But as luck would have had it, another Indian, who was also a critic of Tagore’s views, arrived at the scene that saw the gradual fall of Chen from grace. Comintern delegate and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s emissary to China, Manabendra Nath Roy or MN Roy, who had grown up under the name of Narendranath Bhattacharya, had brought the Comintern-sponsored controversial resolution that the CPC must lead the agrarian revolution swarming across a deeply divided China while rethinking its future relations with the Left Kuomintang and its government at Hankow during the fateful Fifth Congress of the CPC in the city, currently a part of modern-day Wuhan, in May 1927. Although the then general secretary Chen and the Soviet Politburo appointed CPC advisor Mikhail Borodin readily opposed Roy’s radical move, the resolution was overwhelmingly endorsed by a big majority of the Congress delegates, predominately the ones from the countryside. Meanwhile, a cunning Roy’s capricious act of leaking the Comintern order to the CPC and then chairman of the Left Kuomintang Government at Hankow, Wang Jingwei, resulted in the expulsion of the Communists from the Left Kuomintang-led regime in Wuhan and the government’s fall. The terrible turn of events of the spring of 1927 also marked the end of the Chen era at the helm of the CPC as an extraordinary meeting of the Central Committee of the Party deposed him from the exalted position of general secretary. Subsequently, in 1929, the year Tagore made two short visits to China, the purge of Chen was complete as the CPC expelled its co-founder for toeing the Leon Trotsky line against Stalin’s policies for the then Comintern-guided CPC toward the Chinese revolution.