China's well-coordinated hearts-and-minds campaign was greeted with suspicion by the people of NEFA (now Arunachal)
By
Ajai Shukla and Sonia Trikha Shukla
Business Standard, 20th Oct 12
It was the 19th of November, 1962. The
sounds of battle were still audible, echoing through the valleys. The previous
two days had been nightmarish for 9-year-old Phurpa Lhamu, an eruption of
artillery and machine gun fire in the hills around the idyllic Sangti valley.
Chinese columns were converging here, pushing back the Indian Army frontally.
Simultaneously they were rounding the Indians, ambushing them from the rear and
converting every bottleneck into a bloody killing ground.
Even
more terrifying for Phurpa was the absence of the village youngsters, who the
Gaon Bura (the village elder, referred to universally as GB) had rounded up and
sent off to haul ammunition to the army’s forward posts. For three days and nights,
almost without a break, they had ferried supplies to the Indian picquets at
Thembang and Chhander. This had served no purpose; the advancing Chinese had
blown away those positions in a night. And the retreating Indians had walked
into their ambushes.
Peering
out of her window in the early morning light, Phurpa saw two lines of soldiers,
in battle fatigues, moving cautiously down the twin spurs that led down to
Sangti. At first she assumed they were Indians but, as they came closer, she
realized that they walked differently, more spread out and weapons at the
ready. Even when they were in plain sight and she could see their Chinese
features, the awful reality took some time to sink in: the People’s Liberation
Army (PLA) was here in Sangti. The Indian Army was gone. Nobody knew, or was
ready for, what might lie ahead.
As
the Chinese crossed the Sangti Nala and approached the village, Phurpa saw the
elders walk out to greet the Chinese, holding out khatas (white silk scarves) in the
traditional Buddhist welcome. Phurpa could hardly believe her eyes. These were
the monsters who, just three years earlier, had tried to kill His Holiness the
Dalai Lama in Lhasa, causing tens of thousands of Tibetans to flee their
homeland, passing through the Dirang and Sangti valleys on their way to new
lives as refugees in India.
Phurpa Lhamu from Sangti recounts her experiences under Chinese occupation
But
here the Chinese were, bowing politely and accepting khatas, behaving for the world like
honoured visitors. And for a full month to come, they would continue to live in
the area, cultivating the villagers, fetching water, harvesting crops and even
holding feasts. But the PLA would never succeed in gaining the trust of locals
or in becoming a part of their lives.
In
all the writing that has come out of the 1962 war, and in the popular Indian
imagination, that disaster appears to have unfolded in a freezing, uninhabited,
high-altitude desert where a star cast of ill-prepared soldiers struggled
manfully to implement ill-judged orders from misguided politicians and
bureaucrats. This is true to some extent in Ladakh. But the North East Frontier
Agency, or NEFA --- as Arunachal Pradesh was called in those days --- is also
the story of an Indian people who were abandoned to the Chinese by the Indian
army and administration that had neither the grit nor the capacity to stay with
the people that they had made their own.
Forgotten
in the shame of 1962 are the stories of the Monpas of Monyul; the Membas of
Menchuka and the Mishmis of Walong. These are the only Indians who have lived
under foreign occupation since independence.
And
when Indians cringe at Nehru’s abandonment of Assam in the face of China’s
advance --- his infamous response, in an All-India Radio Broadcast, was, “My
heart goes out to the people of Assam” --- how much shoddier then was the treatment
of NEFA’s people who did not even rate a pro forma mention.
On 22nd
October, the Chinese swept into Tawang, quickly consolidating control over that
densely populated valley. In a second offensive on 18-20th November,
the PLA captured the areas beyond Sela --- the fertile Dirang valley, Bomdi La,
the Rupa-Tenga valleys, Kalaktang, and all the way down to the eponymous
Foothills, on the border of Assam. After declaring a unilateral cease-fire on
the midnight of 20th November, the Chinese stayed in Dirang and
Tawang till the end of December, governing Tawang for two months, and Dirang
for a month. Simultaneously, the PLA occupied the Menchuka valley, and the
Walong valley, along with small enclaves elsewhere. Here too, they governed
till the end of December.
