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A view of part of the town of Kohima |
We
had two options to approach Imphal from Guwahati. One was to go via Silchar and
the other was to go via Guwahati and Kohima in Nagaland. The driver was
reluctant to take the route via Silchar as, he said, it had the disturbed area
of Tamenglong on the way. It is the westernmost district of Manipur with Assam
on its western flank. True, that area of Manipur had been disturbed for quite
some time with rebel activities and they did not quite like outsiders. We
naturally chose to take the other option and travel via Guwahati.
So
we headed towards Guwahati from where we took the highway on
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A street in Kohima |
the northern bank
of Brahmaputra to travel to Kohima in Nagaland. It was only around 400
kilometres but was likely to take more time because of bad roads. Nonetheless,
it was interesting as we got to see some wildlife including rhinos of Kazi
Ranga feeding close to the highway. The road passes through some thick jungles
before one reaches Kohima.
Kohima
is today the capital of Nagaland but it is historically very important. It was
here that a very important battle of the World War II was fought. It was a very
bitter battle with hand to hand fights on the heights of the Kohima Ridge where
the Kohima Collector’s bungalow was located. While the Japanese made a
determined push the British threw into the battles all that they had,
eventually succeeding to force the Japanese to retreat. Both the sides saw
Kohima as very important as a foothold here would have provided the Japanese
access to the railhead of Dimapur about 40 miles away
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View from the historical road to Imphal from Kohima |
and the British decided
to deny that to the Japanese at any cost. The cost was very heavy as the
Collector’s tennis court acquired the likeness of a meteorite-hit site with
burnt out vegetation and human bodies.
One
does not know how Kohima looked like in 1944 when Japanese had occupied large
parts of the town but when I visited it more than a quarter century ago it was
a beautiful hill town, green and sparsely populated. Staying at an elevation
where the circuit house was located when I looked out it appeared attractive
with its undulations and lovely conical-top houses. I believe it has now
developed beyond
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The cros with the evocative epitaph |
imagination. What is more important perhaps is that shedding
their insularity the Naga people are now making forays out into the country. We
saw a Naga troupe giving beautiful dance performances in the Museum of Man in
Bhopal.
I
suppose the only place worth visiting in Kohima at that time was the War
Cemetery. Maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the Cemetery is
dedicated to the soldiers of the 2nd British
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My wife Bandana at the War Cemetery |
Division of the Allied
Forces who died at Kohima. According to the Graves Commission, about 1429
soldiers are buried here and it also has a memorial for about 900 Hindu and
Sikh soldiers who died in the battles and were cremated according to their
religious rights. It is a beautifully maintained place that exudes its sombre
ambience.
The
Cemetery is located exactly at the place where the battle was fought i.e at the
tennis courts of the Deputy Commissioner’s bungalow between two ridges. The
place offers a panoramic view of Kohima town. Two memorial crosses – one at the
upper end and the other at
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A temple at Bishnupur on way to Moirang |
the lower end are important. The one at the upper
end commemorates the Indian soldiers who laid down their life. It carries the
epitaph: “Here… lie men who fought in the battle of Kohima in which they and
their comrades finally halted the invasion of India by the forces of Japan in
1944”. The lower end memorial, dedicated to soldiers of the British 2nd
Division also carries an epitaph that is more evocative which says :
“When
you go home tell them of us and say for your tomorrow we gave our today”
Next
day we travelled on the historic Kohima- Imphal road. Here at several places
placards have been put up indicating the battles that took place there as the
British Army pursued the retreating Japanese
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A part of the Women's market |
Imperial Army. It was very
interesting. The road was good up to Mao, the last town of Nagaland at its
border with Manipur. As soon as we crossed into Manipur, more specifically its
Senapati District, we came up against nightmarish conditions. Un-tarred and
probably never attended to, presumably, since the Allied
Forces left the area about forty five years ago, and to say that it was bouncy
would be an understatement. It was bone-rattling, stomach churning and what
have you. I have never had such a drive anywhere in the country, including in Ladakh.
It took more
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Netaji's statue at Moirang |
than four hours of grueling drive for us to reach the level
grounds of Imphal. I am sure if the road conditions were somewhat like this
when Japanese retreated perhaps more soldiers would have died of exhaustion
than by being hit by bullets.
Imphal
proved to be a pretty small town but was torn by rebellion. Militants were very
active and life was not quite secure. I remember when I visited the Imphal head
post office I was given normal salutes by armed CRPF men outside the building.
Inside the office the salute shook me a bit as it was loud and had kind of
bullet-like report. On regaining my composure I realized it was only a salute.
But then I noticed CRPF jawans had taken positions elsewhere in the office –
positions that they had probably considered to be vantage ones. From their preparedness it seemed as if an
attack by the rebels was imminent. Nothing, however, had happened even after I
returned to Shillong but, I presume, they
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The stone commemorating hoisting of national flag |
had anticipated genuine threat.
Apparently they preferred to remain on high alert as the rebels always
targetted the Central Government offices/installations.
Having
finished whatever work I had to attend to we moved on to Moirang which is around
50 kilometres away in the south. The road was reasonable and it passed through
the Bishnupur district. Moirang is important for us Indians as this was the
place where the Indian National Army (INA) organized by Netaji Subhash Chandra
Bose defeated the British army and hoisted the National Flag. It was here that
the first Provisional Government of India was formed and established.
It
was described as a small sleepy town when the INA forces came
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Loktak Lake |
barging in after
crossing the treacherous rivers, hills and jungles of Burma. But the
battle-weary troops valiantly fought and routed the British detachment to claim
the place as liberated. The building that housed the INA headquarters could do
well with a repair job, However the spot where the National Flag was hoisted on
14th April 1944 has a museum which transports one to the days of
Second World War and the audacious fight put up by the well-organised band of
gutsy but ill-equipped fighters raised by Netaji. There is also a statue of
Netaji donated by the Government of West Bengal mounted on a pedestal nearby.
It was, I am afraid, pretty disappointing; as it seems to have made Netaji
somewhat of a midget. That is my impression and it should not be taken amiss.
Nearby
is the Ramsar Site of Loktak Lake which is claimed to be the largest fresh
water lake in the North-East. It is a valuable economic resource as it helps in
generation of electricity, irrigation and fishing. It has what are known as
“phumdis”, a collection of a mass of vegetation soil and organic matter which
are so tightly married together that an antelope like Sangai, though
endangered, can thrive on them. We too walked on them, of course, not with much
ease. The largest “phumdi” is of 40 sq.kms and is the only floating national
park in the world. It is known as Kelbu Lamjao National Park.
We
also proceeded to Churachandpur, the headquarters of the eponymously named
district. The visit to it is another story which will be mounted separately.
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