History is a many angled mirror in which
nations easily see themselves as they wish they were. Especially are
political histories prone to convey a grand panorama of wars, rulers and a
panoply of other prominent personages, while scant attention if any, is
given to the peasant who first fashioned a better hoe or selected a superior
fruit or grain variety.
Identifying a broader history is particularly critical in countries like
Nepal, which is only recently emerging from feudalism and legally abolished
slavery in 1925. Where other nations have had centuries to sift and sort
fragments of their past and settle upon an agreed interpretation, modern
communications and development demands force a telescoping of decisions.
Choices of what is unique, valuable and viable must be made rapidly and will
become binding upon the future.
Less than two centuries ago the numerous fiefs of hill rajas along the
southern escarpment of the Himalayas were unified by the military mastery of
the house of Gurkha. In the 19th century these people, tracing their ethnic
origins to Mongols and Tibetans, and to Rajputs and Brahmans from the Indian
plains, speaking numerous dialects and holding diverse faiths, were welded
into a kingdom. National isolation was sought in order to shield themselves
from British-Indian domination from the south and Tibetan-Chinese from the
north. Consequently Nepal today, with a population nearing 13 million, ranks
among the least modernized nations, with a literacy rate of less than 20
percent.
MAHESH REGMI'S research and translation service, started in 1957, was a new
kind of enterprise for Nepal. His weekly Nepal Press Digest has become an
effective journal of contemporary reporting within the kingdom. It is a
valued source for diplomats in Kathmandu and vital for the United Nations
and other organizations seeking to assist in Nepal's progress. The Regmi
Research Series, printed for "private study and research" on a subscription
basis, is opening chapters of Nepal's past to her own and international
scholars.
REGMI has also produced three major scholarly works. Land Tenure and
Taxation in Nepal was published in four volumes at Berkeley, California,
between 1963 and 1968. A Study in Nepali Economic History 1768-1846,
detailing the agrarian basis of the society during national unification,
appeared in 1971. In 1976 followed Landownership in Nepal, an analysis of
the origin and evolution of the rural problems besetting 95 percent of his
countrymen.
Born in 1929 into a Nepali family with a scholarly tradition, REGMI was
tutored at home by his father until he enrolled at Trichandra College in
Kathmandu where he took his bachelor's degree in 1948. He entered His
Majesty's Government of Nepal in 1951 as Acting Director of Industries and,
concurrently for brief periods, of Cottage Industries and the Central
Purchase Department, before embarking upon his own venture. In 1961-62 he
was Member Secretary of the Royal Taxation and Land Reform commissions. In
and out of government service, his commitment has been to understanding,
explaining and furthering the lot of the Nepali peasant whose hillside farm
beneath the towering Himalayas remains the foundation of Nepalese society.
In electing MAHESH CHANDRA REGMI to receive the 1977 Ramon Magsaysay Award
for Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts, the Board of
Trustees recognized his chronicling of Nepal's past and present, enabling
his people to discover their origins and delineating national options.
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