Rohingyas Are a Nation in Arakan

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    ROHINGYAS ARE A NATION IN ARAKAN

    "They are living in a hostile country, and have been for hundreds of years, and yet they survive. They are

    perhaps to be compared with the Jews. A nation within a nation, and the apple tree hating the growth of

    the mistletoe but not being able to destroy it.."1

    Anthony Irwin

    When the Burmese Government had sent its troops to Arakan to put down the rebels the army killed,looted and kidnapped the prosperous Arakanese peoples.2 The Government failed to build Arakan's war

    damaged economy. Rice, the sole and the important product of Arakan, was rotting in godowns for lack of

    transportation. The local merchants were being ruined by the government to eliminate and frustratemiddlemen. The agricultural loans were entirely inadequate to the farmer's need. The government had

    appointed incompetent party members to the higher administrative posts which had formerly been held by

    efficient and capable civil servants.3

    All these circumstances gave opportunity to the Arakanese for

    demanding a State. In 1951, 23 candidates were elected to parliament, out of whom 12 membersadvocated Autonomous State for Arakan and they formed the Independent Arakanese Parliamentary

    Group (IAPG) under the leadership of U Kyaw Min, but later its name was changed to the Arakan

    National United Organization (ANUO), and they "moved a resolution in the House of Nationalities that

    the Arakanese no longer be classified as a minority".4

    But in Arakan strong forces hostile to ANUO still exit and these forces were favourable to Anti FacistPeoples' Freedom League (AFPFL). The Arakanese people suspected the ANUO controlled Arakan

    because "Kyaw Min and his group are prosperous landowners and capitalists, high government officials,

    and professional men. And the small rice farmers in Akyab, as elsewhere in the division, has good reasonto fear that he might be oppressed should the (IAPG) win its campaign for an autonomous Arakan State" 5.

    And the people of Kyaukpyu and Sandoway " have been traditionally resentful of Akyab's domination

    and snobbishness",6

    and they are against the Akyab people "and hence against separation; and the

    Kyaukpyu people even aspire to make their little four-townships island into a divisional headquarters".7

    The Rohingyas opposed the ANUO because of their Arakanese brother's "feeling of superiority to the

    Muslim north".8

    The Rohingyas preferred the control by the Union Government to the domination by theAUNO leaders, and they supported the AFPFL Government.

    9But some noted Rohingyas had become

    ANUO members. Mr. M.A .Gaffer thought it was a grave mistake for the Rohingyas and he strongly

    warned the Rohingyas to keep away from ANUO for two reasons----- firstly that the right course for the

    Rohingyas as an educationally and economically backward community was to concentrate on educationand social uplift and avoid political agitation; secondly that the demands made by the ANUO reflected the

    ambitions of the Arakanese majority and were manifestly detrimental to the interest of the Rohingyas.

    Their demands for Arakan State implied the introduction of ultimate majority rule which naturally meant

    vassalization of the Rohingyas. Arakan is inhibited by two major peoples Rohingyas and Arakaneseeach one of whom is different from the other in name culture, moral code, social organization, political

    outlook, religion and physique.

    It means that Rohingyas are a nation in Arakan." We the Rohingyas of Arakan are a nation. We maintain

    and hold that Rohingyas and Arakanse are two major nations in Arakan. We are a nation of nearly nine

    lakhs more than enough population for a nation; and what is more we are a nation according to anydefinition of a nation with our own distinctive culture and civilization, language and literature, art and

    architecture, names and nomenclature, sense of value and proportion, legal laws and moral codes, customs

    and calendar, history and traditions aptitude and ambitions, in short, we have our distinctive outlook on

    life and of life. By all canons of international law the Rohingyas are a nation in Arakan."10

    So it is adream that the Arakanese and Rohingyas can even evolve a common nationality.

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    It is quite clear that Arakanese and Rohingyas derive their inspiration from different sources of religion---

    Buddihism and Islam. Rohingya culture had been basically and overwhelmingly Islamic in letter and inspirit, and the interplay of many centuries did not make them lose their distinctive character. This feeling

    of distinctiveness ever present in their consciousness made them articulate to look upon themselves not

    only as a distinct indigenous race but also as a separate nation.The Rohingyas emerged as a distinct entity

    because they developed a separate culture and well-defined aims and ideals. Today, Rohingyas also wishto develop their spiritual, cultural, economy, social and political life in a way that they think best and in

    consonance with their ideals and in accordance with their genius; and today in both town and countryside

    Rohingyas and Arakanese lead separate lives and have little to do with one another as they kept sociallyapart from each other.

    The End

    12-1-1972

    1. Anthony Irwin, Burmese Outpost, p. 252. Virginia Thompson, Minority Problems in Southeast Asia, p. 1563. Ibid,p 1574. Ibid, p. 1575. Ibid, p. 157'6. Ibid, p.1577. Ba Chan, "Report on Arakan", The Guardian Monthly, Nov:1953 8. Minority Problems in Southeast Asia , p.1579. Ibid, p.15710. Memorandum presented to the Regional Autonomy Enquiry Commission by M.A. Gaffar dated

    the 24th

    May, 1949.