Saw
A saw is a tool consisting of a tough blade, Wire saw, wire, or Chainsaw, chain with a hard toothed edge used to cut through material. Various terms are used to describe toothed and abrasive saws.
Saws began as serrated materials, and when man ...
Ba U Gyi (, ; 1905 – 12 August 1950) was the first President of the
Karen National Union
The Karen National Union (; abbreviated KNU) is a political organisation with an armed wing, the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), that claims to represent the Karen people of Myanmar. It operates in mountainous eastern Myanmar and has un ...
. Ba U Gyi graduated with a bachelor's degree from
Cambridge University in 1925 and studied law in England, passing the
English bar in 1927.
From 1937 to 1939, he served as the Minister of Revenue of British Burma, and from February to April 1947, as the Minister for Transport and Communications of Burma.
He was killed in an ambush by the
Burmese Army on 12 August 1950.
Ba U Gyi's four principles are still held as the guiding Principles of the Revolution of the Karen National Union:
# Surrender is out of the question
# The recognition of the Karen State must be completed.
# We shall retain our arms.
# We shall decide our own political destiny.
Early life
Saw Ba U Gyi was born in 1905 to a wealthy land-owning
Karen family in Burma. After he completed his degree at Rangoon University in 1925, he went to London, studied at Cambridge University and became a lawyer. He passed the English bar in 1927. In 1937 he returned to Burma and joined the government of Ba Maw as Minister of Revenue.
[Keenan, Paul. "Saw Ba U Gyi." Voices of the Revolution. The Karen History and Culture Preservation Society (2008).]
Adulthood
Later, he joined the pre-independence cabinet and became Information Minister of Burma. During this time, he began to work to gain independence for the Karen people. In September 1945, he was one of the leaders of the Karen Central Organization. He and the KCO asked the British that they be granted their own homeland. On 25 August 1946, he and other Karen leaders arrived in London to get Karen their homeland. At this time, the British controlled Karen land and he went to Great Britain in an effort to regain control of the land for his people, but the British refused and did not give it back to them. Instead the British gave it to Burma. On 27 January 1947, the British agreed with Aung San-Attlee, the Burmese president, and gave him and the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL) rule over Burma. Saw Ba U Gyi had joined the AFPFL in 1944 which was struggling for Burmese independence. He disagreed with the AFPFL political line and resigned to lead the Karen National Union.
Independence

According to Paul Keenan of the Karen History and Culture Preservation Society, "The Aung San-Attlee agreement gave no provisions for Karen aspirations for their own land." To form their case, between 5 and 7 February 1947, 700 members of the Karen Norberg Associates (KNA), Baptist KNA, Buddhist Karen National Association (BKNA), Karen Central Organization (KCO), and its youth branch the Karen Youth Organization (KYO) which had been formed in October 1945, met at Vinton Memorial Hall in Rangoon and formed the Karen National Union. That union asked for representation in government. They also asked for a seaboard on their own land, and for the creation of all-Karen units in the armed forces. The British ignored the KNU.
Death
After the negotiations with the AFPFL government failed, Saw Ba U Gyi led an armed rebellion as commander of the Karen National Liberation Army (KNDO) in 1949. He was ambushed and killed on 12 August 1950 at a small village near
Hlaingbwe township
Hlaingbwe Township (; Pwo Karen: ; ) is a township of Hpa-an District in the Kayin State of Myanmar
Myanmar, officially the Republic of the Union of Myanmar; and also referred to as Burma (the official English name until 1989), is a ...
, around from Rangoon, with other Karen leaders and an English major who was imprisoned for supplying arms. His corpse was reportedly transported four miles out to sea where it was thrown overboard.
Karen Martyrs' Day
The anniversary of Saw Ba U Gyi's death is commemorated annually on 12 August as Karen Martyrs' Day.
[Rand, Nelson. "Martyr’s Day in Myanmar: Karen rebellion." Asia Times. Asia Times Online, 14 Aug. 2003. Web. 28 Apr. 2016.][Core, Paul. "Burma/Myanmar: Challenges of a ceasefire accord in Karen state." Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 28.3 (2009): 95-105.]
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ba U Gyi, Saw
1905 births
1950 deaths
Burmese Karen people
People from Ayeyarwady Region
University of Yangon alumni
Burmese rebels
Burmese people of World War II