Telling
the story of China’s short-lived rule over these areas is not just an act of
catharsis or self-realisation. It is also the story of India’s only real
victory of 1962, where China’s spectacular military success was rendered
meaningless by the refusal of NEFA’s people to warm to the conquerors or to
succumb to their blandishments. In that war, as in those of the 21st
century conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, victory was less about destroying
military forces, than about winning the public affection.
The
PLA had come prepared to fight, and also to win hearts and minds through a
coordinated, made-in-Beijing, public relations campaign. This was uniformly
implemented, down to the last phrase, across all the areas that they occupied
in 1962. Our research across the Tawang area; in Menchuka, and in Walong and
Kibithoo in the eastern corner of Arunachal Pradesh, finds locals recounting
exactly the same phrases that the PLA soldiers used while dealing with the
people of NEFA.
In
the confusion of defeat after the Namka Chu battle on Oct 20, 1962, as Monpas
fled Tawang on the heels of the army and the administration, it was easy to be
overtaken by the fleet-footed PLA patrols. The Monpas who were caught, and
those who stayed behind because they were too poor, old or infirm to leave,
found the Chinese giving them a uniform message. Tashi Khandu, who went on to
become an MLA in Arunachal Pradesh, stayed on in his village, Kitpi. According
to him, the Chinese would regularly say, “Our fight is with the Indian
government, not with the people of Tawang. Look at you and look at us: we are
the same people.”
There
seemed to be little recognition, or at any rate acknowledgement, amongst the
PLA soldiers and apparatchiks, of the bitter anti-Communist feeling amongst the
Buddhists of NEFA (and Chinese ingress was almost entirely in Buddhist areas).
With the Monpas having actually seen the Dalai Lama pass through the villages
of Tawang after entering India at Khinzemane in March 1959; and after hearing
first-hand from Tibetan refugees about the PLA’s brutal subjugation; there were
few Monpa buyers for the PLA’s simplistic thesis that the Chinese and the
Monpas were one people.
But
the Monpas’ inherent politeness, combined with a sense of self-preservation,
held back the local people from countering the Chinese propaganda. As Phurpa
Tsering of Dirang points out, “Our elders met the Chineses soldiers with khatas
(silk scarfs), not because they were happy to see them but because they were
community leaders, responsible for their people, who had to work with whoever
was in charge.”
Along
with political commissars, the PLA contingents in each area were equipped with
Monpa-speaking translators, usually Monpas from Tsona just across the McMahon
Line. This made the locals even more suspicious of the Chinese. Tashi Khandu
says, “Since they had translators, none of us spoke while the Chinese were
offered tea. And when we spoke, we made sure we said nothing that would anger
them.”
But
the Chinese --- who favourably contrasted the Monpas’ cheerful cooperation with
the sullen resentment that they continued to face in Tibet after the 1959
revolt --- believed they were making headway in winning hearts and minds.
During the period of occupation, the PLA’s young soldiers routinely offered to
help locals till their fields, harvest the crop, and even gifted them clothes.
Leaving a vessel full of water on the doorstep of an elderly Monpa was another
PLA tactic.
Even
as the Monpas subconsciously rejected these gestures, there was admiration for
the discipline that the PLA displayed, especially when contrasted with the
unseemly flight of the defeated Indian Army. The Chinese would always dress
smartly, and they would never ask the locals to work as porters, something that
the Indian Army of that time regarded as a natural privilege. Although most of
the Chinese soldiers were very young, not a single case was recounted of
misbehaviour with Monpa women. Anything taken from the locals was scrupulously
paid for.
But
while generating respect, the PLA failed to generate trust. As the Chinese pull
out neared, the PLA invited local notables for bara khanas (community feasts) in all the
big villages. There was little choice but to show up, but as one invitee
recounts, “We drank their liquor, but nobody ate their food. Everybody believed
the Chinese were serving us dog meat”.
Poised
to leave in December, before the passes were closed by snowfall, the PLA sent
out a farewell message: “We are going now but rest assured, we will return.
This is a part of China and we know that you are not happy with what the Indian
government has done for you. But the Chinese government will be different. We
will look after your interests.”
Lekie,
who lives in Thembang village on the route of Chinese invasion, describes her
response: “We
were happy that China was leaving and that the government of India would come
back. Even though India’s officials and army had run away we knew they would do
good for us when they returned. But if the Chinese were to stay, we were afraid
that they would kill us.”
