Showing posts with label featured. Show all posts
Showing posts with label featured. Show all posts

Kirti Chakra to Havildar Giris Gurung Gorkha Rifles

9:57 PM
President Ramnath Kovind today presented Kirti Chakra to Havildar Giris Gurung (Posthumous), 4th Battalion, First Gorkha Rifles.
Havildar Gurung displayed exemplary selfless courage under fire and an unmatched spirit in killing two militants in Kupwara, J&K till his martyrdom

During a search operation in Kupwara, though bleeding profusely, he realised the threat to his team and with utter disregard for his personal safety, moved to eliminate the militant.
Though grievously injured, he eliminated another militant before succumbing.

Via TheDC

Darjeeling Unrest 2017: From an agitation to a Leadership Contest

1:55 PM

Writes: Dinesh Sharma

The Gorkhaland agitation of 2017 has been an eye-opener in many aspects. While it did not yield the desired results even after 104 days of the shutdown, it did manage to bring out the inner demon in us, exposing our vulnerabilities, our inability to trust one another, and utter disrespect for the institution of Democracy. The agitation became an open ground for public, politicians, and CSOs for mud-slinging each other and trying to exploit the situation to their advantage.

After the police firing and death of protestors, internet and media shutdown Darjeeling was virtually cut-off from the world. The administration forcefully took the protests off the streets, deploying thousands of para-military forces across the Hills.  With an emotionally charged public and a witch-hunt like a crackdown on Gorkhaland supporters by the administration, Darjeeling was a ticking bomb threatening to explode any time, bringing back the memories of the 1980s violent agitation.

A wise man (name withheld to avoid police persecution) from the Hills observed “call it unfortunate or otherwise, the 2017 agitation was like an audition for ‘Gorkhaland Got Leaders’ show with individuals and organizations staking their claim to the title. The bigger irony is when flag bearers of the movement abandoned Darjeeling, and the epicentre of the movement shifted to Delhi.”

“This is where Delhi protests came to the rescue of the Government” the wise man adds. “Delhi was too far for the West Bengal Government to even take it seriously.”

However, for the Hills political leaders who were too timid and afraid to speak against the government back home, Delhi offered a safe sanctuary. Here, away from the killing fields of Darjeeling.  Delhi became the pilgrimage for all Hill leaders to wash their guilt. It offered them a chance to establish a connection and find relevance to the movement, and they came prepared with the Gorkhaland rhetoric and lofty speeches.

As always, the ignorant and gullible public of Darjeeling believed that the activities in Delhi were a proof that Gorkhaland has become a national discourse and the Central Government would have to come to their rescue sooner or later. It gave a false hope that Gorkhaland could now be a possibility. Roadmaps and vision for Gorkhaland were being discussed in Delhi, while in Darjeeling Hills where it actually mattered, people were still cut-off and were now fighting for survival amidst a total shutdown and food scarcity.

For the ‘educated, sophisticated, and the social-media savvy’ crowd of Delhi, the time had finally come to have a say. Overnight, Samitis and Committees were formed to spearhead the movement. In Delhi, you could speak for Gorkhaland, curse anyone, say anything, without having to worry about courting arrest, staying hungry, or getting shot in police firing. More importantly, organizers made sure to organize events and activities over the weekend to make it convenient for everyone to attend. It was very well organized.

But, the affairs in Delhi soon became monstrous with personal and political biases taking the center stage, rather than the issue of Gorkhaland. Without the threat of being arrested or being a political target, Delhi made much more noise than Darjeeling, to a point where the frontrunners of Delhi protests began to dictate terms on the course of the movement. They wanted a pie of everything, right from a seat reserved at the negotiation table to issuing certificates and approvals of the political leadership in the Hills. And they did so without even having to step a foot in Darjeeling or having a first-hand experience of the ground situation. Intellectuals and eminent personalities soon joined the protestors in Delhi, rendering their advice and services freely. The same intellectuals would later go on to form other ‘eminent organization’ for themselves is another matter.

So, where did Delhi go irrevocably wrong?

If you remember, there was an all-party Gorkhaland Movement Coordination Committee (GMCC) formed during the peak of the agitation with members from different Hills political parties and intellectuals of the Gorkha community. The GMCC had a wide public support as a think-tank and everybody wanted to be part of GMCC.

As part of a trust-building measure and garnering support, different Delhi-based groups pressurized the GMCC to hold a meeting with the public in Delhi. However, behind the scene was a more sinister plan to disrupt and break the GMCC, by people and organizations who were not invited to be part of it.

An orchestrated assault on members during the GMCC meeting in Delhi was the final nail in the coffin. As the old adage goes “if I am not in it, I won’t let it be” proved true in this case. In a not-so-surprising move, just a few days after the incident, a committee was formed by with the tagline “Group of eminent Gorkha personalities” by members who were once spearheading the GMCC. Currently, the committee is struggling hard to find its relevance in a post-agitation phase and is last heard of preparing a ‘Vision Document for Gorkhaland.’ Strangely enough, the said committee has not even passed a single statement condemning the atrocities in Darjeeling, unwarranted arrests, or even the killings. They also observed solemn silence throughout the entire process of a new administration set up by the state government.

In Conclusion

The key takeaway this time has been the sad realization that the people of Darjeeling have no role in the politics of their land. The narrative is scripted outside of Darjeeling – in Delhi and Kolkata, and a template is handed over to the self-proclaimed political leadership, with strict rules on what to do and more importantly what not to do. Even the so-called local administrators have very little say in the politics of the land.

Democracy in theory roots for a ‘Government of the People, By the People, and For the People. As is the norm, the mandate of the majority public is integral to Democracy. However, the irony is that Gorkhaland, a movement that prides on being Constitutional and Democratic showed very little respect for it. Elected representatives were forced to flee the land, aspirations of the people trampled ruthlessly using brutal force, and the right to expression simply became a joke.

……..

Dinesh tweets under the handle @OyeKeta and can be reached at: https://twitter.com/OyeKeta

***NOTE: In context, Upendra had sounded an early warning bell against the same lot, you can read it here: https://facebook.com/TheDarjeelingChronicle/posts/899442646860184

Via TheDC

where is my Home?

8:45 AM
Writes:  Binayak Sundas

There are those Nepalis in India who are from Nepal and hold Nepali citizenship and then there are others who live in India and hold Indian citizenship

In the last few decades there has been a steady rise in literature on experiences of people visiting those parts of their socio-cultural spaces separated by partition. Hence people discover that the land that they grew up thinking as the quintessential other and enemy was not after all so different. The people, that they always thought of as the evil incarnate could have easily been neighbors, friends or even family. Such is the complicated history of the subcontinent and the problems of the concept of the nation-state in the region.

A person from Kolkata may find that he has far more in common with someone from across the border in Dhaka than he has with someone from his own state in Darjeeling. Similarly, a person from Lahore may find that Amritsar is far closer to home than Quetta or Karachi. These dilemmas and complexities have led to a plethora of beautiful, yet melancholic stories that have captured the imaginations of readers and caused them to rethink certain aspects of nature of nationalism and renewed connections across the border.

The partition of Punjab and Bengal in 1947, a tragic event of Himalayan proportions, and its aftermath are very difficult to be compared with anywhere else. It was an incident that was a product of specific historical events that were unique to the region and yet one cannot help, but wonder if similar literature is possible to be written between Indian Nepalis and Nepal’s Nepalis.

