Former Prince of Hsipaw Honored in Colorado
Last Thursday
the Colorado School of Mines posthumously conferred on Sao Kya Seng, the last
Saophalong (ruling prince) of the Shan State of Hsipaw, the Distinguished
Achievement Medal in recognition of his outstanding professional achievements
as an alumnus of the institution.
The President of the university, Dr. Paul
Johnson, presented the award to Inge Sargent, Sao Kya Seng’s widow and the
former Mahadevi (Celestial Princess) of Hsipaw, accompanied by their two daughters,
Sao Mayari and Sao Kennari. The ceremony was held in Golden, Colorado and
attended by over 300 guests.
Sao
Mae, third from left, at the award ceremony in Colorado with her and Sao Kya
Seng’s two daughters, Sao Kennari, far left, and Sao Mayari, second from left
(Photo courtesy of Sai Awn Murng)
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Sao Kya Seng attended the university from
1949-1953, graduating with a degree in mining engineering. It was while
studying there that the prince met and fell in love with a fellow international
student, Inge Eberhard, from Austria, who had won a Fulbright Scholarship to
study in Colorado in 1951. The couple married in 1953 and soon thereafter,
moved back to Burma. She became Sao Thusandi, the Mahadevi of Hsipaw, and
quickly learned the Shan language and customs, earning the title Sao Mae or
royal mother, from her adopted family.
“The two of us were like a Little Peace
Corps,” recalled Sao Mae, whose
story is immortalized in her book Twilight Over Burma: My Life as a Shan
Princess, published in 1994. The book has also been adapted into a film,
which will premiere in German on October 26, 2015.
“[Sao Kya Seng] had planned to develop
[Hsipaw’s mineral wealth] in a responsible and safe way so that the Shan people
could reap the benefits of development,” she
said in her award acceptance speech.
However, what should have been a fairy tale
came to an abrupt halt with Ne Win’s coup in 1962, a political shift that would
usher in almost five decades of brutal military rule.
“Unfortunately, the military coup occurred as
some of the equipment arrived from overseas,” Sao Mae explained. “All Shan
people who believe in education will be proud of what the last Saopha of
Hsipaw, Sao Kya Seng, was able to achieve in spite of the Burmese military and
those Shans who conspired with them. He not only tried to reform the political
system but worked for the economic improvement of all people living in the Shan
States.”
Most of the Shan princes were arrested and
imprisoned. The ruling prince of the Shan State of Yawnghwe, Sao Shwe Thaike,
who was also the first President of Burma, died in prison under suspicious
circumstances.
“We were all staying at the house [Sao Kya
Zone’s residence in Taunggyi] and that morning [of the coup], army officers
showed up and called my father away for a ‘meeting’ with the local military
commander,” recalled Hkun Htun Oo, the leader of the Shan Nationalities League
for Democracy (SNLD) and himself also a former political prisoner. His adoptive
father was Sao Kya Zone, Sao Kya Seng’s older brother.
“They did not explain any further but told
him to bring his toothbrush, any regular medicines, and warm clothing, so it
was clear that he was going to be detained,” he said.
“That ‘meeting’ lasted five years in Insein
[Prison]. I was about to leave for school and warned my uncle [Sao Kya Seng] to
be careful, I suspected a coup. After the car dropped me off at school, he took
the same car to Heho. Along the way, he was detained and taken away to the
Eastern Command.”
Sao Kya Seng and Sao Thusandi, as
Saophalong and Mahadevi of Hsipaw
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Sao Kya Seng was last seen at the army
checkpoint near Taunggyi. He was never heard from again. Sao Mae was initially placed under
house arrest before fleeing to Austria in 1964 with their two daughters. She
would return to Colorado, remarry, and work as a high school teacher until her
retirement, when she and her husband, Howard Sargent, established the Burma
Lifeline charity to provide aid to the peoples of Burma, particularly ethnic populations
living along the country’s border areas.
Although over five decades have passed since
Ne Win’s military coup and Sao Kya Seng’s arrest, the former Mahadevi of Hsipaw
and her two daughters continue to write letters every year to the Burmese
government, including the current quasi-civilian Thein Sein administration, asking
about the fate of Sao Kya Seng. Their inquiries continue to be met with
silence.
By SAI AWN MURNG
/ Special Contributor to Shan Herald Agency for News (S.H.A.N.)
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