Mizos In Bid To Save Ancient Heritage Tree In Myanmar

Thursday 05th of July 2007
Historians and scholars in Mizoram are campaigning to save a dying banyan tree planted by Mizos between 750 A.D and 1150 A.D in neighbouring Myanmar. Campaigners say the tree, threatened by river waters, is an outstanding symbol of ancient Mizo history and migration.

It is a cause that has captured the imagination of Mizos, who have been discussing the fate of the tree on the internet and other forums, and has even brought together musicians and artistes to give a concert.

The tree, known as 'Khampat Bungpui' - or the Khampat Big Banyan - stands on the banks of the river Khampat and is believed to have been planted there by early Mizos as they were settling in the Kabo valley in Myanmar. Khampat is also the name of the town the river runs through.

'There is no historical proof as such but according to known records the tree was planted by our forefathers during 750-1150 A.D,' Mizo historian B. Lalthangliana said.

As with many other societies around the world, there is very little written historical record in Mizoram. Instead, historians draw upon an abundant and rich tradition of oral history that is passed down generations by word of mouth.

P.C. Biaksiama, a Mizo scholar who has visited the Khampat Bungpui, said the survival of the tree was at stake. 'During the monsoon now, the Khampat river is flowing quite close to the tree. Another monsoon will wreak havoc on our heritage tree,' he said.

Now concerned citizens in the Mizo capital of Aizawl and Khampat village have formed a body called the 'Khampat Bungpui Humhalhtu Committee' (Khampat Bungpui Preservation Committee).

A number of other Mizo associations have also stepped up to help the cause. The Mizo Zaimi Inzawmkhawm, an association of Mizoram singers, organised a concert in June in the cause of preserving the tree.

Campaigners are also gearing up to negotiate with the Myanmar government, with the help of the Mizoram government.

'Since the tree is not on our territory we will find a way to negotiate with the Myanmarese government through the state government,' Biaksiama said.

'It is by using this tree that we are able to trace our history - it is a heritage for us, and no boundaries should prevent us from preserving it,' he added.

Botanists in Mizoram say the Khampat banyan is an offshoot of the original one that has now developed into a fully-grown tree. A banyan tree has prop roots, which usually develop into trees that continue to grow even after the mother tree has died.

'There's a high chance that Khampat Bungpui still lives on. The parent tree might have died long back but sure enough the aerial roots will still be there,' said Laltlanhlua, a Mizoram forest department official.

The preservation committee takes its inspiration from previous successes with the Rih Dil, a lake of equal importance to the Mizos that is also situated in Myanmar. A link road for Mizo tourists is now in place and a special permit to visit the lake is recognised by the Myanmar authorities.

As with the tree, the Rih Dil too occupies a special place in Mizo mythology - ancient Mizos believed there is a paradise under the lake's bed. And many Mizos still believe that departed souls go the Rih Dil, their eternal resting place.

'The Rih Lake is also preserved by the people of Mizoram. In the same way, we can preserve the tree. It will be much easier since Khampat village has a majority Mizo population,' Biaksiama said.

But Mizos living in Khampat are mostly poor farmers who can do little to help save the tree. There are also reports that the military government in Myanmar discriminates against the Khampat Mizos.

Mizos are believed to have originally come from China in around 700 A.D. They reached Myanmar's Hu Kaung valley and eventually the Kabo valley around 750 A.D. The valley is a strip of land extending from the present eastern border of Manipur to the river Irawadi in Myanmar.

When they first reached Khampat village, the more dominant Shan tribe drove them out, forcing the Mizos to move further west and settle down in what is now Mizoram. But a significant population returned to Khampat in 1914 and settled there.

Equally, many descendants of the original Khampat Mizos have chosen to settle down in Aizawl - a symbol of cultural continuity where international borders count for little.



CricketCurry.com
CricketCurry.com - Cricket Discussion Forum

Roger Federer Drops Set On Way to Victory Over Kohlschreiber

Opting to disregard one of the golden rules of sport kept Roger Federer on Centre Court for rather longer than he would have liked today. At two sets and a break up on Philipp Kohlschreiber, the Swiss slipped into experimental mood rather than applying the killer touch and paid for it when he dropped his first set of the tournament before bouncing back to win 6-3, 6-2, 6-7 (5-7), 6-1. The fact ..