I have over the years of my research come across many academic literatures that have tried to clearly make the difference of Indian Nepali from those in Nepal. They have suggested the use of terms such as Nepa-mulya and Bharatiya Nepali, but nothing seems to have quite captured the imagination of Indian Nepalis, as that of the “Gorkha” since nothing speaks of pride like a colonial imaginary construct, used to garner cheap military labor. The two kinds of Nepalis in India are those who are from Nepal but are in India to work and earn their livelihoods and hold Nepali citizenship and the other who have lived in India and hold Indian citizenship.

The common perception is that the accents in their Nepali are the main marker of difference. This is, of course, a mistake since Nepal does not have a unified accent, neither do Indian Nepalis.

During my stay in Delhi, I had the privilege of making a lot of friends from Nepal, the picture that they painted of Nepal and its socio-economic dynamics seemed to be very different from the one that I remembered from the tales of my mother or my brief visits to Dharan and more importantly from the socio cultural and economic scenario in Darjeeling, the hub of Indian Nepalis. The language too seemed different; Bahuns, Ranas and Shah friends spoke a form of Nepali, that they claimed was the equivalent of King’s English. They were mortified when they heard me speak in Nepali, some were out rightly offended, some laughed and one friend said I spoke like a Taba Keta (drug addict) from Thamel.

Tracing the root

On my father’s side, my family was from Dolakha. Once, as my grandfather narrated the story to me, one of my ancestors, a Damai, accidentally touched a Brahmin bride on her wedding day, which caused her to lose her caste and the marriage was called off. By the evening the entire village was gathering for traditional Jhar Katnu (hacking him to death). How else would the groom’s and bride’s family regain lost honor and the rest of the village salvage the entertainment denied to them?

Maybe someone informed them, my family left the village with whatever little belongings they had before the mob arrived.  Realizing that they could never go back home they made their way to the only refuge for the wretched of Nepal: Darjeeling, along with the Brahmin bride. This was a hundred years ago, during the same period the ancestors on my mother’s side were facing a different dilemma.

After the Gorkha state’s victory in Limbuwan hills, the state’s appropriating class were vigorously taking over Kipat (communal land holding) lands of Limbus and converting them to Jagirs (land grants given in lieu of salary). The Limbus rose in rebellion several times but failed. The only two way left for Limbus were: accept the Gorkha rule, new land revenue structure and a debt trapped life or leave the region altogether. My ancestors made way to Munglan (India) in search of the promised life.

The British at that point of time were perpetually caught in one conflict after other both in the western and eastern frontiers and were expanding Gurkha regiments to include the Rai and Limbus as well. This was a departure from the earlier policy of only hiring Magars, Gurungs, Thakuris and Khas. In the Gurkha regiment my ancestor was introduced to the brilliance of the martial race theory and how it manages to gain cheap military labor and can repeat it over generations. My family has served the British and Indian armies for the next hundred years.

I made my way across the River Mechi, but graves of my grandparents were on the other side of the border. I paid a visit to my great aunt and uncle’s graves on Nepal’s side of the Mechi River. Buried on the border, was perhaps a fitting metaphor for what I was to discover in the coming days. On a lighter note, it was a bit ironic that they were buried next to each other. In life they could never stop bickering.

Journey to Nepal

A few brief anxious moments circling Kathmandu and then we landed. My first steps in the city that I had read and written about but never visited. I looked around and saw what the Malla rulers must have seen, large hills surrounding the valley, like massive walls that could never be breached. A fortress that had stood the test of time, of course until Prithvinarayan Shah came. Prithvinarayan too saw the hills and he too realized they were walls, except they were not the walls of a fortress but that of a prison.

He imprisoned the Mallas within the valley until they did not even put up an effective fight, choosing to rely on faith than in a final battle as the Gorkha army walked into the city.  My introductions to the city were the taxi drivers and they were exactly like the ones back home. Their Nepali was exactly like mine, perhaps a bit more polite, which made me wonder where were those who spoke in “King’s Nepali.” I never had a problem with the language while my stay there. The only problem though was that the people in Katmandu and even in Pokhara for that matter spoke too softly and I realized that I must have sounded like I was screaming half the time.

The driver started to complain about administration and corruption. I felt at home again. The night of course belonged to Thamel, I had heard a lot about this place, but nothing prepared me for what I experienced. The Sarangi players made me realize how amateurish the ones in Darjeeling and Sikkim are. The people, the shops, the bars, they could trap anyone here for a long time. I walked around aimlessly until late at night and I made my way back reluctantly to my hotel.

The next day I made my way to the old city and this place felt alien. Don’t get me wrong I loved the place, the culture, the architecture and the people but none of it seemed familiar to me. It was beautiful but foreign to me, the Newari accent seemed curious and it was not one I had heard before, well at least in real life. The Newars in Darjeeling and Sikkim have long given up the language and no hint of this accent remains in their Nepali. The smell and the sight of this place seemed odd. I wondered if the first soldiers of the Gorkha army felt this unease and strangeness of this place.

Perhaps the strangeness of this place was what caused Prithvinarayan to lament about the simple life of home, where people drink from streams than this valley where water comes in cisterns. As I placed my hand on the old walls with the sun uncomfortably on my back, history was alive for me. The debates over socio-economic structures, class relations, the impact of new ruling class, modes of production etc were all forgotten and a different kind of history took its place—the one that had the thrill of living through it, of extending your hand through time to capture a moment gone by, a history of emotions so to speak.

I did not go to any of the palaces though. I watched all of them from across the road. A hundred years ago I would have been flogged for just being this near the royal palaces or any other palaces. I have been inside palaces elsewhere of course, but somehow the resentment here seemed very personal, anger with these Rajput status claiming rulers went back far too long back in history, I doubt if anyone else could even understand it.

The structures as magnificent as they were, just did not impress me, every brick of these palaces was wet with the tears of some indebted peasant who was forced to sell his children to pay the Sarkar and Sahukar. As I blew my smoke towards the palace I smiled to think of the fact that they no longer lived there, at last they would know the pain of leaving their homes behind. All that money, all that eulogies and all that false status, and son had killed fathers and brothers had killed brothers, in the end just dust in the vast expanse of history, like the rest of us.

My mother had lived in Pokhara for two years in her youth, back then when teachers from Darjeeling were in demand in Nepal. A visit to this town was mandatory, but nothing about this place seemed like the stories I had heard. As mesmerizing as the lakeside was it was easily eclipsed by the next place I visited, Mustang. You could write several books about this place and still could not do justice to this desolate beauty.

My mind could not help, but think of all the Newari traders and Tibetan scholars who might have passed through this place or places like this, what they must seem what fears they had and how this place looked to them. My heart also could not but think of all the soldiers of the Gorkha army as they first crossed to invade Tibet and how frostbitten defeated they retreated with the great Chinese general Fu’ Kwan hot on their heels, on his way to invade the Gorkha empire.

Muktinath temple deserves an article by itself, a great remnant of the syncretic traditions of the Himalayan region, perhaps a remnant of the Khas Empire itself. The place perfect for worship, it reminded me so much of the Mahakal Mandir in Darjeeling, thought it also made me lament thinking of the commercialization of the temple at home.

