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History of the Rangers: Sarawak Communist Organization’s failed Utopian Dream By James Ritchie

 
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“When you're left wounded on

Afganistan's plains and

the women come out to cut up what remains,

Just roll to your rifle

and blow out your brains,

And go to your God like a soldier”

“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”

“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.”

“Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.

“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace,

for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”

“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .”
“The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.

“Nobody ever defended anything successfully, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.

“Fixed fortifications are a monument to the stupidity of man."
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died.
Rather we should thank God that such men lived.

The Soldier stood and faced God


Which must always come to pass

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He hoped his shoes were shining

Just as bright as his brass

"Step forward you Soldier,

How shall I deal with you?


Have you always turned the other cheek?


To My Church have you been true?"


"No, Lord, I guess I ain't


Because those of us who carry guns


Can't always be a saint."

I've had to work on Sundays

And at times my talk was tough,

And sometimes I've been violent,

Because the world is awfully rough.

But, I never took a penny

That wasn't mine to keep.

Though I worked a lot of overtime

When the bills got just too steep,

The Soldier squared his shoulders and said

And I never passed a cry for help

Though at times I shook with fear,

And sometimes, God forgive me,

I've wept unmanly tears.

I know I don't deserve a place

Among the people here.

They never wanted me around


Except to calm their fears.


If you've a place for me here,


Lord, It needn't be so grand,


I never expected or had too much,


But if you don't, I'll understand."

There was silence all around the throne

Where the saints had often trod

As the Soldier waited quietly,

For the judgment of his God.

"Step forward now, you Soldier,

You've borne your burden well.

Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,

You've done your time in Hell."

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Sarawak Communist Organization’s failed Utopian Dream By James Ritchie
Wednesday, January 04, 2023
Members of the Sarawak People's Guerilla Force (SPGF), North Kalimantan National Army (NKNA) and Indonesian National Armed Forces (TNI) taking photograph together marking the close relations between them during Indonesia under the rule of Sukarno.

Few people know that Communism in Sarawak started as early as the 1950s in three major Kuching Chinese-language papers which they controlled.

It was Malaysia’s best-kept secret until the Malayan Communist Party leader Ong Boon Hua’s alias Chin Peng wrote his biography: My Side of History which broke all sales record in both Singapore and Malaysia with the sales of more than 30,000 copies. Though James Chin reviewed V.L. Porritt’s “The Rise and Fall of Communism in Sarawak 1940-1990”, few if any have read my 488-page book of untold police and communist stories in Crimson Tide over Borneo.

But long before that, it was Special Branch Assistant Commissioner Tim Hardy’s 1963 report: “The Danger Within: A History of the Clandestine Communist Organization in Sarawak” which revealed communist Utopian dream. Hardy was one of the last British colonial officers to serve in Sarawak under the first Malaysian commissioner Dato Sri John George Ritchie.

His report which sympathized with the communist struggle, was derived after reading volumes of communist documents and material from various sources - either through seizures, police raids, interception of “couriers” or purchased for cash from informers.” Hardy wrote in his memoir The Reluctant Imperialist (2008):

“In short, the comrades used their pens far too much for their own good. The papers came in rich, voluminous variety; clandestine news sheets, samizats (Mao’s essays on guerrilla warfare) for instance were mailed from China, a page or two at a time, the whole at the end to be cyclostyled, bound together and distributed or studied in secret cells) ‘rolled slips’ (messages in gossamer rice-paper whose every centimeter was covered with miniature Chinese ideograms that often needed a magnifying glass to read...

“Study notes carelessly dropped, journals, diaries, self-criticism statements, work plans, letters, periodicals and even love letters. “The astonishing abundance of material - all of it handwritten - demonstrated the depth of learning, the ingenuity and the industriousness of the communists and of those who aspired to join them.”

By the early 1960s Communism had inflamed the imagination of young Chinese proud of their successful motherland China, and burning to free Sarawak from British colonialism. Hardy wrote in his book, The Reluctant Imperialist:

“With every page I turned, I tuned in a little closer to the wavelength the youngsters were on; those children huddled together in twos and threes under flickering oil lamps on the floor of sheds in pepper gardens or in clearings in the belukar (secondary jungle far more dense than virgin jungle) on the outskirts of towns and villages listening to broadcasts from the motherland or turning the pages of hand-written copies of treatise such as Lenin’s Imperialism, the Last Stages of Capitalism, a most favored work.”

“They were teaching themselves ‘revolution’ in preparation for the day they would be called upon to kill ‘running dogs’ (special Branch personnel and SEP communist informers) not out of blood lust and not for loot, but because the ‘foreign devils’ (British) left them no other way of reaching their glorious goal.”

Hardy said that vilifying the colonialists was not as villainous as it seemed, it was heroic! “They were inspired to dream of creating a high-minded ‘government of the proletariat’ that would distribute Sarawak’s wealth equally and without regard to race or class. Utopian? Yes indeed, but evil? No.”

For religious as well as racial reasons, the Malays while on the other hand, the Iban still saw the Chinese as not a threat to the community; they were just “itinerant merchants passing through, bartering goods, as they have done for centuries past”.

SCO’s dream was to establish a Communist State; to achieve self-government and independence. It had to firstly strive for the establishment of a new democratic society, followed by a socialist society, and finally a communist society.

The SCO considered British imperialism was “The common enemy of all races and classes”. An SCO booklet entitled Conclusive Report on the Political Party (movement), dated August 20, 1960 contained the following passage: “We must strengthen our forces in all fields including workers, farmers, merchants, etc., and develop our forces there into powerful and influential groups.

“After that, we should try our best to elevate the prestige of the left-wing forces in the eyes of the people. “At the same time, we should try our best to win over all the small cliques and factions. “Those that cannot be won over should be dealt with by a policy aimed at splitting them up and isolating them one by one. By such means we may attain our aim of unifying all power to lead under our control.”

The first issue of Masses’ News, an organ of the Third Divisional Committee of the SCO, of early August, 1961, summed up SCO policy. But a hand-written document addressed to “comrades” dated August 26, 1961 said: “Without shedding blood we cannot expect to gain real independence. Our struggle may assume the form of an armed struggle. We cannot fight them with aircraft and guns but we can fight them in the jungles as in Angola

With the impending formation of Malaysia, Hardy was tasked by the colonial government to prepare a paper on the SCO and in November 1962. The “Secret” document was sent to top officials in Kuching, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Jesselton, London, Canberra, Wellington, and Washington. Hardy said that in the early 60s an attempt to form the Borneo Communist Party (BCP) by proponents who were followers of Marxist-Leninist ideology. An underground communist movement, BCP distributed a treatise on the formation of an “Open Political Party” in their struggle for Independence.

But it never took off and the Utopian dream vanished into thin air!

Ends/jr 25.10.22 - End -7
posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 11:42 AM  
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