“Lengteng tlang tlan chungah, kan thawveng a danglam lo, Zawlno leh Thadou, kan pi leh pu chu chanchin khat.” (“Upon the hills of Lengteng, our shadows are not different, Zawlno and Thadou, our grandparents share one story.”)
The wind carried her song across the ridge. The Thadou warriors, camped in the valley below, heard it. Their spears trembled. Chungkunga himself wept, remembering his own mother’s lullaby. The raid was abandoned. Instead, the next dawn, he came with a basket of salt and a pig—a Mizo peace offering. Lalthangvela, shamed by a woman’s courage, tried to have Dongi killed. But Lianzuala stood before his father’s guards. “You would kill the only soul who saved our people?” he asked. The village rose. The old Chieftain was exiled to the Ramkawn (fallow lands). dong yi mizo version
Dongi’s only inheritance from her late mother was a khuang (Mizo drum) and a whispered prophecy: “When the northern wind carries three songs, the valley will remember your name.” The valley of Zawlno was ruled by the fierce and unjust Chieftain, Lalthangvela. He had grown fat on the rice of poor farmers and cruel in his judgments. When he accused Dongi’s father of stealing sacred Zu (rice beer) meant for the harvest festival, the old man was dragged to the Zawlbuk (bachelors’ dormitory) and publicly shamed. “Lengteng tlang tlan chungah, kan thawveng a danglam
That night, Dongi climbed the highest peak, Mualcheng. The northern wind howled like a grieving mother. She raised her mother’s drum and sang the Hlado (hunting call) of her clan—a song of truth and vengeance. Lalthangvela, shamed by a woman’s courage, tried to
(The highest song shall endure forever.) End.
And so, Dongi did the unthinkable. She broke the Zawlbuk ’s male-only tradition. She opened a school of Hla (songs) on the very peak of Mualcheng. Boys and girls, Thadou and Zawlno, rich and poor—they came. They learned the three songs: the song of truth, the song of unity, and the song of mercy. Years later, when Lianzuala became the first elected Lal (Chief) of a united valley, he did not sit on a throne. He sat on a simple bamboo mat. Beside him sat Dongi, her mother’s drum silent but sacred.
“Chhakthlang thlipui chuan, ka hla ngaithla la, Ka pa chhia ka phur ang, a dik lo chu ka sawi ang.” (“Northern wind, listen to my song, I will carry my father’s shame, and speak the wrong.”)