We are all Nepalis

In most places I was asked of my caste, though I don’t think it was so much of the apprehensions but mostly due to curiosity, my Limbu and Damai heritage has given an interesting face. The fun part was when I told them I was Damai, one shopkeeper laughed and when he realized I was serious he quickly diverted the topic, a security guard turned all shades of yellow and some went on  long monologues how caste didn’t matter in modern Nepal, which sort of proved to me that it did.

The one thing I realized was Darjeeling accent was not a unique accent and it was a mere extension of the eastern accent of Nepal with a bit of Janjati and a perhaps a little bit of Madhesi accent. We were not different at all. We are all a part of a larger socio cultural space. We are all Nepalis. As I made my way back across the border leaving behind a place where everyone spoke in my language, into a place where people spoke languages that I did not speak, I wondered where home was.

The author is a PhD researcher at Centre for Historical Studies, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University

Via: My Republica
Author can be reached at: binayaksundas@gmail.com

Gorkha Pride: Major Manoj Pandey and His Gorkha Boys

8:01 AM

Writes: Mr Harpreet

This day 2 years ago: Capt MK Pandey's statue in Lucknow - defaced by his fellow Lucknowites, restored by Gorkhas from his Regiment.

The preferred 'tool' of the Gorkhas? Khukri! These guys are sheer magicians with the Khukri. Can just as easily chop off an enemy's head as they can use the same side arm to delicately remove the offending posters that deface their hero's monument.

Hats off to these simple people from the hills of Nepal / Darjeeling / Sikkim who can put anyone to shame with their single-minded dedication to whatever task they are entrusted with and a cheerful nature that can win over even the most evil of their enemy.

Then there are those that lead them into battle. Capt Manoj Kumar Pandey, PVC (P) was a Lucknowite, yet his immortal last words as he fell on the icy slopes of Khalubar were not in his mother tongue but in that of his men.

'Na Chhornu' (Don't spare them) was what he said in 'Gorkhali' as he fell after receiving one final, fatal burst. Even in death, he paved the way for his boys when the grenade in his hand found its mark and took out the Pakis that had fired the last salvo at him.

The enraged Gorkhas of 1/11 GR ensured that their fierce leader's last command was executed with ruthless efficiency. Not a single Paki was taken a prisoner that night at Khalubar. When dawn broke, the battlefield was littered with dead Pakis of the Northern Light Infantry.

A foothold on Khalubar Ridge had been established by the 'Kirantis' of Manoj Kumar Pandey. Restoring our lands till the LoC was but a small formality hereafter.

A huge price had been paid, but willingly. But young Manoj and his 'boys', some of them nearly 2 decades elder to him, knew no other way.

It is these bonds, forged in blood and sacrifice, that ensure that his Gorkhas assume ownership of a memorial in his name, even if in a civilian part of his hometown, and without any second thoughts, let their Khukries flash again to remove the defacement inflicted.

Via TheDC

रोहिंग्याहरूलाई ढुक्कै छ, तर गोर्खाको चिनारी अझै संकटमा।

5:10 PM

विश्वकै बृहतम गनतान्त्रिक देशमा यो के भैरहेछ? एकातिर राष्ट्र स्तरको साहित्यिक कार्यक्रम, राष्ट्रिय अकादमी कवि सम्मेलन विच भारतिय साहित्यका चिरपरिचित साहित्यकारहरूलाई समेत विदेशीको सम्बोधन गरिन्छ_ भने यता पहाडमा गोर्खा नेता बिमल गुरूङ र मोर्चाका शिर्ष नेताहरू लगायत GTA का पूर्व सभासद्, नगरपालीका पार्षद् समेतको नाम मतदाता शुचीबाट हटाइने फरमान जारी भएको छ। जब कि राज्यका मुख्य मन्त्री तथा तृनमुल नेत्री सुश्री ममता ब्यानर्जीले रोहिंग्या मुस्लिमहरूलाई बगांलमा आश्रय दिइने घोषना गरिसकेकी छिन भने दमदम नगरपालीकामा रोहिंग्याहरूको आधार कार्ड समेत बनिएको रिपोर्टमा उल्लेख छ। राष्ट्रकै गृह विभाग द्वारा रोहिंग्याहरू देशका लागी खतरा भनेर भनिएता पनी उनीहरूले बगांलमा आश्रय लिरहेका छन्।

तर के अचम्म पहाडमा GTA चुनाव जितेर यसका मुख्य कार्यपाल रहिसकेका बिमल गुरूङ लगायत सभासद अनी दुइ-दुइ पटक नगरपालिका चुनाव जितिसकेका नगर पार्षदको नाम मतदातन शुचीबाट हटाइने बगांल प्रसाषनको फरमान जारी भए पछी पहाड मा एउटा भयावह स्थिति देखा परेको छ।

भारतमा IPS र IAS लाई एउटा उच्च गरिमाको रूपमा सम्मान गरिन्छ तर उनीहरूनै राज्नैतिक प्रेरित भएर आँफ्नो कर्तब्य पथबाट हटेर कार्य गर्छन भने उनीहरूमाथी जन्ताको विश्वास हटेर जाने छ। साथै छोराछोरीलाई IAS र IPS बनाउछु भन्ने सपना पालेर बसेका आमाबाबुको सपना समेत गर्वमै तुहुने छ।

विश्वको बृहतम् गनतान्त्रिक देश भनिने यो देश भित्र त्यो कस्तो कानुन हो जो निर्वाचित सदस्यको समेत नाम मतदाता शुचीबाट हटाइन्छ?? बगांलमा गोर्खाहरूले चुनेका नेताहरू आज शुरक्षित छैनन् भने अब जन्ता कति शुरक्षित छन् त?? यो अन्दाज लाउने कुरो हो।

*के यो सहि भैरहेछ??
*के यसमा तपाँइको पनी सहमती छ?
*यदि छैन भने फेरी किन मौंनधारण गरेर बस्नुभएको छ?
*कतै बिमल पछी तपाँइ र मेरो पालो! त आउँदैन??

*सचेत नेताहरू बोल्नु पर्छ कि पर्दैन??
*शिक्षित जन्ताहरू बोल्नु पर्छ कि पर्दैन??
*जेम्मावार पत्रकारहरू बोल्नु पर्छ कि पर्दैन??
*साहित्यकारहरू बोल्नु पर्छ कि पर्दैन?

