Myanmar
democracy leader's devotion to assassinated father links tragedy to
hope
By Grant Peck - Associated Press - August 12, 2002
When modern
Myanmar's founding father was cut down by assassins' bullets in 1947,
his daughter Aung San Suu Kyi was just 2 years old.
For decades
after Gen. Aung San's death, a succession of weak, incompetent or despotic
leaders ruled the country. His legacy seemed consigned to the history
books and his dusty home turned museum for schoolchildren to visit.
The date of his death, July 19, was observed each year as Martyrs' Day,
but the annual ritual seemed only a reminder of the doleful history
of the country, which also is known as Burma. No more, thanks to Suu
Kyi - the daughter who has become the undisputed leader of the country's
democracy movement, a woman who meets with Myanmar's military masters
on equal terms and stakes a claim to her father's heritage.
"I think
you see his presence in the thought and expressions of Aung San Suu
Kyi," says Josef Silverstein, a retired Myanmar specialist at Rutgers
University in New Jersey. "I think that the people still see her
as carrying out his ideas about a peaceful and united Burma. For this
year's commemoration, Suu Kyi's opposition party urged a dialogue with
the government to solve the nation's woes, saying the talks should be
in line with "policies laid down by the martyrs" - a reference
to Aung San and his fellow independence fighters who had visions of
creating a democracy.
Aung San,
one of Asia's great anti-colonial leaders, was a blunt man of action.
His Oxford-educated daughter is refined, worldly and patient. But they
share charisma, fierce nationalism and a stubborn streak. Rebellion
also runs in the family: Some 19th century ancestors actively resisted
British colonization. "Even at a young age, Aung San was very much
anti-British, in a xenophobic sort of way, because his maternal grandfather
had been beheaded by the British," says Sein Win, 80, who as a
young reporter covered Aung San's brief career.
Born in 1915,
Aung San became head of the country's largest nationalist association,
and enlisted Japan's aid to build up a "Burma Independence Army"
to kick out the British. When the Japanese took over the country in
World War II, they installed a puppet nationalist government that included
Aung San. But he led an
underground struggle against the Japanese, and his nationalist army
switched its allegiance in March 1945 to the Allied cause. Aung San
then negotiated an independence accord with Britain, and in April 1947
his party won 196 of 202 seats in an election for a constitutional assembly.
But six months
before independence, gunmen burst into a meeting of the interim government,
killing Aung San and six Cabinet ministers. A jealous political rival,
former Prime Minister U Saw, was tried and hanged for arranging the
assassination. His life cut short at age 32, "he died as a freedom
fighter, as a hero, but not as a real political leader," says Sein
Win.
In 1962,
one of Aung San's comrades in the independence struggle, Ne Win, staged
a coup d'etat, installing a socialist police state that led the nation
to economic ruin. His misrule sparked a popular uprising in 1988. By
chance, Suu Kyi had returned home that April to nurse her dying mother.
She had lived abroad since she was 15, earning a degree at Oxford University,
working at the United Nations and, in 1972, marrying an English academic,
Michael Aris.
Although
a political unknown, the Aung San component of her name was enough to
bring out a half million people for her speech at the foot of Yangon's
Shwedagon Pagoda on Aug. 26, 1988. "I could not, as my father's
daughter, remain indifferent to all that was going on," she declared.
Defying a brutal military crackdown, she helped found a party, the National
League for Democracy. The day after an abortive protest on Martyrs'
Day in 1989, Suu Kyi was placed under house arrest and spent the next
six years in isolation at her lakeside house in Yangon.
Her party
won the 1990 general election while she was under house arrest, taking
392 of 495 parliamentary seats, but the military wouldn't let it take
power. In 1991 she won the Nobel Peace Prize. She was released from
house arrest in 1995 but the military continued to harass her and restriuct
her movements. She spent another 19 months under house arrest until
her release May 6.
But the generals
haven't been able to stop her from pressing the democracy campaign.
On Aug. 7, a videotape was released in Thailand in which she calls on
the international community to pressure Myanmar's regime to free all
its political prisoners.