Andy Murray Main Attraction on Wimbledon Day 2

Although we dare not offer the Nelsonian exhortation "England expects" to Andy Murray because he is a Scot, it is fair enough to remind him that Britain expects much of him today - and, fingers crossed, over the next two weeks. Resolutely sidestepping the hype, Murray is focused on the job in hand, though the fact that he will be playing the 2009 Championships in Fred Perry clothing i..

Wimbledon 2009: Federer finery finds favour

Roger Federer talks a good game – which is only to be expected. After over half a decade at the very summit of the sport, he has been able to hone his interview technique to perfection – even if his latest tennis outfit becomes the main talking point. His interview style has become a self-referential topic of conversation in press conferences. “I guess it already starts that I speak a few diffe..

Wimbledon 2009: Stylish Federer off to impressive start

Roger Federer justified his role as favourite to win the 2009 men's title by swatting aside the challenge of Yen-Hsun Lu from Taipei 7-5, 6-3, 6-2 on a Centre Court where, despite overcast conditions, the new roof remained open throughout. It was a highly impressive performance, since Lu did his nation proud with a battling show, especially in a tightly-contested first set. Federer's ..

Wimbledon 2009: Tsonga stretched to the limit

The new No. 2 Court witnessed a thriller as ninth seeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga battled through his first round match against Kazakhstan’s Andrey Golubev, a man ranked 62 places below him, in four sets, 6-3, 5-7, 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-5). The tie-break in the third set saw some Tsonga magic as he raced around the ball to drive a winning forehand across the court. This was followed by another ra..

Wimbledon 2009: Djokovic slips past battling Benetteau

Fourth seed Novak Djokovic survived an endurance test against Frenchman Julien Benetteau to win through to the second round but he needed three hours and 28 minutes of concerted effort to complete the job. Benettau, in his sixth Wimbledon, shocked Djokovic by winning a 61-minute first set but was hit by falls in the third game of the third set and the last game of the match, which did not help ..

Wimbledon 2009: Verdasco vanquishes Briton's challenge

Sometimes it can seem that there is a gulf a mile wide between two players facing each other across the net. That was the case today when the number seven seed Fernando Verdasco saw off James Ward 6-1, 6-3, 6-4. No doubt the mere experience of playing on No.1 Court will stand Ward in good stead, but Verdasco’s superior skill in every department left the British wild card brutally exposed. Verd..

Wimbledon 2009: Soderling's star still shining

It was Andy Warhol who predicted, back in 1968, that: "In the future, everybody will be world famous for 15 minutes." He did not have tennis in mind, but the old boy was right. For a few brief moments this month – admittedly a little long than quarter of an hour – Robin Soderling was a star. The Swede was the first man to beat Rafael Nadal at Roland Garros and, from that fourth-round ..

Wimbledon 2009: Blake attacks Tour after crashing out

James Blake criticised the ATP Tour schedule after becoming the first big casualty of Wimbledon 2009. The 17th seed was upset in straight sets 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (7-5) by the on-song Italian Andreas Seppi on Court 3, the old No.2 Court, known as the “Graveyard of Champions”. A fatigued Blake admitted afterwards that it was difficult to stay focused while playing so much tennis and believed the tour ca..

Dry day means roof has no chance to shine

Day One of the 123rd Wimbledon Championships – and it was a disaster. Well, it was if you had just spent a fortune on a new roof for the Centre Court. So, what sort of weather did we have on the dawn of the brave new age of life with a roof? Sunshine, a few clouds and hours and hours of uninterrupted play. Not a drop of rain to be seen. Rats! The roof will have to wait for another day. Other th..

Wimbledon 2009: Roger Federer Wins First Round Encounter; Beats Lu 7-5, 6-3, 6-2

Roger Federer won his first round encounter at Centre Court today defeating Lu of Chinese Taipei in straight sets. Roger needed less than 80 minutes to proceed to the second round at Wimbledon 2009. Roger Federer who is considered by most as the Greatest Player of All Time is looking to beat Pete Sampras' record by winning his 15th Grand Slam title here. Roger looked comfortable during the..