Prem Kumar Chettri

चिसो थप्पडी र माटो कविता - कार्यक्रम अनुभूति

8:47 PM

बी० पी० बजगाईं, सिलगढी

मैले दुइदिन अघि नै क्यालेण्डरमा ३१ मार्च २०१८ –लाई दाग लगाएर राखेको थिएँ। यसदिन पहिलो दार्जीलिङ साहित्यिक भेट २०१८ (1st Darjeeling Literary Meet 2018) सिलगढीको होटल मैनाकमा सम्पन्न हुनेभएको थियो अनि यसै साहित्यिक भेटमा कवि राजा पुनियानीको दुईवटा मल्टिमिडिया कविता भ्रम पहाड अनि इन्काउन्टर स्क्रिनिङ हुनगइरहेको थियो। हुन त मैले यी दुवै कविताहरू पहिल्यै हेरिसकेको हो, दुईपटक युट्यूबमा अनि एकपटक सिक्किमको जोरथाङमा, कफी कवितामा। तर पनि म मैनाक होटल जान उत्सुक थिएँ। किनभने राजाको कविताले हाम्रो वर्तमान, हाम्रो सपनालाई सम्बोधन गरेको छ, म अनेपालीहरूमा यसको प्रतिक्रिया कस्तो हुन्छ भनेर जान्न चाहन्थें।

म मैनाक होटल पुग्दा बङ्गला नाटक, बङ्गला कविताहरूमाथि अलग अलग कोठामा सङ्गोष्ठी भइरहेको थियो। महँगो होटलमा भुँईंमा बस्ने आम मान्छेहरूलाई साहित्यमा कसरी सम्बोधन गरिने चर्चा भइरहेको थियो। हो, यहीं त फरक छ हाम्रो साहित्यमा, औपनिवेशिक संस्कारमा एकथरीले हाम्रो झर्रो जीवन भोगेका हुँदैनन्, महङ्गा होटलमा बसेर टाडाबाट नै हाम्रो गाला मुसार्न चाहन्छन्। हामी यसको ठीक विपरित झर्रो जीवन बाँच्छौं, अर्ग्यानिक कुरा लेख्छौं अनि आम मान्छेलाई साहित्यमात्र होइन व्यवहारमा अँगाल्छौं, किनभने हामी आफैं नै उपनिवेशवादको ढुङ्गाले चेप्ट्याएको भुँईं मान्छे हौँ।

केही क्षण अघिमात्र यस कार्यक्रमलाई पर्यटन मन्त्री गौतम देवले आरम्भ गरेर गएका रहेछन्। अब मैले भन्न परेन राजाले कस्तो स्थानमा कवितामा रौँ ठाडो हुनेगरी माटो र सिङ्गो पहाड देखाउन गइरहेको थियो। उनीहरूको ठूलो जमघटमा हामी केवल पाँचजना मात्र थियौं, म, राजा पुनियानी, समीर शर्मा, छेवाङ योन्जन अनि विजय काफ्ले। राजाको मल्टिमिडिया पोएट्रीका छायाङ्कन निर्देशक पल्लव आएका थिए तर कुनै कार्यले बाहिरिएका थिए।

राजाले मल्टिमिडियामा कविता देखाउँछसम्म थाहा थियो त्यहाँ उपस्थित भीडलाई, यो उनीहरू मध्ये धेरैलाई नयाँ प्रयोग थियो, यसैले हेर्न उत्सुक थिए। तर के देखाउँछ, देखाइने कुराको कन्टेन्ट के हो भन्ने कुराबाट केवल भीड होइन आयोजक पक्ष पनि अनभिज्ञ नै थिए। स्क्रीनिङ अघि राजाले मञ्चमा गएर कवितामा आम मान्छेको चासो मर्दै गएको देखेर नै आफूले कविता अनि यसको प्रभावलाई जिउँदो राख्न मल्टिमिडियाको सहयोग लिन थालेको बताए। यस कार्यमा उनका सङ्गीत पक्षका सहयोगी समीर शर्मालाई पनि मञ्चमा बोलाएर परिचय गराए।

हलको बत्ती बन्द गरियो…, शुरू हुन्छ “भ्रमपहाड”…, बज्छ भ्रम पहाडको साइरन उपनिवेशवादीहरूलाई होशियार गराउँदै।

कविताको प्रत्येक लाइनले मुक अँध्यारो चिर्दै थियो, “सुनमायाको पहाडी गर्भमा चे ग्वेभाराको खनाती छ…” अङ्ग्रेजी सब-टाईटलले त्यहाँको वातावरण चिसो बनाउँदै लग्यो। “चौरस्तामा घिसिङ, बिमल, मन र विनयहरू लीला नाच्दै गर्दा टोल-टोल अस्तित्व युद्धको नाटक खेल्छ हन्ड्रेड डेज, इन्दिरा आवास, प्रधान मन्त्री ग्राम सडक योजना…” दर्शकले बुझ्दै थिए, आन्दोलन रोकिएको होइन केवल बिसाएको हो भनेर।

“हजुर के दर्शक बोल्न पाउँछ? …चुप साले….” सबै चुप थिए। यो प्रस्तुति पहाडमा भएको भए जाडो महिनामा पनि वातावरण गर्मिएको हुन्थ्यो होला तर सिलगढीमा सबै चिसिँदै गएको थाहा लाग्दैथियो।

यसको लगत्तै पछि अर्को मल्टिमिडिया पोएट्री चल्न थाल्छ स्क्रीनमा… “इन्काउन्टर”…। “सखारै इन्काउन्टरमा भाषा मारिएको खबर हेडलाइनमा छ आज र लावारिस लडिरहेको त्यो भाषाको लाशले पर्खिरहेको छ आफ्नै पोस्टमार्टम तारिख…” “बास माग्दा घर किन जलाउँछ, जस्टिस माग्दा टेरोरिस्ट किन भनाउँछ” राजाको कविताले जति चिच्याउन थाल्यो अघि नै चिसिएको त्यहाँको वातावरणमा काँडा उम्रिँदै गएको थियो।

केहिदिन अघिमात्र स्टुडियो साउण्ड ट्रेकका समीर भाईले युट्यूबमा अपलोड गरेको नेपाली साङ्गीतिक संसारका महान विभूति स्व० अम्बर गुरुङको निबन्ध ‘कहाँ गए ती दिनहरू’ सुनेको थिएँ। त्यसमा भएको अम्बर गुरुङको एउटा भनाई राजा पुनियानीसँग ठ्याक्कै मेल खाएको देखें। गुरुङ भन्थे, “स्रोतालाई आफूतिर तानेर पाएको तन्मयताको प्रतिक्रियात्मक प्रबलताले मात्र गायकले प्रभावको प्रभुत्व जन्माउन सक्छ”।

राजा गायक होइन, कवि हुन्, गाउने कवि हुन्। तर अहिले राजाले कविता पाठकलाई पठनको निम्ति मात्र नछोडेर सुनाउने अनि सुनाएर कविताले जन्माउन सक्ने प्रतिक्रियात्मक प्रबलताले वर्तमान सोच्न बाध्य पार्ने काम गर्दैछन् मल्टिमिडिया पोएट्रीको सहायताले। त्यसैको प्रभाव थियो, “पहिलो दार्जीलिङ साहित्यिक भेट २०१८” –को त्यो कोठा सिलगढीको गर्मीमा पनि चिसिएको थियो।

कविता सकियो। बत्ती बल्यो। करैले केही चिसा थप्पडीहरू बजे। उनीहरू मध्ये धेरैको मनलाई सायद यहाँ, यो कसरी भयो भन्ने प्रश्नले थिचिरहेको थियो होला। धेरैले सायद हाम्रो दुखाई बुझ्ने पहिलो अवसर पाएका थिए होला अनि त्यस्ताहरूको अघि हामी सही पाटोमा उभिएको पनि थियौं होला। हामीलाई केही अपेक्षा थिएन, हामी त्यहाँबाट निस्कियौं। कमै बजेको चिसो थप्पडीमाझ निर्धक्क उभिएको थियो पुनियानीको माटो कविता। हामी कम थप्पडीमा पनि ठूलो छात्ती बनाएर त्यहाँबाट प्रस्थान गऱ्यौं। पछि के चर्चा भयो त्यहाँ थाहा भएन….