Such
steadfastness from a people who had experienced Indian administration for
barely a decade, and who had very recently been abandoned, did not occur by
accident. Its stemmed from India’s restrained and sensitive non-interference
with local tradition, a policy backed by Nehru himself, his powerful tribal
affairs advisor, Verrier Elwin, and a superb cadre of officers that was
organised in 1953 into the Indian Frontier Administrative Service. The
sophistication of this policy is reflected in an entry in Elwin’s diaries,
which remarks on Nehru’s belief that this frontier was not necessarily India,
but it could be made so.
That
belief has been vindicated. The People’s Republic of China continues to
struggle in Tibet, the underlying reason for China’s military attack in 1962.
Notwithstanding India’s military defeat, Arunachal is today a full-fledged and
enthusiastic Indian state and the only one amongst the Seven Sisters of the
northeast that has never had a separatist movement. In 1962, the Chinese guns
spoke, scattering the Indians. But the people of NEFA spoke too, and they have
won India the war.
Next time I meet someone from Arunachal Pradesh, I am going to give them a big hug! Thank you for posting this story
ReplyDeleteWhen I was in delhi...the north Indians use to to tease us momo chinki...n ask us whether v want to b part of China. ...wonder when v will b accepted as an indian?
DeleteDon't let those comments affect you. This country is yours. You are an Indian!!!!!
DeleteIA had done... what was cent percent what ought to do... make tezpur the battle ground... leaving nefa untouched... untenebale position/battle ground... and not bringing untold misery to its people there... well... tezpur... that hasn't come to what was expected at that time...
ReplyDeletekashmiri mafia tattus... nehru-gandhi family... 3rd class families... ruling india from 12th century...
ReplyDeleteColonel Saab,
ReplyDeleteIt seems there is a small technical error in following quote.
"“My heart goes out to the people of Assam” --- how much shoddier then was the treatment of NEFA’s people who did not even rate a pro forma mention."
Arunachal became separate state in 1987. Till that it was part of Assam.
Regards
its unfortunate that anti-national elements whose heart and soul lies in the land of the pure had their way when they purged the immigrants from this region from metros
ReplyDeleteThis is how we treat our bretherens while we remain silent on activities of those who have just harboured ill will for our nation
Brings back memories of the drink we had with you at tawang :-)
ReplyDelete@ Anonymous
ReplyDeleteYou should give them a big hug, not just because of teh way they stonewalled the Chinese, but also because they are just very lovely people.
@ Anonymous 07:11
ReplyDeleteYou'll have to identify yourself. Perhaps you could do so to my email: broadswordbs@gmail.com
@ Rhino from Kaziranga
ReplyDeleteYou're partly correct. NEFA was a part of Assam, but only technically. It was not ruled by the government of Assam, and even the Assam cabinet had no say in how NEFA was governed. Instead, NEFA was placed directly under the President of India, who administered it through a Special Advisor to the Governor of Assam.
Incidentally, it was not in 1987 that it ceased to be a part of Assam even in name. That happened in 1972, when Arunachal became a Union Territory.
But, I accept again that you're technically correct.
Mr. Shukla,
ReplyDeleteFYKI, you have been quoted by the Economist magazine:
http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21564861-fifty-years-after-nasty-high-altitude-war-border-dispute-remains-unresolved
Brilliantly written article. At a time when other editorials /opinion pieces /Talk shows are busy wallowing in India's defeat and "analyzing" why our army lost, here is a refresher !
ReplyDeleteIt can only come from someone who as stayed there and made it its home, like you. A roving TV news van or a journo on a trek, could never ever have captured this point of view.
Very nicely written Ajai saab!
ReplyDeletei fully agree with this observation.
ReplyDelete"its unfortunate that anti-national elements whose heart and soul lies in the land of the pure had their way when they purged the immigrants from this region from metros
This is how we treat our bretherens while we remain silent on activities of those who have just harboured ill will for our nation."
at least we can be very merciful and kind in punishing these anti-national elements for the heinous crimes they have committed by blinding them permanently so that they cannot threaten anybody from their own community as well as fellow citizens.
we are not decapitating or making them paralysed for life. we can be very merciful and kind in seeking to make them blind forever by proper medical process under the expert supervision of doctors and judicial and all relevant experts in a joint team.