U Zaw Nyo

Sabyasachi Jayiram Ojha (Rajian: ସବ୍ୟସାଚୀ ଜୟୀରାମ ଓଝା, 22nd June, 1896 - 12th December 1950, age 54) sometimes referred to as S. J Ojha was a Rajian, , and  was also served as the Chief Minister  of the Rajian Federation, a  of  during. He was the founder and first leader of the Rajian National Party, a leading force in the Rajian independence movement as well as serving as the of the Rajian Liberation Army.

Born in a wealthy family of bureaucrats and lawyers in 1896 when Rajia was under, Ojha originally trained as a lawyer in at the , where he quickly abandoned his legal studies instead focusing on political theory and theology. Ojha performed further studies in the and  before returning to Rajia in 1931. By this time Ojha had started to harbour a deep resentment towards with Ojha beginning to campaign towards Rajian independence by forming the Rajian National Party as well as calling for the dissolution of what he saw to be a  monarchy that supported the British. Ojha started to advocate Bharayakha Khalisism, criticising Harhavadha Khalisism on the basis that it helped keep the monarchy in power, and stating that the Jartha Sai was heretical in nature. In order to distance himself from and other  in Rajia Ojha rejected  and  and instead started to voice support for a hierarchical  that nonetheless rejected monarchism and.

Ojha was imprisoned several times during the 1930's due to his nationalist and anti-royalist sentiments. The outbreak of World War II saw Ojha help lead a coalition of nationalists and anti-monarchists known as the Rajian Liberation Army against colonial forces, with the intent of creating a  in Rajia. In 1943 Japan launched an attack on the islands with Ojha collaborating with them to create the Rajian Federation, with him serving as Chief Minister. This resulted in further pro-monarchist and communist insurgencies across Rajia with Ojha conducting a brutal campaign to crush dissent across Rajia. Japanese forces were driven out of Rajia in 1945 with Ojha going into hiding as the Rajian Federation collapsing, still coordinating continued fighting between nationalist and colonial forces.

The out break of the Rajian Civil War in 1948 following independence saw Ojha and the Rajian Liberation Army to continue to fight communists and monarchists, although their military weakness started to become more apparent. In December 1950 Ojha was captured in communist held territory, where he was subsequently executed leading to the breakup of the Rajian Liberation Army.

Today, Ojha remains a influential figure both among the and  of Rajia thanks to his extensive religious, political and sociological theories. Many historians cite Ojha as being one of the key figures in the movement in Rajia as well as one of the most outspoken  and. Ojha has also been labelled a, , and by his critics with his strict views of social hierarchy often being a point of debate among his followers. Ojha's religious theories have similarly been as divisive with some stating that his interpretation of Bharayakha Khalisism was in many cases similar to Harhavadha Khalisism especially in regards to issues such as the rights of women. Despite having being hevily criticised by the Rajian government since his death, Ojha remains a popular figure within Rajia and his teachings (colloquially known as Ojhaism) still form the basis of the and  movements of Rajia.