मलाई विश्वास छ, त्यसपछि विचार गर्नेहरूको टाउको पक्कै पनि फनफनी घुम्न शुरु भयो।

Via Times Doors

AM I FROM NEPAL ?

8:20 PM
AM I FROM NEPAL ?
मैले तीनपल्ट सोधें गोवामा...

“POET SUBASH RAI SOTANG FROM NEPAL”  भनेर मलाई दुइपल्ट भनिएपछि मैले “AM I FROM NEPAL? “ भनेर तीनपल्ट सोधें गोवामा | साहित्य अकादमीद्वारा पणजीको कला अकादमी सम्मेलन कक्षमा सम्पन्न भएको ‘Symposium On Contemporary North-East Indian Literature and Poet Meet’ कार्यक्रममा म पनि Indian Nepali Poet को रुपमा उपस्थित थिएँ | तर जब कार्यक्रम शुरु भयो तब उपस्थित कविहरूलाई मंचमा बोलाउने क्रममा कार्यक्रमकी उद्घोषिकाले मलाई “Poet  Subash Rai Sotang  from Nepal” भनेर बोलाइन् | त्यतिमात्र होइन फेरि पछि कविता वाचनको निम्ति बोलाउँदा पनि त्यही ठेगाना दोहोराइन् |

आयोजकवर्गले भनेअनुरूपनै आफ्नो सम्पूर्ण ठेगाना लेखिएको बायोडाटा अघिबाटै उपलब्ध गराउँदा – गराउँदै पनि आफुलाई ‘नेपालबाट आएको कवि” भनिँदा चुप लागेर नूनको सोझो बन्नु मलाई मेरो मनले दिएन र नै हामी भारतीय नेपाली कविहरू धरीलाई लाग्ने ‘मेड इन् नेपाल’-को छाप हटाउन तथा आफ्नो असली परिचयबारे उनीहरूलाई अवगत गराउन मैले आफ्नो बोल्ने पालो आएपछि आफू नेपालबाट आएको लेखक नभएर भारतीय नेपाली लेखक भएको कुरा स्पष्ट पार्ने सक्दो कोशिश गरेको थिएँ | जुन कुरा त्यहाँ उपस्थित ‘Times of India’ (TOI)-की रिपोर्टरले गोवा पेजमा अलिक अधमरो रुपमा प्रकाशित गरिछिन् अनि त्यही खबर यता ‘Darjeeling Times’-ले पनि आफ्नो वालमार्फत प्रचारमा ल्याएपछि आफ्नो-आफ्नो बुझाइअनुसार विभिन्न प्रतिक्रियाहरू पनि हुँदैरहेछन् | आफ्नो मोबाइलमा भने आफ्नो स्टाटस मात्र हेर्न सकिने सुविधा हुँदा बाहिर के हुँदैछ समयमा थाहै भएन | आज घर आइपुगेपछि त्यो अपुष्ट खबर र त्यसमाथि भएको बुझाइको बाझोलाई ध्यानमा राख्दै त्यहाँ मैले आपत्ति जनाएको सत्यताबारे स्पष्ट पार्न बसें |

जानेर हो कि अन्जानमा हो उद्घोषिकाले मेरो ठेगाना स्पष्टरुपले ‘नेपाल’ बताए पछि प्रतिक्रियास्वरुप मैले मेरो कुरा मंचबाट यसरी राखेको थिएँ –
“Seeking your prior permission, First of all I would like to clarify regarding my address. (यतिबेलै मसितै मंचमा आसीनहरूमा कसैले ‘Yes Yes address was wrong’ पनि भन्दै थिए, म बोलिरहें)-  It was announced from here that I m from Nepal. Am I from Nepal  ? Am I from Nepal ? Am I from Nepal ?  (यसरी मैले तीनपल्ट सोधें, यसबेला मंचमा आसीनहरूमध्ये केहीले भन्दै थिए – “No, No, No”)

Is  Nepal a part of India ?
Is Nepal a part of India ?

(मैले दोस्रो प्रश्न यसरी दुइपल्ट गरें अनि आवाज पनि सुन्दै थिएँ –“No, No, No.” म बोलिरहें)- Here we are talking about ‘Contemporary North-East Indian Literature’ (दोहोर्याउंदै फेरि भनें)- ‘Indian Literature’ And I have been invited here as an Indian Nepali writer. Then how could you say that I am from Nepal? Of course, I speak Nepali, My own language Is Nepali. But I am a Nepali speaking Indian Citizen, and my country is India. Please don’t make me a Nepali foreigner. (यसबेला मुखैमा आयो हिन्दी, भन्दिएँ हिन्दीमा पनि) – हमे विदेशी मत बनाइए | I am from Darjeeling, which falls in India under West Bengal State. (फेरि हिन्दीमा भनिदिएँ)  “ कृपा करके इंडिया का हिस्ट्री, जोग्राफी, राजनीति मत बिगारिएगा, प्लिज |”

त्यसपछि ती उद्घोषिकाले धेरैचोटि मंचबाटै माफी मागिन् अनि आफ्नो उद्देश्य तेस्तो नभएको बताइन् | वास्तवमा प्रोग्राम लिस्टमा नामको पछि ब्रेकेटमा ‘नेपाली’ लेखिएकोले गर्दा तेसो हुनगएको भन्ने आलटाले जवाब दिनथालिन् | मैले प्रतिक्रियामा भनें – “What people think and speak about us in the market because of their misconception, We don’t care but this is an official programme, So this type of error should not  happen.”

कार्यक्रमपछि पनि तिनले व्यक्तिगत रुपमा भेटेर मलाई स्पष्टिकरण दिने कोशिश गरिन्, क्षमा मागिन् | असम, मणिपुर, बोडो साथीहरूले पनि राम्रो जवाब दिएकोमा धाप मार्दै बधाई दिए | उत्तर-पूर्वी राज्यवासीहरूलाई देशले हेर्ने दृष्टिकोण अझ पनि सही नभएको कुरा गरे तिनीहरूले | त्यसरी नै कविगोष्ठी सत्रका अध्यक्ष तथा सुप्रसिद्ध कोंकोणी लेखक पुंडलिक नायकले त मेरो भनाइलाई आधार गर्दै यो देशमा कतिपय जातिलाई घरी घरी आफूहरू राष्ट्रवादी भएको प्रमाण दिइरहनु पर्ने बिडम्बना रहेको प्रसंगको उल्लेख गरे | उनले देशलाई टेरिटोरी मात्र चाहिएको तर त्यहाँको मानिस नचाहिएको झैँ लाग्छ पनि भने | यस्तो कुरा लिएर पनि उत्तर-पूर्वी क्षेत्रका कलमकारहरूले कलम चलाउनु पर्ने उनले बताए |
“समकालीन नेपाली साहित्य”- माथि वार्ता दिन आएका असम तेजपूरका लेखक ज्ञानबहादुर छेत्रीले पनि खुसी हुँदै मलाई भने –“ फलाम तातिएकै बेलामा प्रहार गर्नुपर्छ, अरुबेला गनगन गरेर हुँदैन | तपाईंले ठिक ठाउँमा ठिक्क बोल्नुभो |” उनले अझै भने –“ त्यो उद्घोषिकालाई त रिसाउनु होइन धन्यवाद पो दिनुपर्छ होला अब, कारण उसैको कारणले त तपाईंले हाम्रो कुरा स्पष्ट संगले राख्ने मौका पाउनुभयो |”
मैले पनि कता कता सम्झिएँ – ‘हो त’|

कुरा यसो भाको थियो | त्यसपछि ती टाइम्स अफ इन्डियाकी रिपोर्टर मलाई खोज्दै आइन् र इन्टरव्यु लिन थालिन् | उनी पनि मलाई सोध्छिन् “तपाईं कहाँ जन्मेको भनेर |” मैले म त के मेरो बाजे-बराजु जम्मै दार्जीलिंगमा नै जन्मेका हुन्” भनेर बताइदिएँ | भनिदिएँ- We are the architect of modern India. But people have misconception regarding us because of Indo-Nepal reciprocal treaty and open border.

