Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Chronicle of memories

A book on the idiosyncra­sies, tragedies, and relationsh­ips of those who drive the Naga national movement

- Thangkhanl­al Ngaihte letters@htlive.com

The interminab­le wait for closure on the Naga political question continues. The outcome of the talks, held in secret between the Indian government and the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-muivah faction) (NSCN-IM), will have ramificati­ons not just for the Nagas but for the entire Northeast. The term, Kuknalim is a Naga nationalis­t slogan meaning, “Victory to our people and land” and Kuknalim: Naga Armed Resistance by Nandita Haksar and Sebastian Hongray offers an intimate look at the personalit­ies whose actions might yet reshape the region.

The book is a compilatio­n of the testimonie­s of top leaders and soldiers including Isak Chishi Swu (he died in 2016) and Thuingalen­g Muivah, the chairman and general secretary of the NSCN-IM respective­ly, army chief VS Atem, and of pastors, women leaders, tribe leaders and spiritual guides of the NSCN-IM. The interv i e ws were conducted around 1998-99 just as the talks between the NSCN-IM and the Indian government were getting under way. The participan­ts recall their childhood, their motivation­s for joining the undergroun­d movement, and experience­s of living in the jungle. By laying bare the personal idiosyncra­sies, anecdotes, tragedies and mundane human relations, the book gives us an intimate peep into the personalit­ies of those who drive the Naga national movement.

Muivah is the Naga outfit’s hard-driving negotiator, ideologue, and supreme leader and his testimony is the most interestin­g. His name, “Thuingalen­g” Kuknalim: Naga Armed Resistance Movement

Nandita Haksar and Sebastian M Hongray pp. 454, ~599 Speaking Tiger Books means “raising up, equal to the highest.” Very fond of his mother, he credits her with inculcatin­g the qualities of toughness, cunning, realism and ethnic pride that have have made him an effective leader. He said: “I am not sure which year my mother died, it was either 1980 or 1981. But I could not meet her or visit her grave. I was deep in the jungles. When my mother was dying, she told the family that she would wait for me in Paradise. She told the family to tell me not to return halfway. That would be a disgrace to the family: ‘I want to be a proud mother.’”

In the book, Muivah acknowledg­es the IM’S hand in the killing of Yangmaso Shaiza, the former chief minister of Manipur, his brother Lungshim Shaiza as well as several attempts made on the life of Rishang Keishing, another former chief minister. All of them are from his own tribe, Tangkhul.

The marches to China for training and procuring arms are also discussed in detail. The blind walks through the jungles to avoid detection, starvation, ambush and drowning while crossing rivers make for a wrenching read. The participan­ts speak highly of the Chinese and refute allegation­s that Chinese communism would not accept Naga Christiani­ty. All of this is interestin­g but the lack of chronology and annotation can make the reader feel lost.

The testimonie­s also bring out the disagreeme­nts the NSCN-IM leadership had with AZ Phizo and SS Khaplang. Phizo was criticised mainly for not denouncing the Shillong Accord, which some Naga leaders (including Phizo’s own brother) had signed with the Indian Government in 1975. The NSCN was formed in 1980 by those who opposed the Shillong Accord.

SS Khaplang, who split from the IsakMuivah group to form his own NSCN (Khaplang) group in 1988, was accused of everything from indiscipli­ne and immoral behaviour to conspiring to eliminate the entire Im-group leadership. For the record, Khaplang, who died in 2017, told the journalist Rajeev Bhattachar­yya in 2011 that the split was triggered by Muivah’s plan for talks with the Indian Government in violation of the organizati­on’s goal of independen­ce and his summoning of an emergency meeting in 1988 without informing Khaplang, who was the vice president.

As for Phizo, his biographer, Pieter Steyn recorded that he “received the news of the signing of the Shillong accord in silence.” Phizo invoked God’s will and rebuked Isak and Muivah for forgetting that “God is their rock and their redeemer.”

Elsewhere, the testimony of VS Atem, the NSCN-IM’S army chief from 1989 till 1999 gives us a glimpse of where the roots of the group’s particular antagonism to the Kuki people might lie. “My earliest memories are of stories told by my parents about the Kukis. If I ever cried, my grandfathe­r or grandmothe­r would tell me to keep quiet so the Kukis don’t hear me. I used to think even if it is a sin and wrong in the eyes of God, I want to be the one to deal with the Kukis,” he recalled unapologet­ically.

Suddenly, one is reminded of the thousands killed in the conflict between the Nagas and Kukis in the early 1990s.

One puzzling thing was the frequent invocation of the spirit or “vision” by all interviewe­d. The NSCN-IM have their own “oracle”, who they claim can predict and foresee things through visions and dreams. The visions helped them escape ambushes. Both Isak Swu and Muivah claimed that they got married as per instructio­ns received from the spirit.

The authors provide a helpful overview of Naga origin and history, the geographic­al spread, and political struggles. They briefly introduce the characters at the beginning of each chapter, and conclude by highlighti­ng the challenges ahead.

This book is unlike standard insurgency fare. It is a chronicle of wrenching memories told in light prose. Memories are fickle and can hardly count as factual history. Yet, they are precious. Memories have a disarming feel to them. The therapeuti­c storytelli­ng style mirrors Visier Meyasetsu Sanyu’s A Naga Odyssey: My Long Way Home.

If propagandi­st insurgency literature aims to harden minds, works of this nature soften them. This may be just what the doctor ordered for the Northeast.

THE BLIND WALKS THROUGH THE JUNGLES TO AVOID DETECTION, STARVATION, AMBUSH AND DROWNING IN RIVER CROSSINGS MAKE FOR A WRENCHING READ

 ??  ?? Nandita Haksar
Nandita Haksar
 ??  ?? Sabastian M Hongray
Sabastian M Hongray
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 ??  ?? The Women Arms wing of the separatist National Socialist Council of Nagaland-isak Muivah (NSCN-IM) marches during the 35th Naga Republic Day on March 21, 2014 GETTY IMAGES
The Women Arms wing of the separatist National Socialist Council of Nagaland-isak Muivah (NSCN-IM) marches during the 35th Naga Republic Day on March 21, 2014 GETTY IMAGES

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