She was born in Manipur. She fought for establishing some rights of the Indian Kings in 1930.
The
flood of patriotism let loose by the 1942 movement took its toll of heroes and
heroines in Assam, and now we cherish the memory of Kanaklata, Kusal Konwar, and
others. Well has it been said that we appreciate our heroes, only when they are
dead! The newspapers sometimes make mention of another patriot–Rani Guidalo, the
Naga lady–happily with us still, who sacrificed herself at the altar of Liberty
and suffered more than was necessary.
Our
story takes us back to a dainty girl who was born into the Kaccha tribe. She
belonged to a village some seventeen miles away from Mokokchang. It is an
interior village bordering on the home of tribes that still take an interest in
head-hunting. She was a moody girl, often betaking herself to the quiet haunts
of Nature for which the Naga Hills are so noted. She dwelt among ‘the untrodden
ways’ beside the springs of the hills. Perhaps she had sensibilities, which
could not be appreciated by her associates. Her eyes were luminous with
unrealized visions and her well-developed nose bespoke an energy which was to
make itself felt later on.
She
was picked up by some Missionary who brought her to Mokokchang and tried to
instill into her a dose or two of Missionary lore. There she was for some time,
reading up to Class VI, but then she attained her puberty and had to go home.
That was the custom of her forefathers.
In
the meantime the call of freedom was stirring up the Nagas. It was no part of
the general Indian nationalist movement, but fostered by the traditions and
circumstances of the Nagas themselves. The British did not look upon this with
an eye of tolerance. They captured two rebels –‘Haideo,’ and Jadunang, and had
them hanged.
The
young maiden was feeling the pulsation of a new life around her. She was
probably in tune with the poet:
“We
bear the wrong in silence,
We
store it in our brain;
They
think us dull, they think us dead,
But
we shall rise again.”
She
was just awaiting her chance, when she heard a rumour that India had attained
freedom! It was 1930, and of course India and the plains of Assam were shaking
with the tide of the Civil Disobedience movement. The Naga girl felt that her
hour had come: she gave a call to her people, to rouse themselves and break the
shackles that had been put upon them by the Britishers.
A
hunt was set up. But she was too swift for her pursuers. She stirred the people
and passed swiftly from village to village, from hill to hill. She attained some
amount of prestige and even a halo, the halo of a goddess. She became the
Rani, the sobriquet which now decorates her name.
At
last she was caught with the help of, it is said, a Naga doctor. She was
captured in 1932 and brought for trial to Mokokchang. There she remained for
some time as an under-trial prisoner. The chief charge that was brought against
her was that she abetted murder. For, seven heads hunted by the wild tribes in
the neighbourhood of her village had been found, and it was ‘politic’ to put the
blame upon her.
The
trial was held within jail and she was awarded a life sentence. The news
inflamed thousands of patriotic Nagas and there was a threat of rushing upon the
jail itself, especially when she was about to be removed after the verdict. It
was the Rani’s gesture which restrained them. For she played up to the role
which she had taken upon herself and spoke to the crowd which had gathered
there. She said: “Do not be unruly. Do not lose your patience. For I shall come
back; they won’t be able to keep me for more than two years. I shall come out
and go to see the Mahatma who has given freedom to India. You shall be free
again.” Thus spoke the valiant girl, and the simple-hearted Nagas listened to
their Rani.
Then
followed her travels and travails. She was moved from place to place. She was
taken to Shillong, to Tura, to Aijal in the Lushai Hills. The loss of their dear
daughter shattered the happiness of her parents. Her mother became blind with
weeping. Her father died of sorrow. Her elder brother, who was also a rebel like
her, is believed to have been shot dead. Her younger sister came to be adopted
by the Missionary.
She
had imagined that she would be able to breathe the air of freedom in a year or
two, but when the years rolled on, and all sorts of indignities were heaped upon
her, her wild spirit almost broke down. She hardly talked. She did not look into
the eyes of her visitors. She was careless in her deportment, and came very near
to losing the balance of her mind.
Of
the tortures that were put upon her it would suffice to mention that she was
made to walk hundreds of miles when she had to be moved from one place to
another. Once she had to walk all the way from Shillong to Tura, and on another
occasion from Shillong to Aijal. She was but a young woman brought up on the
cool heights of the Naga Hills. In 1939 she was seen by a Jail Visitor at
Shillong. She seemed to be borne down by her suffering. She was kept as a C
Class prisoner and was then fanning the dust chaff off some paddy.
The
outside world hardly knew anything of the affair. That a wild flower of liberty
was languishing in prison was not flashed in the newspapers. But in 1935 Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru happened to visit Silchar A band of Nagas met Panditji and
apprised him of the heroic exploits of Guidalo. It was a sad item of news for
the fiery leader of India’s struggle for freedom. Naturally he became indignant
and tried what he could to get her released. Then only was the story of this
sacrifice to patriotism broadcast to the world. The plenary session of the
Congress which was held at Allahabad in 1936 passed a resolution demanding her
release.
Since
then, the years have rolled on and much has occurred in the intervening period.
Rani Guidalo was released in 1945, and she is now in her own village as an
internee. She went to prison as a blooming young lady still in her teens, and
she came out with her health shattered and her mind inhumanly tortured. But her
wild spirit still smoulders in her, and, in recent interview with a press
correspondent, she showed a lively interest in recent happenings in the
political arena. She does not wish that the Nagas should remain outside the
Indian Union, but she demands complete autonomy for the Naga Hills. She would
resent any interference from outside in their internal affairs. She believes in
the co-operation of the plains people and appeals to them to come to the help of
their less advanced hill brethren.
Thus,
the tale is soon told. But what draws one’s attention on to Guidalo is the
poetry in her character and career. The history of events, it has been
observed by a notable historian, is ephemeral, and for the scholar; but the
poetry of events is eternal and for the multitude. The poem that this
wild flower from the backwoods of the Naga Hills acted and lived will survive as
a symbol. It will outlast her mere existence as a Naga
patriot.
No comments:
Post a Comment