(अरु थुप्रै कुरा भनें  क्रमश: लेखुँला |)

Note - This is what Poet Subash has posted on  Facebook 

Via POET SUBASH RAI SOTANG

JNU students protest against Mahendra P Lama leveling allegations of sexual harassment

6:47 AM

JNU students protest against 2 other professors alleging sexual harassment

ANI | New Delhi Students of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) staged a protest against professors Mahendra P Lama, and Rajesh Kharat leveling allegations of sexual harassment against them. The students demanded that they should be arrested.

Recently, JNU's another professor Atul Johri was arrested in a sexual harassment case and was later granted bail.
JNU students protest against professors Mahendra P Lama leveling allegations of sexual harassment

A student of JNU filed a case against Lama and Kharat, who work in the Centre of South Asian Studies of JNU. The professors allegedly took the student to China for work and tried to harass her sexually.

She asked the Internal Complaint Committee of JNU to suspend the professor. However, no step been taken against him as yet.

Both the professors were arrested by the Police on the basis of the complaint registered by the victim but were later granted bail. The varsity authority has not taken an action against them since then.

Via B S

Give a dog a bone

8:21 PM

Writes Gurkha Ritesh

The real problem with people of hills is that we have a large populace of highly qualified people and very tiny percentage of them are educated people in profound sense of education.

The recent agitation gave bruise  and agony into the heart of each and every Gurkha's who truly believed that we could achieve our dream " Gorkhaland" but with some Mir jafar on the ground we failed ...

If we do not realize the importance of collective effort  I am sure after some years we will be minority in our own place. And even if we manage to throw the present lot into the dustbins of history, another mamta banerjee, binay tamang, anit Thapa,man ghishingh ,and neeraj zimba will rise and take us back to were we are today.....

Gorkhas  have now become " Give a dog a bone" and they will never betray their master. But I will never give up in my dreams and my pride, we can see the back date history no revolution was successful in single fight ,it took India 200 years to be free from colonial hand but in between multiple battles , bandh and movement of purpose was seen, but what kept them alive it was indeed a collective effort, none of them gave up and after so many ups and down the so called movement has made us celebrate the 75 th independence day. Let us be slave no more and fight for our land....I m ready are you ???????

GORKHALAND MARTYRS - Forgive them, even though they do know what they are doing.

7:21 AM

Writes: N N Ojha

In nearly seventy summers, winters, springs and autumns that I have left behind, I have had my share of happy and unhappy experiences. Such prolonged exposure to a rainbow of experiences in life generally helps a person rise above euphoria and dejection, while retaining requisite levels of  human sensitivity. Like most people of my age group, I too can enjoy happiness without getting euphoric and put up with adversity without being gripped in disappointment.

Our brother Anit Thapa has robbed me of this most valuable lesson learnt through a lifetime of trials and tribulations. His statement that over 12 of our youngsters who fell to police bullets during the recent (or should i call it current) spell of agitation actually had to be fired upon by the security personnel because they were pelting stones has left me not just dejected but heart broken.

Anit, have you forgotten that throughout the incidents of firing you and your big brother Binoy Tamongo were leading the agitation? Did you ask these youngsters to pelt stones at police? If they pelted stones on their own, did you as their leader not stop them? If you asked them to do what you now say was responsible for them to lose their lives or if you as leader didn’t stop them, aren’t you an equal partner in the crime? How come you the leader of the agitation survived but youngsters who followed your command not only lost their lives but actually deserved to lose their lives according to you in your new avtar?

Are you aware that your big brother Binoy has in the meeting held at Uttar Kanya demanded that a high level inquiry should be held in the killings of our youngsters and the demand was also accepted by the CM? How could you conclude that the firings by police and the resultant killings of our youngsters is justified even when the high level inquiry promised by the CM is yet to commence?

I do not know on what basis you have declared that the youngsters who died in police firing deserved to die as they were stone pelters. Let me share public perception about two of these incidents.

When Ashish Tamang of Magarjung was killed in Mirik, he was simply walking down the road when he was noticed by a CRPF jawan who was reportedly drunk. Story that started doing rounds immediately after the  incident was that the jawan hailing from Chhattisgarh (some say he was a surrendered Naxal militant inducted into the force as part of a promised rehabilitation package) was murmuring in an inebriated condition that he and many of his colleagues were away from their homes and families ‘tum logon ki wajah se’ and pulled the trigger.

Likewise when Sangay Bhutia was killed in Sonada, he was walking down to a nearby chemist shop to buy medicines for his ailing elder brother, when a bullet was fired from a passing CRPF convoy and the young lad fell dead there and then.

Firings by security forces resulting in killing of citizens is a serious matter. The veracity of stories floating around has to be proved or disproved through high level inquiries. Perhaps that is why your big brother Binoy asked for a high level inquiry and the CM too agreed for the same instantaneously.

For you to preempt the inquiry’s findings by declaring that the police fired because the youngsters were pelting stones is highly reprehensible. It shows a fratricidal streak in you just to please your newfound benefactors. Your statement breaks our hearts. It won’t do any good to you either. Still, there is time for you to atone your sinful conduct and retrace the statement.

As an old man i am a well wisher of all our youngsters including you. Let me assure you my advise to you is not out of any ill will against you. It is meant for your own long term welfare.

Gorkhaland – the solution lies in the political and not in the politics.

6:59 PM

Writes: Dr. Deepa Joshi*

Let me pick up on Reggie Lama’s opening line – ‘12 deaths and the hardship of a 104 days of shutdown remain conveniently forgotten’. With humility and respect, let me remind Mr Lama - that the world lives by forgetting the deaths and perils of the lesser mortals – the Rohingyas in Myanmar, Syria for the past few years, the Palestinians for as long as we can remember, and the list is long. What we have lost in the last five decades is but a miniscule of the numbers that add up to a staggering list of those who have died seeking dignity and freedom – rights that remain denied.

