Skip to main content

WORTHY MEN

His Highness Field Marshall Kaiser Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana. The name and the title bespoke the subject well, despite his diminutive physique his stature was indeed colossal. His name was spelt in English like that of German royalty, he was the son of Maharaja Chandra Shumsher who ruled Nepal for 28 years, his first wife was a royal princess the eldest sister of King Tribhuvan, his second a renowned beauty, he was an immensely wealthy and erudite aristocrat, his private collection of books is a major library in Nepal today, in short Shakespeare might have written of such a person, “His life was gentle, and the elements so mix'd in him that nature might stand up and say to all the world, this was a man!”

What does such a man owe anyone else in life’s bounty? The story begins with the end of the Rana oligarchy. As the second man in the regime after the last Rana prime minister Maharajah Mohan Shumsher, Field Marshall Kaiser was the Commander-in-Chief of the Nepalese army when power was handed over to King Tribhuvan and the Nepali Congress Party at the New Delhi conference. India did not want a bloody revolution in Nepal and the compromise reached promised a peaceful transition to democracy within a time frame of six months. King Tribhuvan made a triumphal entry into Nepal as the sovereign, Congress Party was rewarded with all the plum portfolios in the cabinet, Mohan Shumsher was the transitional prime minister and Field Marshall Kaiser, the transitional commander of the army.

The new army was formed by the king with a junior Rana general at the time elevated to the post of deputy commander-in-chief of the army. In fact the story goes he was ranked 34th in the Rana hierarchy as a C Rana and the king retired all his seniors to make him ready for the ultimate post. General Kiran Shumsher Rana was the deputy to Field Marshall Kaiser during the transition period. It was this bond between the older man and the youth that time tested.

After the transition period Rana oligarchy that lasted a total of 104 years became history. King Tribhuvan and the political parties ruled Nepal for some period until the death of the king. His oldest son became the new king of Nepal in 1955. King Mahendra’s ascension to the throne made world headlines as insular Nepal opened itself to the outside. The Royal Coronation was celebrated in a befitting manner in 1956. Commander-in-Chief General Kiran was the vice president of the Coronation Committee and he was in charge of the minutiae of the ceremonies. It was also the year he would retire.

After the successful completion of the coronation the cabinet of Prime Minister Tanka Prashad Acharya recommended to the king that General Kiran be made Field Marshall of the Nepalese Army, a life-long honorarium for the retiring army chief. King Mahendra was grateful to the general for giving continuity to the important institution at a crucial phase in history. “Kiran, I am happy that the cabinet has recommended your name for the honour of Field Marshall”, the king privately told the retiring chief." A happy retiree will always ensure a smooth transition. Having been made the Commander-in-Chief at the age of 35, General Kiran was only 40 years of age now, in his own mind it was certainly not the time to retire. And also there was the question of his elder cousin General Kaiser under whom he had served as a deputy during the six months transition period. “Your Majesty”, replied General Kiran, “among the old Ranas it is only General Kaiser who has remained in Nepal to serve Your Majesty and it is under him that I served as the deputy army chief, it is but right that he should be rewarded with the honor of Field Marshall on the occasion of the coronation. I am still young and will serve the nation in other fields.” The king was happy to hear this as indeed General Kiran would serve the nation in many areas given his qualities. But it was also a sacrifice on the part of the general due to an unspoken bond in the noble tradition of the military. Did Field Marshall Kaiser ever know that he owed this high honor to the loyalty and sacrifice of his one-time deputy?


Comments

  1. Greetings Dear Ranaji,
    This article is truly amazing, because it says something about Kaiser Shumsher, a Rana whom I admire the most, but reading your blogs made another lesser known Ranaji, Kiran Shumsher among my favourite. If I were given a chance to meet a dead Ranaji, I would meet Kaiser Shumsher, even though I know a very little of him. Whenever I have some free time, I rush to Kaiser Library, but it's sad that the earthquake has devastated the library and even sadder to see it's collection of books dwindle.

    I would be extremely delighted if you write something about Kaiser Shumsher.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Is it true that Kaiser Shumsher used to torture his first wife, mentally and physically. I heard that he used to beat his first wife so hard that she would often go to Narayanhiti durbar to complain to his brother, king Tribhuwan. Can you please tell of this is true or not?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

THE A, B, C CONUNDRUM

Balkrishna Sama's portrait of the nine Rana prime ministers, 1846 - 1951 A.D. Nepalese history books tell stories of the nine Rana prime ministers ruling Nepal in unison for 104 years and the family is often depicted and reviled as one monolithic juggernaut that assaulted and consumed the sovereignty of benign kings and their happy, loyal subjects. Nothing could be further from the truth on both counts. Out of the nine one was assassinated, two were unceremoniously removed from the post by their own siblings, one resigned due to internal and external exigencies and the last one was forced to give it all up. But who were those that did not get to wear the "Teen Chand" prime ministerial crown? I often look at the fading pictures of the family to trace the hierarchy at the times they were taken. The Soviets were famous for cleverly air-brushing out the disgraced party members from chesty pictures of proletarian solidarity. The Ranas just removed them from the frames...

THE BIOGRAPHER: LIFE OF GENERAL PADMA JUNG RANA

An important biography  of Maharajah Jung Bahadur Rana was written by his son General Padma Jung Rana during his exile in India and it was published after his death in Allahabad in 1909 A.D. by Pioneer Press titled "Life of Sir Jung Bahadur of Nepal". It is the only book to my knowledge that is written by an "insider" eye witness, a member of the family of Jung Bahadur, and is full of interesting accounts and anecdotes that would not have come to light had it not been for this book. I have always wanted to learn more about the Rana family members who fled Nepal after the coup d'etat of 1885 A.D. and their life in India. Here is the first in the series: my findings on General Padma Jung Rana.  A tragedy in life came early, at the very instance of birth in fact. Writes General Padma Jung Rana in his biography of his famous father, he was born on the very day Maharajah Jung Bahadur Rana left Kathmandu for the war effort to relieve the hard-pressed British forces i...

THE RANI FROM RUKUM

Rani Karma Kumari R ukum is a scenic hill district of western Nepal where one of the Chaubisi Rajyas or 24 small fiefdoms held sway before unification. Ruled by the Thakuris or the heads of the local clans it was finally absorbed into unified Nepal sometime during the rule of Regent Bahadur Shah. Since then it has been a common practice in the Shah and Rana courts bringing the Thakuri girls from faraway places such as Rukum for an upbringing in the royal households, educating them in palace etiquette, teaching them the culinary arts and instilling in them the love of music and poetry for the purpose of eventually marrying them to the young princes of the house. The girls left their homes and their parents early and made a new life among their peers and minders in the Durbars of Kathmandu. This was the tradition of Dola Palne. Thapathai Durbar of Maharajah Jung Bahadur Rana circa 1852 A.D. This young girl of six or seven from Rukum who was brought to Kathmandu was taken to the Tha...