of our towns and monasteries you can see whole settlements
of beggar Mongols living in dugouts. All our
Mongol arsenals and treasuries were requisitioned.
All monasteries were forced to pay taxes; all Mongols
working for the liberty of their country were persecuted;
through bribery with Chinese silver, orders and titles
the Chinese secured a following among the poorer Mongol
Princes. It is easy to understand how the governing
class, His Holiness, Khans, Princes, and high Lamas,
as well as the ruined and oppressed people, remembering
that the Mongol rulers had once held Peking and China
in their hands and under their reign had given her
the first place in Asia, were definitely hostile to
the Chinese administrators acting thus. Insurrection
was, however, impossible. We had no arms.
All our leaders were under surveillance and every
movement by them toward an armed resistance would
have ended in the same prison at Peking where eighty
of our Nobles, Princes and Lamas died from hunger and
torture after a previous struggle for the liberty
of Mongolia. Some abnormally strong shock was
necessary to drive the people into action. This
was given by the Chinese administrators, General Cheng
Yi and General Chu Chi-hsiang. They announced
that His Holiness Bogdo Khan was under arrest in his
own palace, and they recalled to his attention the
former decree of the Peking Government—held
by the Mongols to be unwarranted and illegal—that
His Holiness was the last Living Buddha. This
was enough. Immediately secret relations were
made between the people and their Living God, and
plans were at once elaborated for the liberation of
His Holiness and for the struggle for liberty and
freedom of our people. We were helped by the
great Prince of the Buriats, Djam Bolon, who began
parleys with General Ungern, then engaged in fighting
the Bolsheviki in Transbaikalia, and invited him to
enter Mongolia and help in the war against the Chinese.
Then our struggle for liberty began.”
Thus the Sait of Uliassutai explained the situation to me. Afterwards I heard that Baron Ungern, who had agreed to fight for the liberty of Mongolia, directed that the mobilization of the Mongolians in the northern districts be forwarded at once and promised to enter Mongolia with his own small detachment, moving along the River Kerulen. Afterwards he took up relations with the other Russian detachment of Colonel Kazagrandi and, together with the mobilized Mongolian riders, began the attack on Urga. Twice he was defeated but on the third of February, 1921, he succeeded in capturing the town and replaced the Living Buddha on the throne of the Khans.