Friday, May 28, 2010

Lepcha Heroes

....dear readers very sorry for this delay...actually i am caught up with a very important work and hence i have not been able to update the LEPCHA HEROES section timely..have patience and very soon i will be inserting accounts of Lepcha heroes you never knew existed.....Thank you all

Sunday, May 9, 2010

LEPCHA HEROES-III

TENDOOK PULGER

This is another Lepcha hero who has been remembered by few but who has managed make a lasting effect in the annals of history. The Gazetteer of Sikkim clearly elaborates his family. Doobgye, his father, was the Jongpen of Barmie in Sikkim and had lead the Sikkimese army against the Nepalese in Nagari. Doobgye had also assisted some Major Latter to lay down the present boundary of Sikkim and Nepal. Doobgye’s second wife was Barfungputso from whom Tendook Pulger was born.

Tenduk Pulger had the good fortune to be born the nephew of another distinguished Lepcha, the Chebu Lama (Astrologer Lama); when the Chebu Lama died, in 1866, Tenduk Pulger inherited from him one third of his property, fifteen and a half square miles of land in the north-western part of Darjeeling District known as the Karmi Estate. He accompanied Sir R. Temple on his travels in Sikkim and he was made Tehsildar under the Deputy Commissioner of Darjeeling in 1875 which was followed by the post of Deputy Commissioner in 1878. The British impressed by his work and effort made him the Revenue Collector of Kalimpong Estate. During this time he also served as a tutor for Young Sidkeong Tulku who went to become the 10th Chogyal of Sikkim later

With his characteristic zeal he went on serving the British government and he was made the Manager of Khas Mals in 1885. The title of Raja was conferred on Tenduk Pulger by the British Raj for Intelligence services rendered during the brief Anglo-Tibet war of 1888, when the Derbyshire Regiment passed through Kalimpong on its way to the Jelep La.

In 1891, as Manager of Khas Mehals, Raja Tenduk organized an agricultural show, Kalimpong’s first, jointly with the Rev.Mr. Graham. So successful was it that, by 1893, it had expanded to include a beauty ompetition, not the beauty of the female form, though, but the beauty of national costumes, Lepcha, Bhutia and Nepalese.

He retired from active service and was rewarded for his services in the North East frontier with the grant of pension and estate in Darjeeling. He died in 1902.

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