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Smash and Grab (Annexation of Sikkim)

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This riveting blend of chronology and personal observation brought alive the miserable story of a ling doomed by treachery and finally cancer, yet trailed to the end of his days by graceless Indian intelligence agents. BARBARA

CROSSETTE IN SO CLOSE TO HEAVER:

THE VANISHING BUDDHIST KINGDOMS

OF THE HIMALAYAS

Specifications
Publisher: Westland Books
Author Sunanda K. Datta Ray
Language: English
Pages: 433 (Color and B/W Illustrations)
Cover: PAPERBACK
8x5 inch
Weight 380 gm
Edition: 2025
ISBN: 9789360455883
HBM223
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Book Description
About the Book
This book made history. It wasn't banned, not quite, when it first appeared in 1984, but its disappearance was cleverly managed so that few got to read the only authentic account of how a protected kingdom became India's twenty-second state. As the Hon. David Astor, editor of The Observer in London, wrote, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray was 'alone in witnessing and communicating the essential story'. He had to surmount many obstacles and incur severe disapproval to do so. Nearly thirty years later, in 2013, a revised edition was published with a long introduction by the author, and now all these years later, the book still reads like an exciting thriller. Rich with dances and durbars, lamaist rituals, intrigue and espionage, it brings vividly to life the dramatis personae of this Himalayan drama-Sikkim's sad last king, Chogyal Palden Thondup Namgyal, and his vivacious American queen, Hope Cooke; bumbling Kazi Lendhup Dorji and his scheming Kazini, whose nationality and even name were shrouded in mystery, and who played into the hands of more powerful strategists.

Citing documents that have not been seen by any other writer, the book analyses law and politics with masterly skill to recreate the Sikkim saga against the backdrop of a twentieth-century Great Game involving India and China.

Smash and Grab: Annexation of Sikkim didn't just make history. It is history.

About the Author
SUNANDA K. DATTA-RAY is one of India's foremost experts on the Himalayan states. A chance visit to Gangtok in 1960 first sparked a lifelong interest that has allowed him to cultivate a deep knowledge of the history, customs and politics of Himalayan societies.

Datta-Ray's fifty-five years in journalism spanned England, India, the US and Singapore. Educated in Calcutta and at the Victoria University of Manchester, where he read Economics, he abandoned Chartered Accountancy to start his career as a reporter with a small-town weekly in the north of England when he was twenty. He was elected Visiting Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 2001-02, and appointed Senior Research Fellow at Singapore's Institute of South-East Asian Studies.

Before taking up a teaching assignment at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University, he was Editorial Consultant to the Straits Times group of publications in Singapore, Editor-in-Residence at the East-West Center, Honolulu, Editor of The Statesman (Kolkata and Delhi) and on the Board of Directors of United News of India. For many years, he was the South Asia correspondent of The Observer, London, a regular columnist in the International Herald Tribune and an essayist in Time magazine. He also wrote for Le Monde Diplomatique and The Canberra Times.

His columns now appear in the Telegraph, Business Standard, Asian Age, Deccan Chronicle and Free Press Journal. In 1990, he was awarded the Freedom of Information Award in New Delhi. His other books include Looking East to Look West: Lee Kuan Yew's Mission India, which won the Vodafone Crossword Award for non-fiction in 2009, Bihar Shows the Way and Waiting for America: India and the US in the New Millennium.

Introduction
Many readers assumed this book was banned as soon as it appeared in 1984. Even NDTV's anchor said so when introducing me in The Big Fight programme. Given the title, which quotes the twelfth Chogyal of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal, the conclusion was not unexpected. It was strengthened when Smash and Grab: Annexation of Sikkim disappeared from view just as its revelations were beginning to attract attention.

A ban would have been clumsy. As it happened, Gurbachan Singh, the last political officer in Gangtok and Sikkim's de facto overlord, filed a defamation suit against me demanding enormous damages. Normally, defamation has to be proved before the courts take any action. Proving can take months, even years. In my case, the Delhi High Court issued an order at the first hearing, forbidding sale of the book until the case had been settled. A contempt charge was piled on that when Gurbachan Singh produced a cash memo from a shop in some small town which had sold a copy. The matter was resolved only when the eminent jurist, Soli Sorabjee, representing me in a generous act of friendship, persuaded the prosecuting lawyers to accept an out-of-court settlement entailing an apology (Appendix A) but no money. The sales ban was lifted but the publisher claimed he had no copies left to sell. He wasn't interested in reprinting either.

Preface
This is not the story of the Chogyal's life. Only he could have written that. Nor does it pretend to be a comprehensive account of Sikkim's Buddhist polity. It is an observer's chronicle of a recent passage in the subcontinent's history. Describing what happened, and how, will not change the present or future. But it may serve some purpose if, in truly recounting how law, usage and promises were ruthlessly set aside to destroy one of the last surviving fragments of a cultural empire that once straddled the heart of Central Asia, it also reveals the dangerous ease with which public opinion can be whipped up into chauvinistic acquisitiveness.

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