Vettel untouchable as Red Bull dominate British Grand Prix

What seemed to be a foregone conclusion after qualifying became one almost the moment Sebastian Vettel launched his Red Bull RB5 into the lead of the British Grand Prix. In a crushingly dominant drive, which underlined the major step forward that the Milton Keynes team have made on high-speed circuits, Vettel pulled away from Rubens Barrichello's Brawn by as much as a second a lap in a series..

FIA post-race press conference - Great Britain

1st Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull), 1h22m49.328s; 2nd Mark Webber (Red Bull), 1h23m04.516s; 3rd Rubens Barrichello (Brawn GP), 1h23m30.503s. Q: Sebastian, your first dry grand prix victory. Fantastic start. In the first stint you are pulling away at a second a lap from everyone else. You were told to calm down by your team in the middle stint but was it really as easy as it looked today? Sebastia..

Roger Federer to Begin Proceedings at Centre Court: Wimbledon 2009

Welcome to the 123rd Championships, staged for the first time this year beneath a breathtaking canopy which bids fair to enable Wimbledon to match the Theatre of Dreams title so proudly held by Manchester United and their Old Trafford stadium. Except that, in the case of Centre Court, it might be more appropriately called the Cathedral of Dreams. For one man, however, dream has transformed into ni..

Wimbledon 2009: Roger Federer Focuses on Title, Not Records

Five-time champion Roger Federer was relaxed and confident ahead of what could be an historic tournament for him, although any talk of taking Pete Sampras' Grand Slam record was relegated to a mere afterthought – the Swiss 2nd seed wants his Wimbledon title back, with any records that come with it mere icing on the cake. "The focus is on the first round and the first point," said..

Andy Murray Ready for Title Push at Wimbledon 2009

Andy Murray has given his fans the news they wanted to hear, declaring: “I’m ready to win a Grand Slam.” The world No.3 believes that the time has come to break his duck in the four majors, and is ready for a fortnight of Murray-mania at SW19. “I'd obviously love to win here,” said the Scot. “ I enjoy playing on grass and I love playing at Wimbledon.“ Murray reached the final of the US Ope..

Mentally, Physically Unfit Rafael Nadal Withdraws from Wimbledon 2009

Rafael Nadal has announced he will not defend his Wimbledon title. The world number one and top seed had said after the French Open that he would not play Wimbledon if he was not 100% and so it has come to pass. "I’m here and I'm just not 100%. I'm better than what I was a couple of weeks ago but I don’t feel right," Nadal told a packed press conference on Friday evening at the..

Australian Open 2009: Federer's Velvet Sledgehammer Crushes Young Del Potro

Roger Federer reminded everyone of his world-class ability as he disposed of Juan Martin Del Potro with the loss of only three games in their men’s quarterfinal at Rod Laver Arena on Tuesday. The No.2 seed, who two days ago was tested in a five-set thriller with Tomas Berdych, was in sparkling form as he demolished the Argentine 6-3 6-0 6-0 in 80 minutes. Critics of the three-time Australian..

Australian Open 2009: Tsonga Beats James Blake in Three Sets

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga displayed the va-va-voom that took him to the Australian Open final last year as he ousted American James Blake 6-4 6-4 7-6(3) in a magical encounter on Rod Laver on Monday night. Similar in size, strength and sheer talent, the match up between the fifth and ninth seeds always promised to explosive, and the combatants did not disappoint in a match that produced spectacular te..

Australian Open 2009 - Fernando Gonzales No Trouble for Rafael Nadal

Top seed Rafael Nadal has eased into the quarterfinals of Australian Open 2009, brushing aside a flat Fernando Gonzalez 6-3 6-2 6-4 late on Monday afternoon. While Nadal did not look as sharp as he did when eliminating Tommy Haas in the third round – in that match he hit 53 winners and recorded just eight errors – he did enough to ease past the Chilean in straight sets. Gonzalez was undoubte..

Australian Open 2009: Roger Federer outlasts dogged Berdych

World No.2 Roger Federer has survived an almighty scare in the fourth round of Australian Open 2009, downing a brave Tomas Berdych 4-6 6-7(4) 6-4 6-4 6-2. The Swiss maestro found himself in big trouble early on when his groundstrokes were returned with interest by the No.20 seed, who beat Federer in the opening round of the 2004 Athens Olympics but never since then in seven subsequent meetings. ..

