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Ba Maw

Burmese politician and former head of the now-defunct State of BurmaFor the Burmese village, see List of villages in Myaungmya Township.

Ba Maw (Burmese: ဘမော်, pronounced:; 8 February 1893 – 29 May 1977) was a Burmese lawyer and political leader, active during the interwar and World War II periods. Dr. Ba Maw is a descendant of the Mon Dynasty. He was the first Burma Premier (1937–1939) and head of State of Burma (Myanmar) from 1942 to 1945.

Contents

  • 1 Early life and education
  • 2 Academic career
  • 3 Law career
  • 4 Politics
  • 5 Family
  • 6 References
  • 7 Bibliography
  • 8 External links

Early life and education

Ba Maw was born in Maubin. He came from a distinguished family of mixed Mon-Burman parentage. His father, Shwe Kye was an ethnic Mon from Amherst (now Kyaikkhami) and well-versed in French and English languages. Thus Shwe Kye served as a royal diplomat who accompanied Kinwun Mingyi U Kaung in the Burmese diplomatic missions to Europe in the 1870s, and worked as an *istant tutor to Royal tutor Dr. Mark at the last royal palace of the last Burmese monarchy. Ba Maw's elder brother, Professor Dr Ba Han (1890–1969), was a lawyer as well as a lexicographer and legal scholar, and served as Attorney General of Burma from 1957– 1958.

After an education at Rangoon College, Ba Maw obtained MA degree from the University of Calcutta in 1917. Then he was educated at Cambridge University in England and received a law degree from Gray's Inn where he was called to the bar in 1923. He went on to obtain a doctoral degree from the University of Bordeaux, France. Ba Maw wrote his doctoral thesis in the French language on aspects of Buddhism in Burma.

Academic career

After graduating from Rangoon College in 1913, Ba Maw began working as a teacher at Rangoon Government High School and later at ABM school. In 1917, he got an MA from the University of Calcutta, and became the first English lecturer at Rangoon University where he worked for the next four years.

Law career

From the 1920s onwards, Ba Maw practiced law and dabbled in colonial-era Burmese politics. He achieved prominence in 1931 when he defended the rebel leader, Saya San. San had started a tax revolt in Burma in December 1930 which quickly grew into a more widespread rebellion against British rule. San was captured, tried, convicted and hanged. One of the presiding judges that tried San was another Burmese lawyer Ba U.

Ba Maw acted as the lead counsel for Saya San, and other rebel leaders. According to Ba Maw, the government "...under the cloak of judicial trail, went on enforcing the law against thousands of villagers who knew nothing of that law, but only how they were unable to pay their taxes in time, and their homes and villages were wrecked...": 12–13 

Politics

In 1934, Ba Maw served as education minister, and then in 1937, he became premier under the new Burmese cons*ution. However, in July 1940, Ba Maw resigned from the Legislature of Burma. During a conference of the Sinyetha, he issued seven orders, one of which was, "to refuse to participate in the war in any way as long as freedom was refused to the Burmese." On 6 August 1940, he was arrested for violating the Defence of Burma Rules, and taken to Mandalay for trial. According to Ba Maw, "My trial in itself was a ritual sort of affair, brief and formal and without any touch of drama in it. all the drama was taking place outside...where people everywhere had begun to speak with greater racial feling and defiance." On 28 August, Ba Maw was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment for a year. Originally jailed in Mandalay, he was later relocated to Mogok, in northern Burma.

Greater East Asia Conference in November 1943, the participants were (L–R): Ba Maw, Zhang Jinghui, Wang Jingwei, Hideki Tojo, Wan Waithayakon, José P. Laurel, Subhas Chandra Bose

On 13 April 1942, Ba Maw escaped from Mogok during the Thingyan festival. He and his wife Kinmama hid out in the hills of Mang Lon until the third week in May, when they established contact with the *anese. On 4 June, during the *anese occupation of Burma, Ba Maw was made Chief Civilian Administrator, while Aung San agreed to reform the Burmese Independence Army as the Burma Defense Army. On 1 August 1942, Ba Maw was inaugurated as the head of the Burmese government.: 192, 235–261 

As the war situation gradually turned against the *anese, the *anese government advanced its previously vague promise to grant Burma independence after the end of the war. The *anese felt that this would give the Burmese a real stake in an Axis victory in the Second World War, creating resistance against possible re-colonization by the western powers, and increased military and economic support from Burma for the *anese war effort. A Burma Independence Preparatory Committee chaired by Ba Maw was formed 8 May 1943 and the nominally independent State of Burma was proclaimed on 1 August 1943 with Ba Maw as "Naingandaw Adipadi" (head of state) as well as prime minister. The new state quickly declared war on the United Kingdom and the United States, and concluded a Treaty of Alliance with the Empire of *an. Ba Maw attended the Greater East Asia Conference in Tokyo in November 1943, where he made a speech speaking of how it was the call of Asiatic blood that drew them together into a new era of unity and peace.

However, the new state failed to secure popular support or diplomatic recognition due to the continued presence and activities of the Imperial *anese Army, and after their collaborationist allies, the Burma National Army defected to the Allies side, the government collapsed.

Ba Maw fled just ahead of advancing British forces via Thailand to *an, where he was captured later that year by the American occupational authorities and was held in Sugamo Prison until 1946. He then was allowed to return to Burma, after Burma became independent of Great Britain. He remained active in politics. He was jailed briefly during 1947, on suspicion of involvement in the **ination of Aung San, but was soon released.

After General Ne Win (1910–2002) took over power in 1963, Ba Maw was again imprisoned (like many prominent Burmese of the period who were detained during the time of Ne Win regime, from the 1960s to the 1980s, his imprisonment was without charge or trial) from about 1965 or 1966 to February 1968. During the period of his imprisonment Ba Maw managed to smuggle out a m*cript of his memoirs of the war years, during less than two of which (from 1 August 1943 to March 1945) he was Head of State (in Burmese naing-ngan-daw-adipadi, lit. 'paramount ruler of the State').

He never again held political office. His book Breakthrough in Burma: Memoirs of a Revolution, 1939–1946, an account of his role during the war years, was published by Yale University Press (New Haven) in 1968. In the post-war period he founded the Mahabama (Greater Burma) Party. He died in Rangoon on 28 May 1977.

Family

Ba Maw married Khin Ma Ma Maw (13 December 1905 – 1967) on 5 April 1926. The couple went on to have 7 children including Binnya Maw and Tinsa Maw. His daughter Tinsa Maw married Bo Yan Naing of the Thirty Comrades in June 1944.

References

    Bibliography

    • A History of Modern Burma, by John Frank Cady, Cornell University Press, 1958
    • The Burma we love, by Kyaw Min, India Book House, 1945
    • Allen, Louis (1986). Burma: the Longest War 1941-45. J.M. Dent and Sons. ISBN:0-460-02474-4.
    • A Burmese heart, by Tinsa Maw-Naing, Y.M.V. Han, 2015. ,315 pages, with black and white illustrations. ISBN:9780996225403.

    External links

    • Speech of Ba Mow, Nippon News, No. 113. in the official website of NHK.
    • Dr. Ba Maw Library, contains various pieces of do*entary by and about Dr. Ba Maw. Run by the Dr. Ba Maw Foundation
    • Breakthrough in Burma: Memoirs of a Revolution, 1939-1946, Dr. Ba Maw's 499-page book in pdf format, at Burma Library

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