Ho Chi Minh: Father of Modern Vietnam
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Jawaharlal Nehru with Ho Chi Minh, Pic credit WikimediaNK SINGH |
There
are many others who have led their people to independence from colonial rule.
But no one has had to face the kind of desperate odds Ho had to in waging armed
struggle against a host of adversaries for so long a time.
Ho
Chi Minh belonged to the generation of Gandhi and Nehru, the Asian generation
that challenged the defeated the 200-year-old imperialism of Europe. He was to
Vietnamese what Gandhi was to Indians. Nehru said about him: “Judged by any
standard, he is most remarkable man of our time.”
Uncle
Ho’s life was a story of struggle. He was born on 19th May 1890. He
was originally named Nguyen That Thanh or Nguyen Van Thanh. His father Nguyen
Sinh Huy, a scholarly aristocrat in court, was dismissed by the French for supporting one of the earliest nationalist
movement.
The
youngest of three children, Ho had a sister and a brother. Both of them took
part in independence movement and died during the early 1950’s. Ho studied at
the Lycee Quoc Hoc at Hue, which was regarded as the best secondary school in
the country. Because of anti-imperialist
views he was forced to leave the school without graduating.
In
the summer of 1911, Ho Chi Minh joined a French merchant ship as a cabin
boy. Over the next few years, he
travelled throughout the world. By 1914 he was in London, working at a
restaurant as a cook, where he joined a Chinese-led anti colonial group. He
travelled quite a lot – United States, Africa, Portugal, and Germany.
Then
he settled in Paris, where he worked as a gardener, cook, laundryman and later
earned his livelihood retouching photographs. Actually, his revolutionary
career begins here. He attended university lectures and political discussions
and studied Marxism.
Founder
of French Communist Party
In
1919 he joined the French Socialist Party. In the following year, he joined
other members of the left wing in founding the Communist Party of France. As
the party’s expert of colonial affairs, he travelled throughout Europe,
speaking at party meetings and writing anti-colonial tracts.
Ho
remained in Soviet Russia from 1922 to 1925. During this period, he became
closely acquainted with top Soviet leadership, including Lenin, Stalin and
Trotsky.
In
1925 Ho went to China at the Soviet Consulate as a translator and aide to the
Soviet Advisor to Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang Government, which was at that
time allied with the Chinese communists.
In
China he helped to train communist cadres and recruited Vietnamese political
refugees for a guerrilla force that aimed at liberation of Vietnam from French
rule.
After
the Chiang Kai-shek broke with communists in 1927, driving them underground, he
fled to Moscow. By that time, he had become one of the key leaders in
international communist movement.
On
6th January 1930, Ho Chi Minh formed the Indo-Chinese communist
party. It was soon organising peasant revolts in Tonkin where famine and
poverty were widespread.
Many
rebels were arrested or executed by French police. Ho was arrested at their request
by the British authorities at Hongkong. After his release, Ho was banished from
Hongkong. He disappeared. The French put a price of 50,000 piastres on his
head.
During
most of the 1930s Dr Ho remained in the background. He helped organise communist
party in Singapore and moved clandestinely through south east Asia, in the
disguise of a Buddhist monk, a beggar or a business tycoon.
“He
Who Shines”
With
the outbreak of second world war he reappeared in south China under his adopted
name, Ho Chi Minh, which means “he who shines”. He remained in China a long
time and trained his forces.
In
December 1944, Ho returned to Vietnam after an absence of more than three
decades and organised guerrillas into formal military units, which worked
closely with US in returned for American supply.
On
19th August 1945, Ho Chi Minh’s Viet Minh forces marked victoriously
into Hanoi, driving out the Japanese. On 2nd September 1945, the
Democratic Republic of China was proclaimed. When nation-wide elections were
held, he was elected President. His Viet Minh won 230 out of 300 seats in the
new national assembly.
Meanwhile,
on 6th March 1946, France, unwilling to give up its former colony,
recognised it as a free State within French Union. Ho declared a “national war
of resistance.”
On
21st July 1954, following the defeat of the French in the seven-year
war of resistance, a cease fire agreement was signed at Geneva which divided
Vietnam into two parts, and provided for an election in two years to settled
the future of the country.
In
1959, there emerged in South Vietnam a Viet Cong guerrilla force. Ho justified
its existence on the ground that South Vietnamese Government had refused to
permit elections, as specified under the Geneva agreement.
Meanwhile,
the United States sent military aid to the Saigon Government to save it from
the communists. Ho demanded unification of Vietnam and withdrawal of American
intruders.
The
Viet Cong grew from strength to strength, setting up parallel governments in
large parts of the land despite the fact that USA threw half a million troops
into the frying pan. In fact, it was the war against the US interventionists
that the Vietnamese showed their true mettle.
Uncle
Ho did not live to see the day of final victory of Vietnamese people. He died on 2nd September 1969.
Excerpts
from Patriot, 14 September 1969
Post
Script: The final victory came on 30th April 1975, when the last of
US troops left Vietnam. The Vietnamese fought a 45-year-long war for to achieve
their Independence.
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Patriot 14 September 1969 P1 |
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Patriot 14 September 1969 P2 |
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