Australian Open 2009: Roddick gallops past Robredo

In-form American Andy Roddick has blitzed his way past Tommy Robredo 7-5 6-3 6-3 to comfortably reach the quarterfinals of Australian Open 2009. Roddick’s victory would be a bitter pill to swallow for the Spaniard. Not only had he cruised to this stage of the draw by dropping only 18 games, but he has now lost to Roddick a staggering 10 consecutive times. Even so, the No.21 seed looked like ..

Australian Open 2009: Bartoli bounces Jankovic out of Open

Frenchwoman Marion Bartoli has caused a major upset on day seven of Australian Open 2009, defeating women’s world No.1 Jelena Jankovic 6-1 6-4 in the fourth round. Bartoli, the 2007 Wimbledon finalist, came out with all guns blazing, clubbing seven winners to Jankovic’s none in the first three games in the opening set. In her post-match press conference, Bartoli said she was hopeful coming i..

Australian Open 2009: Del Potro first man into quarters

Juan Martin Del Potro of Argentina is the first man through to the quarterfinals of Australian Open 2009 following a convincing 5-7 6-4 6-3 6-2 win over Marin Cilic of Croatia. In a match dominated by big hits and serves, it was a low unforced error count that helped the No.8 seed on the way to his first Melbourne Park quarterfinal appearance, and only his second in any Grand Slam event. The..

Australian Open 2009: No sweat for Brilliant Serena

World No.2 Serena Williams has progressed to the final 16 of Australian Open 2009 with a 6-1 6-4 victory over China’s Shuai Peng on Saturday. Although finishing with a routine scoreline, it was a match of two halves that Williams played against the world No.41. In the opening set, the American was all business, dishing out 16 winners and winning the point when landing her first serve on 92 p..

Australian Open 2009: Adorable Ana Ivanovic Goes Down to Alisa Kleybanova

Ana Ivanovic has been bundled out of Australian Open 2009, going down in one of the matches of the tournament to Russian No. 29 seed Alisa Kleybanova, who won 7-5 6-7(5) 6-2. Ivanovic, the 2008 women’s singles finalist, drew upon all her fighting qualities over nearly three hours at Hisense Arena, but was ultimately powerless against the sheer force of Kleybanova’s game. The pair exchanged a..

Australian Open 2009: Roger Federer irresistible as Marat Safin falls

Roger Federer has put on another masterful display on a court he has come to dominate in recent years, knocking out the ever-dangerous Marat Safin in straight sets to move through to the fourth round of Australian Open 2009. Billed as the match of the tournament so far – and a rematch of their famous semifinal at Australian Open 2005 which Safin clinched 9-7 in the fifth set – the encounter did..

Australian Open 2009: Roger Federer fires; now for Safin

Roger Federer has breezed through his second round Australian Open 2009 match against Russian Evgeny Korolev 6-2 6-3 6-1, setting up a tantalising third-round clash with Marat Safin. Three-time champion Federer was at his imperious best against the rising Korolev, controlling play from the back of the court as the errors mounted for his opponent. Federer’s first break came in the fourth game..

Australian Open 2009: Safin sets up mouth-watering clash with Roger Federer

Australian Open 2005 champion Marat Safin has breezed through to the third round of the tournament after downing Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez in straight sets, 7-5 6-2 6-2. The Russian looked in brilliant form on Margaret Court Arena, setting up a mouth-watering match-up against Roger Federer in the next round. Federer defeated Russian Evgeny Korolev 6-2 6-3 6-1 on Wednesday afternoon. Saf..

Australian Open 2009: Cilic chips his way into third round

Croatian young gun Marin Cilic has moved through to the third round of Australian Open 2009 following a hard-fought 6-2 6-3 4-6 6-3 victory over Serbian Janko Tipsarevic. Both men came into the match with points to defend from last year’s performance at the Open. Cilic made the fourth round in 2008, while Tipsarevic extended Roger Federer to 10-8 in the fifth set of an epic third round match 12..