Thein Pe Myint became involved in politics as a
Rangoon University student in mid-1930s. Known then by his birth name, Thein Pe, he became a secretary of
Dobama Asiayone (We Burmans Association), an influential anti-colonial association whose members included the who's who of Burmese independence politics:
Thakin Aung San,
Thakin Nu,
Thakin Kyaw Nyein,
Thakin Mya,
Thakin Than Tun,
Thakin Shu Maung (later Ne Win), etc. Already a well-known and controversial writer, Thakin Thein Pe quickly became one of the leading spokesmen of the leftist movement in Burma. He was an important student leader in the protests against the colonial
British Government in 1936 and the "Uprising of 1300 ME" in 1938. When the
Second World War began Thein Pe Myint was one of a few leading Burmese independence activists that refused to ally with fascist Japan. In an open break with most other prominent student leaders like
Aung San, Thein Pe Myint sided with the
Allied powers, even if it meant working with the British. In 1942, Thein Pe Myint went underground when the
Japanese empire conquered Burma. Thein Pe Myint position on Japan was later vindicated as Japanese rule proved disastrous. General
Aung San, who had allied with the Japanese, sent Thein Pe Myint as an envoy to
India to seek help from the
Allies in fighting the Japanese. He played a leading role in propaganda and liaison activities between wartime Burmese leaders, like General Aung San, and the British Force 136, the special operations and intelligence unit. After the war, he worked in many associations and parties, including the
Communist Party of Burma, Sino-Burmese Friends Associations, People Peace Association, and the Burmese Writers Association. In 1946, he became the first minister of
Agriculture and
Forestry in General Aung San's government during the war. He was jailed in 1948 but released in 1949. After independence, Thein Pe Myint's political career turned to advocacy as a journalist. ==Career as a writer and journalist==