Chit Phumisak

Chit Phumisak
Born Somchit Phumisak
(สมจิตร ภูมิศักดิ์)

(1930-09-25)25 September 1930
Prachantakham District, Prachinburi Province, Siam
Died 5 May 1966(1966-05-05) (aged 35)
Waritchaphum District, Sakon Nakhon Province, Thailand
Occupation author, philologist, historian, poet
Parent(s) Siri Phumisak (father)
Saeng-ngoen Chayawong (mother)[1]

Chit Phumisak (also spelt Jit Poumisak; Thai: จิตร ภูมิศักดิ์; IPA: [tɕìt pʰūː.mí.sàk]; born 25 September 1930; killed 5 May 1966) was a Thai author, philologist, historian, poet and Communist. His most influential book was The Face of Thai Feudalism (โฉมหน้าศักดินาไทย, Chom Na Sakdina Thai), written in 1957 under the pseudonym Somsamai Srisootarapan. Other pen names used by Chit include Kawi Kanmuang and Kawi Srisayam. He has been described as the "Che of Thailand".[2]

Biography

Born into a poor family in Prachinburi Province, eastern Thailand, he studied philology at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. It was as a student that Chit first became exposed to Marxism; in 1953 he was hired by the U.S. embassy to help assist William J. Gedney, an American linguist working in Thailand, to translate The Communist Manifesto into Thai (in an attempt to scare the Thai government into taking a tougher stance against communism).[3]

His writings were anti-nationalist and progressive and were viewed as a threat to the state by the harshly anti-communist government of Sarit Thanarat. He was arrested in 1957, branded a communist, and after six years in jail was declared not guilty by a court and set free.

In 1965, he joined the Communist Party of Thailand, headquartered in the jungles of the Phu Phan mountains, in Sakhon Nakhon Province. On May 5, 1966 he was shot dead by villagers near the village Nong Kung in Waritchaphum district. His body was burned and no proper ceremony for his death occurred until 1989, when his remains were finally placed in a stupa at the nearby Wat Prasittisangwon.

There is a small dispute over his death. Paul M. Handley, the author of "The King Never Smiles" states that Chit was executed by government officials near Phu Phan mountains shortly after he was released from jail.[4]

Selected works

Further reading

References

  1. "บิดาและมารดาของจิตร ภูมิศักดิ์ [Chit Phumisak's Parents]". สามัญชนบนถนนประชาธิปไตย (in Thai). Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  2. Cunningham, Philip J. "The Long Winding Red Road to Ratchaprasong and Thailand’s Future", Asia-Pacific Journal, May 17, 2010.
  3. Craig J. Reynolds. Thai Radical Discourse: The Real Face of Thai Feudalism Today. Cornell University.
  4. Handley, Paul M. (2006),The King Never Smiles. Yale University Press


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