Rani Gaidinliu

Fighter

Birthday October 26, 1915

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Nungkao village, Manipur, British India

DEATH DATE 1993-2-17, Longkao, Manipur, India (77 years old)

Nationality India

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1915

Gaidinliu Pamei (26 January 1915 – 17 February 1993) popularly known as Rani Gaidinliu was a Naga spiritual and political leader who led a revolt against British rule in India.

At the age of 13, she joined the Heraka religious movement of her cousin Haipou Jadonang.

The movement later turned into a political movement seeking to drive out the British from Manipur and the surrounding Naga areas.

Within the Heraka faith, she came to be considered an incarnation of the Goddess Cherachamdinliu.

Gaidinliu was born on 26 January 1915 at Nungkao (or Longkao) village in the present-day Tousem sub-division of Tamenglong District, Manipur.

She was from the Rongmei Naga tribe (also known as Kabui).

She was the fifth of eight children, including six sisters and a younger brother, born to Lothonang Pamei and Kachaklenliu.

The family belonged to the ruling clan of the village.

She did not have a formal education due to the lack of schools in the area.

1927

In 1927, when she was just 13, Gaidinliu joined the Heraka movement of her cousin Haipou Jadonang, who had emerged as a prominent local leader.

Jadonang's movement was a revival of a tribal religion.

It attracted a number of followers from the Zeliangrong tribes (the Zeme, Liangmai and Rongmei).

Jadonang was convicted and hanged by the British for killing few Manipur merchants.

Persuaded by Jadonang's ideology and principles, Gaidinliu became his disciple and a part of the movement against the British.

In three years, by the age of 16, she was also accused of creating communal unrest against Kukis and the British wanted to arrest her.

So she was mobilizing people against the British and their rule, finally arrested by the British for her calamity against the Kukis.

1931

The British arrested and killed Jadonang by hanging on 29th August, 1931 in Imphal.

He was charged for treason due to the death of four Meitei traders in Longkao over violation of a social taboo; Jadonang had no role in the killings.

Gaidinliu, then, emerged as his spiritual and political heir.

She openly rebelled against the British rule, exhorting the Zeliangrong people not to pay taxes.

She received donations from the local Nagas, many of whom also joined her as volunteers.

The British authorities launched a manhunt for her.

She evaded arrest by the police, moving across villages in what are now Assam, Nagaland and Manipur.

The Governor of Assam dispatched the 3rd and 4th battalions of the Assam Rifles against her, under the supervision of the Naga Hills Deputy Commissioner JP Mills.

Monetary rewards were declared for information leading to her arrest: this included a declaration that any village providing information on her whereabouts will get a 10-year tax break.

1932

Gaidinliu was arrested in 1932 at the age of 16, and was sentenced to life imprisonment by the British rulers.

Her forces engaged the Assam Rifles in armed conflicts in the North Cachar Hills (16 February 1932) and the Hangrum village (18 March 1932).

In October 1932, Gaidinliu moved to the Pulomi village, where her followers started building a wooden fortress.

While the fortress was under construction, an Assam Rifles contingent headed by Captain MacDonald launched a surprise attack on the village on 17 October 1932.

Gaidinliu, along with her followers, was arrested without any resistance near the Kenoma village.

Gaidinliu denied that she had any role in the attack on the Hangrum post of the Assam Rifles or the construction of the fort.

In December 1932, her followers from the Leng and the Bopungwemi villages murdered the Kuki chowkidar (watchman) of the Lakema Inspection Bungalow in the Naga Hills, suspecting him to be the informer who led to her arrest.

Gaidinliu was taken to Imphal, where she was convicted on the charges of murder and abetment of murder after a 10-month trial.

She was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Political Agent's Court for abetment of murder.

Most of her associates were either executed or jailed.

1937

Jawaharlal Nehru met her at Shillong Jail in 1937, and promised to pursue her release.

Nehru gave her the title of "Rani" ("Queen"), and she gained local popularity as Rani Gaidinliu.

1947

She was released in 1947 after India's independence, and continued to work for the upliftment of her people.

An advocate of the ancestral Naga religious practices, she staunchly resisted the conversion of Nagas to Christianity.

She was honoured as a freedom fighter and was awarded a Padma Bhushan by the Government of India.