Asia.
MH went through another lean period in the 1940s during the second world war when many of its students and staff members from abroad had to leave India. The school enrolment dropped drastically and the school was nearly closed had it not been for the efforts of Bishop Bohn Frederick Fisher and Rev Halsey E. Dewey. After Rev David G Stewart took charge of the school as its Principal in 1953 MH was back on its feet and in the next ten years of the Stewart era Mt. Hermon had more than regained its past glory. Graeme Armstrong Murray, who took over MH from Stewart in 1964, took MH to greater heights.
“MH is again going through a bad phase and it needs our support badly and we must respond positively to the challenges ahead,” I told the Rongongs, who showed their interest in taking another look at MH.
At first I wanted to take a cab to the school (MH) and then walk back. Finally, we shared a taxi from the bazaar taxi stand which charged Rs 8 each to reach Singamari at North Point. During my time the taxi fair used to be Rs1/-. Along the way I decided to stop ahead of North Point College to say hello to my old school teacher John West. But he wasn’t there and so we walked on and on the way I enquired about Mahindra and Udai, two great footballers who are younger brothers of the well-known Benu Subba, a star in East Bengal who later joined MH. Benu is now no more but the memories of the two of us representing MH as strikers on the football field can never be erased.
We made a thorough survey of the school, the playground and the boys hostel at Fernhill. I showed the girls the class rooms where I studied and taught. We relaxed in front of the Stewart Building, built in 1963 in honour of our former Principal Rev David G Stewart, whose wife Dorothy passed away in New Zealand on August 15, 2011. Naturally, my thoughts and prayers were for Mr and Mrs. Stewart and their family members as I sat quietly in front of the Stewart building. Luckily, my almost-disfunctional digital camera managed to take a photo of the 1963 staff members from the school corridor, where many past photographs were displayed. 1963 was my first year at MH and last year of the Stewarts. God bless them.
MH looks a bit rundown but the uplifting thing is that a new dining-room-cum kitchen is coming up at the place where the old gym used to be. This was actually my idea that somehow has become a reality. Fantastic!  I persuaded the Sikkim Hermonites Association to put pressure on the authorities on this project.
MH Principal George Fernandes, who was my colleague in the staff way back in mid-1970s, has only one year left before he retires at the end of next year.  Since the early 1990s MH has been going through a bad phase but Fernandes has managed to stabilize things a bit.
My hopes and dreams for Darj is not limited to MH alone. Asia’s most distinguished schools came up in Darjeeling after the British takeover of the place from Sikkim in the 19th century. Schools such as St. Paul’s, St. Joseph’s, Loreto Convent (Darj), Dr. Graham’s Homes, St. Augustine’s School, St. Joseph’s Convent (Kalimpong) and Goethal’s Memorial School, Victoria School and Dow Hills School (Kurseong) should never be allowed to “go down the drain” and become a thing of the past during our time. We need to rise up to the challenges that we face in our generation.
When the political leadership in Darjeeling and Calcutta has promised to give “top priority to education” in the hills, hill people, particularly alumni of these schools, should come forward and give a helping hand.
Darjeeling deserves a better future. It needs us. We can and must reach out and touch each other from wherever we are. This column that I have started is my way of saying that I care no matter what has happened to our beloved Darjeeling. Charity begins at home and we must take the first step to reach higher grounds from the area of our interest. We must move ahead confidently with hope and courage and create a better future for ourselves, our children and those who make Darjeeling their place of habitation in the days and years to come.











No comments:

Post a Comment