Mr Lama rightly captures the bitter bile of a public disillusioned, disheartened and desperate for answers and consolation and asks for hope that seems difficult to find, in trying to keep the Gorkha heart beating. I speak to this issue – how should we be going forward, and what is indeed forward for us? My suggestion is, it is time now “to engage in the political and not the politics”. I explain below what this means in the current context of the hopelessness that engulfs on the one hand, and the callousness of the politicians who appear so keen to grab and claim the vacant space of politics, and I explain why being political and not indulging in politics is our only hope in resurrecting our injured identity and regaining our rightful place, not in context to how others - whether they be – back (crotch, as well ) scratching and smirking fellow citizens “down there”, alive and kicking Mr Modi or the very dead Marshall Manekshaw – but in the context of how we see and conduct ourselves.

Engaging in politics is easy – but if there is one thing we should have learnt from the past 3 months – engaging in the political although, difficult and demanding – is what really matters. What then is the difference between these two terms? Even though, it was “the people” who led and kept the movement alive – in their everyday small and big acts of resilience, resistance and solidarity, engaging in this very “political” act of claiming space and voice - every now and then we faltered - backtracked by the compulsions of “politics”: going back to begging the powers that be – whether it was a muted BJP leadership only interested in play of politics and representation or a bunch of elites with vested interests and mandates in politics. What can we learn from this?

Being political empowers us the ordinary citizens in ways that politics can never do. Our leaders – steeped in the corruption of politics, our elites – shifting and aligning their positions to their convenience – will not get us the dignity and freedom we deserve as a people, as well as help ensure that, this dignity and freedom extends to all, especially those in the margins of what makes for the political entity of Gorkhaland. It is only we the people – who can and who must find these for ourselves.

How do we begin, now that we think we are ended? Contrary to the desolation we feel, I see hope all over again, hope in the everyday writings across the spectrum – from Mr Lama’s questioning about leaders quick to take control or those still in the hiding to Mr Sharma’s questioning of the everyday ethics [or rather the lack of it] at the SBI’s Ladenla Branch. We need to continue to write, but more importantly – continue to act – because our democratic rights are not disassociated from our everyday living and existence – in fact we can only achieve the democracy we desire by the choices we make every day. The list of things that come to mind, is way too long to list here, but it includes the small and the big of how we get on in our everyday lives.

First and foremost on that list, at least for me - is public scrutiny of every leader and official, who claim to represent us or to service our needs; ensuring henceforth that this disease of a consensus between politics, government and economics ends here and now. In honouring the 12 deaths and the 104 days of a shutdown – lets ensure that we make this space for politics and administration so regulated – that it will only attract those – who seek nothing else except to represent our interests and the needs of the most marginal amongst us.
Does this sound like some hazy nirvana dream (not to ignore that we are infamous in exploring the same ). The answer is a resounding No! Reclaiming politics through political people power is happening around the world, from UK’s Jeremy Corbyn’s spectacular comeback to the recent referendums for independence in Catalonia and Iraqi Kurdistan. What matters is what and how we chose going forward.

All the basic human dignity and freedom we have long been denied will come back to us, once we the people make it clear to the powers that be – from our very local municipalities, towns, districts to the state and central governments – that we are and we will forever continue to be political. That, this is our promise to ourselves, those whose lives have been lost not just in 2017, but decades back too - and to the many more who will be born to live in this very fair land of ours.

* Coventry University, London. Previously Assistant Professor at Wageningen University, The Netherlands.

Via The DC

Sunil Chhetri overtakes Wayne Rooney in active goal scorers list

7:14 AM

Sunil Chhetri surpassed Wayne Rooney as the current leading goal scorers in the world after his goal against Kyrgyzstan on Tuesday. He now has 54 International goals next to his name while Rooney sits at 53.

India captain Sunil Chhetri became the fourth highest active International player on Sunday after his goal against Kyrgyzstan on Tuesday. He surpassed England football great Wayne Rooney with a goal to sit on the fourth position after Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi and Clint Dempsey.

Chhetri’s goal against Kyrgyzstan in Bangalore not only helped India win the crucial AFC Asian Cup Qualifier in Bangalore but also increased his greatness quotient for the cricket-crazy country.

The Captain scored the only goal in the qualifier in the 69th minute which ensured India sat at the top of the Group. He made a brilliant run, dribbled past the defence, returned it to a waiting Jeje who fed a decent ball for his skipper. Chhetri, who was waiting in the area,  produced a spectacular goal to give India the lead.

The goal was his 54th strike for India, while Rooney sits at 53. Only football legends Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal, Argentina’s Lionel Messi and American Clint Dempsey stand ahead of the 32-year-old Chhetri.

While Ronaldo is the current leading goalscorer with 73 goals, the Real Madrid star is followed by rival Messi with 58 goals. With two more goals, Chhetri will stand par with Demsey to become the the highest active scorer only after the two legends Ronaldo and Messi.

Under coach Stephen Constantine, India have also improved their FIFA rankings to stand in the top 100 for the first time in 21 years.

Indian Express

Darjeeling Crisis - Who should be blamed?

10:45 AM

PERSPECTIVE: Who should be blamed?

Writes: Norbu Bhutia Angu

Blaming CM Smt. Mamta Bannerjee is fair for the unrest in the hills but it's unfair to over look the contribution of our leaders towards the cause too? I am not affiliated to any party in the hills. As all Gorkhas even I want a separate state and a identity. But at what cost???? Absolutely not by stepping over the corpses of my people and over the corpses of our security personnel who are one of us just performing their duties.

It's understandable why people are resonating. But the actual reason for resonating is within our family. Why did we accepted different boards? How did TMC formed a board in Mirik? Why there were independent candidates contesting elections. All this would not have taken place if the ruling party and the leaders were committed towards the cause which they have once stood for and stayed committed towards it.

I think it's foolish and absurd just to blame Mamta for all the unrest and commotion because at the end of the day deep beneath our heart we know that we have been betrayed by our own leaders whom we have trusted and entrusted with all devotion n support,for a dream that was never so far only if our leaders were committed. Our dream our aspirations our Gorkhaland.

Via TheDC

Darjeeling feeds hundreds in time of crisis

10:03 AM

Going the extra mile: Darjeeling feeds hundreds in time of crisis

Humanity scored over politics as the Queen of Hills went about lending a helping hand to hundreds of distressed tourists. Residents of Darjeeling provided food, biscuits, tea and drinking water to those who were miles away from their homes — stranded and distraught — waiting at the motor stand to be ferried home. Many organisations pitched in along with the local residents distributing bottled water, tea and biscuits. "Residents of the motor stand area, seeing the tourists on the roads waiting for the buses, decided to chip in.

There were hungry kids too. We got the necessary stocks and started cooking khichdi (rice, lentil and vegetables cooked together) for the tourists," said Promod Sharma, a local. Soon, hungry tourists were seen queueing up for the nutritious lunch. "The lunch saved us. We had absolutely no food and did not know what to do with a small child. We don't even know for how long we will have to wait for the bus but it will not be on an empty stomach now," stated Anil Kumar, a tourist from Bihar Sharif. Even foreign tourists were seen queueing up in front of the community kitchen. "I had arrived four days ago and am leaving today (Friday). It is such a good gesture on the part of the people of Darjeeling. With no shops open I had missed my breakfast too," stated Roum from South Korea. Not only food, there was a humane side of Darjeeling too that became evident in such a time of crisis. Two elderly policemen from Burdwan paid a visit to a restaurant near Chowrasta. For those who belong to the plains, the chilly nights in the Hills are not easy to spend.

