Freedom Bloc Explained

Freedom Bloc
Lang1:Burmese
Lang2:Mon
Colorcode:
  1. ED2124
Leader:Ba Maw
Aung San
U Nu
Thakin Than Tun
Thakin Mya
Thein Maung
President:Ba Maw
General Secretary:Aung San
Foundation:October 1939[1]
Ideology:Marxism[2]
Buddhist socialism
Socialism
Left-wing nationalism
Anti-colonialism
Dissolution:1944
Merger:Dobama
Poor Man's Party
Htwet Yat Gain
Successor:Mahabama Party[3]
Country:Burma

The Freedom Bloc, later known as Dobama-Sinyetha Asiayone, was a political party in Burma during World War II.

History

The party was established by a merger of Dobama Asiayone (DAA), Ba Maw's Poor Man's Party and the All-Burma Students Association, and was known as the "Htwet Yat Gain" (Burmese: ထွက်ရပ်ဂိုဏ်း, "Association of the Way Out"),[4] although DAA leaders secretly formed the People's Revolutionary Party at the time of the merger. It opposed cooperation with the British war effort unless Burma was guaranteed independence immediately after the war, and threatened to increase its anti-British and anti-war campaign. As a result, the Governor ordered the arrest of the Bloc's leadership, most of whom remained in prison until the Japanese invasion of 1942.

Following the onset of the Japanese occupation, the party was renamed Dobama-Sinyetha Asiayone and dropped its anti-fascist and socialist outlook due to the Japanese presence. Ba Maw became Head of State and leader of the renamed party.[5]

In 1944 the party was dissolved, with the Mahabama Party formed to replace it.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Maw . Ba . Breakthrough in Burma: Memoirs of a Revolution, 1939-1946 . 1968 . Yale University Press . New Haven . 59.
  2. Book: Maw . Ba . Breakthrough in Burma: Memoirs of a Revolution, 1939-1946 . 1968 . Yale University Press . New Haven . 73.
  3. Book: Maw . Ba . Breakthrough in Burma: Memoirs of a Revolution, 1939-1946 . 1968 . Yale University Press . New Haven . 279-80.
  4. Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, p130
  5. Fukui, p129