Saturday, September 18, 2010

....ALAS..

What pushed the Rongs’ backs against the wall…
Well the starting of the hunger strike in Kolkata by the Rongs made me think hard-amongst all minorities and Scheduled Tribes in the Himalayas, Rongs are the only ones who have to resort to such extremes.
Then I considered as a Rong and tried to grasp the situation. It’s the genuine sense of belonging that pushes the Rongs. The hills are our home and when problem arises in home we try to solve it anyhow and not ignore them and seek refuge in another neighboring nation.
The History has not been too kind to the Rongs. Scattered across the hills of this part of the Himalayas Rongs had their own clans and chieftains who were much in tranquil with their co-existence with the nature. I know of many new age historians armed with one sided argument walk away with the laurels while making the facts even stranger than fiction. The ancestors of our “blood brothers” came down the passes and swore allegiance to the treaty of “KAYUSA VEE LAONG TSAOKS” only to rule over us for another 300 years. The Namgyals (the ruling family of Sikkim) tried to rein in the hostility that arose due to the usurping of the land by taking into confidence the Rong ruling class and giving them, titles and offices in the Royal House. The resentment towards the taking over never really died down but the historians were careful enough to forget many such upheavals and conspiracy so that the theocratic set up would not be disturbed. While post 1835 and the conniving tricks played by Grant and Lloyd with Chogyal Tshugphud Namgyal, the Rongs in Darjyulyang too were facing new domination which had started after the massacre  of Chongjod Bholod’s family in 1828. Then the white trash of this side of Atlantic, which by now were already well entrenched on this side of the Indian Ocean, ensured that “the Buddhist prayer wheels were rapidly replaced by Hindu Mantras”. And in this historic cacophony the Rong spirit, unity and spiritual affinity towards Mayel Lyang (the utopia of the Rong conciousness) gradually disintegrated into two classes: the oppressors and the oppressed. It was the oppressed who by all means stuck to their heritage and culture and language as these were the only binding forces to remain of a culture that was once the most prolific and spread out across the Himalayas.
And of the Rongs in Damsang Lyang (present day Kalimpong sub-division) Gaybu Achyok (Gyelpa Achog) had erected Laong Tsaoks (stone pillars) all the way to Tibet to demarcate the his domains from that of the Bhutia Chogyal in Sikkim. His assassination only led to the House of the Paro (no wonder Rongs still call Bhutan as PROLYANG or Paro Lyang) to take over Damsang Lyang (Thank you Anum Azuk). Sikkim did not bat an eyelid because the descendants of the Minyak house  were never the warrior kind (remember they were the spiritual leaders in the first place with Buddhist agenda of the fleeing Nyingmapas during the the strife with the Gelugpas in Tibet).
India happened and yet nothing happened for the Rongs.
            This is the story of the oppressed Rongs who never had a voice even on their own lands and today the oppressed has come out in the open.



1 comment:

  1. I could feel the rage in your voice yet its still unheard...
    And you have the power to tell the world through your writings ...Someday.. it will make a difference.

    ReplyDelete

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