"Though its summer for us, the night temperature is chilly for people from the warmer climates. The cops seemed to be feeling very cold and did not have warm clothes," stated Anil Rai, the owner of the restaurant located in Toonsoong. Rai gave them two of his jackets. "When they were reluctant to take the jackets as they were not sure if they would be able to take out time to return them owing to their busy schedule, I told them that they could keep the jackets as remembrance," stated Rai.

(Via:millenniumpost)

Dear Gorkhas, Please Beware of the Bengal State Machinery

1:13 PM

Writes Dushyant Chettri

A recent Facebook update by a dear friend from Calcutta got me thinking. I shall begin this article by quoting him. Mr. Ranabir Lahiri, for whose intellect I have a great deal of respect had this to say today as his status:

“The decision to hold the cabinet meeting in Darjeeling is power gone mad, arrogating to itself the right to hegemonize the spaces historically contested by the three major actors - the Chogyal of Sikkim, the Gorkhas of Nepal, and the British East India Company. Bengal and Bengalees had never been in the picture. The decision betrays an insensitive use of political authority, a poor mimicry of our colonial administration that used the hill stations [Darjeeling, Simla, Ooty] as summer capitals.
Didi's Darj policies are symptomatic of the average Bengali mindset about the hills, marked by a sense of entitlement and ownership over a landscape, without ever being a part of its history and geography. How can you lose something when you never had it! Honestly speaking, as I head straight north from Siliguri, within half an hour of my drive I distinctly perceive a change - the weather, the food, the features of men and women who pass by, and the language they speak.”
Drawing upon Ranabir Sir’s argument, I would like to add that this isn’t just an example of “power gone mad,” rather it is part of a very well though-out and much larger game-plan. What the Bengal Government is now attempting to do, in a way perhaps the CPIM too never dreamt, is an eventual colonization of the Darjeeling hills. As much as we would like to believe not, the CM is an extremely clever strategist, and all her decisions aren’t impulsive at all, but clearly motivated. Let me enlist a few examples here:

1) As mentioned in Mr. Lahiri’s status, the decision to hold a Cabinet Meeting in Darjeeling, something which has not happened since British times.

2) Attempting to impose the Bengali language, successfully resisted, on the predominantly Nepali-speaking populace here (even then the fact that it may be retained as fourth optional is worrisome!)

3) Very slyly pumping in money into various development boards and effectively fracturing the Gorkha identity along the lines of caste and ethnicity.

4) Creation of Kalimpong district and splitting of Jalpaiguri district into Cooch Behar district, in effect, actually re-distributing the Nepali speaking and other adivasi areas of the Dooars, rendering them a minority, and by extension, increasing and ensuring the dominance of the Bengali populace.

5) Most importantly, rendering the GTA completely ineffective and powerless. The recent audit that she has announced for the GTA funds is also part of the same game plan. By refusing to divest powers and give full constitutional autonomy to the GTA, she has already rendered it pretty much dysfunctional. The timing of the audit, too, is telling, as it is clearly designed to once and for all, nullify whatever little power rests with the GTA.

These signs, read together, present an extremely ominous future. The Bengal government is very slowly and very slyly putting the age-old colonial machinery into place, by creating gradual in-roads into Darjeeling and Dooars. Dooars has already fallen within that trap. Following the exact British modality of establishing colonial supremacy over predominantly tribal areas, the Bengal government is splitting places into separate administrative districts and re-shuffling of the populace.  In Darj, it is deploying the local people to achieve its cunning, nefarious design. Please be extremely careful, as none of this is a sudden, impulsive move! It is part of a much larger, much more nefarious attempt of eventual and complete colonization of Darjeeling by Bengal and shifting the control of power entirely to Calcutta.

Mirik, too, has unfortunately fallen within this trap. Choose anyone, GJMM or otherwise, but by giving an in-road to TMC, what people are actually doing is becoming pawns, chess pieces, within this larger game plan.

The CM has more or less control over the rest of Bengal, apart from the Darjeeling hills, and she is well aware that for the next ten years at least, nothing can dethrone her. The only place left to gain control over is the Darjeeling hills, a move for which she seems utterly and entirely desperate, as proven by her recurring visits.

Do not be fooled by her artificial empathy, do not be fooled by the Bhanu Jayanti celebrations (for which the posters where in Bengali!), read the ominous signs and think for yourselves! Unless Bengal’s larger game plan is understood and checked now, thirty years down the line, this will have serious repercussions and render your own Gorkhali people as mere puppets, or worse still, as minority in your own land!!!

Police case filed against Shahitya Academy Award Winners, school heads and GJM leaders

2:54 PM

LANGUAGE ISSUE: Police Cases Filed Against Heads of Schools, Shahitya Academy Award Winners and GJM Leaders

Writes: Vivek Chhetri

Darjeeling police have started a suo motu case against Gorkha Janmukti Morcha leaders, literary figures and heads of educational institutions who had attended a meeting on Tuesday to discuss the government's decision to make Bengali compulsory in schools.

Apart from Morcha leaders Bimal Gurung, Roshan Giri and Binay Tamang, cases were drawn up against Jiwan Namdung and Prem Pradhan, former presidents of the Nepali Sahitya Akademi, and Rev. Joy Halder, the rector of St Paul's School.

The police have also filed a case against Pemba Bomjan, the president of Gorkha Dukha Niwarak Sammelan, the oldest social organisation in the town.

The Morcha had called a meeting on May 30 where literary figures, academicians, college professors, teachers and people from different walks of life discussed the state's plan of a three-language policy.

During the meeting, Gurung had announced a two-day closure of educational institutions in the hills yesterday and today and rallies with black flags during the chief minister's visit next week to protest the government's decision.

Classes were suspended in a majority of the schools in the hills today as the students had not turned up.

Most of the speakers at the May 30 meeting had said that while they were not against any particular language, imposing one on students of a region was not acceptable and they should be given the option to choose.

The FIR filed by Saumyajit Roy, the inspector in charge of Darjeeling Sadar, states: "It is to be noted here that the above accused persons are purposefully trying to create an issue unnecessarily with a motive of provocation to ignite feeling of hatred and enmity between different castes of people on the basis of regionalism and trying to distort the government policies...."

"It is also to be noticed here that no such notification in view of compulsion of Bengali language to the education system of the hills has been imposed till date."

The accused have been booked under Sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 155A(b) (promoting enmity between different groups), 505 (statement conducting to public mischief) and 34 (common intent) of the Indian Penal Code.

Told about the police case, St Paul's rector Rev Halder said: "I am hearing it from you. I am quite taken aback. Whatever I said in my speech was based on my personal experience about learning different languages. At the end of my speech, I had also said that since we are all governed by CISCE, we need to await for a notification on this matter."

The chief minister had yesterday clarified that CBSE and ICSE schools in Bengal would have to teach Bengali as one of three languages up to Class X but students need not write the board exam in the third language

In the hills, most students have English as their first language and Nepali as the second. The students mostly opt for Hindi as the third language, which they will have to drop for Bengali if it is made compulsory.

Morcha leader Tamang said: "It seems that we cannot even speak or voice our grievances now. Where is the freedom of speech? We have not spoken against any language, we are merely saying that you should not impose a language and make it mandatory."

[Via: Telegraph, file pic]

 
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