Read Living Silence in Burma Online
Authors: Christina Fink
About the author
Christina Fink is a program associate and lecturer at the International Sustainable Development Studies Institute and program coordinator and lecturer in the Foreign Affairs Training Program, Chiang Mai, Thailand. She is also honorary assistant professor in the Department of Sociology, Hong Kong.
LIVING SILENCE IN BURMA
Surviving under military rule
Christina Fink
second edition
Zed Books
LONDON
|
NEW YORK
Living silence in Burma: surviving under military rule
, second edition, was first published in 2009 by Zed Books Ltd, 7 Cynthia Street, London
N1 9JF, UK
and Room 400, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York,
NY 10010, USA
This ebook edition was first published in 2013
Copyright © Christina Fink 2001, 2009
The right of Christina Fink to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988
Set in OurType Arnhem and Futura Bold by Ewan Smith, London
Cover designed by Rogue Four Design
Index:
[email protected]
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of Zed Books Ltd.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data available
ISBN
978 1 78032 830 0
Contents
3
Breaking the silence, 1988–90
4
Military rule continues, 1990–2000
5
The Than Shwe years, 2000 and beyond
6
Families: fostering conformity
7
Communities: going with the flow
8
The military: a life sentence
10
Education: floating books and bathroom tracts
11
The artistic community: in the dark, every cat is black
12
Religion and magic: disappearing jewels and poltergeists
13
The internationalization of Burma’s politics
14
Conclusion: a different Burma
Illustrations
Between pages 112 and 113
1 Farmers transplanting rice in Rangoon Division, 1996
3 A Karenni mass in a refugee camp on the Thai–Burma border, 2007
4 Novice monks studying in a monastery near Mandalay, 1996
5 Aung San Suu Kyi speaking from her gate, 1996
6 Armed Forces Day parade in Naypyidaw, 2007
7 A young Burmese soldier at a train station in Kachin State, 1998
8 A policeman watching monks walk by in Nyaung Shwe, Shan State, 2005
Between pages 208 and 209
9 Students leaving their high school near Mrauk U, Arakan State, 2006
10 A tea shop with a sign urging discipline in the background, Pa-an, Karen State, 1998
11 Villagers undertaking forced labour, Pegu Division, 2000
12 Insein Prison, where many political prisoners are held, just outside Rangoon, 2006
13 A man praying at Shwedagon Pagoda, Rangoon, 2006
14 A woman having her palm read, Rangoon, 2006
15 Organizing newspapers for delivery, Rangoon, 1996
16 Newly arrived refugees awaiting treatment for malaria and tuberculosis, Thai–Burma border, 1992
All photographs are by Nic Dunlop/Panos Pictures
Acknowledgements
First and foremost, I would like to thank those who shared their stories with me. For some it was a painful experience, bringing up feelings of suffering and loss. For others it was risky, because to speak against the government is a crime in Burma. Unfortunately I could not include everyone’s stories here, but each and every one helped me to understand Burma better. I would also like to express my gratitude to all who helped to arrange interviews for me, to those who interpreted and translated interviews, often at short notice and late hours, and to those who have answered so many questions for me over the past several years. Although I would like to name everyone here, for their safety, I cannot.
I am grateful to Nic Dunlop for working with me to create the photo essay, to Ko Sitt Nyein Aye for allowing me to use the title of one of his articles, ‘In the dark, every cat is black’, as a chapter title, and to Ko Maing Kyaw Khin for agreeing to let me use one of his cartoons. Also to Ko Mun Awng for his song of defiance, and to the former political prisoner who shared his song of sadness with me. Thanks to Moe Kyaw for making the maps and to Ko Zaw Oo and U Aung Saw Oo for their help in reconstructing a list of student protests and school closures from 1962 to 1999.
The book has benefited greatly from the comments and suggestions made by several people who read earlier drafts; most especially, Hadley Arnold, Nancy Chen, Min Zin, Josef Silverstein, Martin Smith, NC, and Win Min, as well as CT, Mathea Falco, KK and UTZ. Needless to say, any mistakes are my responsibility alone.
I am deeply grateful to the Open Society Institute for providing me with a fellowship to research and write this book. Robert Molteno, my editor, was also wonderfully supportive. And Chris Beyrer and Edith Mirante gave me much helpful advice throughout the writing process.
I am indebted to Maureen Aung-Thwin, who first stimulated my interest in Burma with her infectious enthusiasm. And I will never forget the Burmese residents of the two houses where I was based while conducting much of my research. Their generosity, good humour and fantastic cooking deepened an already great love for Burma.
For the second edition, I would like to thank my editor, Tamsine O’Riordan, for her helpful suggestions, and Win Min for all his assistance during the interviews and the writing process.
Author’s note
Burmese prefixes
In Burma it is polite to put a prefix in front of the name of the person to whom one is talking. The speaker chooses the prefix according to the age of the other person, relative to one’s own age. Thus if a woman’s name were Mee Mee, and she were about forty years old, a girl would call her ‘Daw Mee Mee’, but someone in his or her thirties would call that same woman ‘Ma Mee Mee’.
Daw – for aunts, older women
U – for uncles, older men
Ma – for older sisters, women slightly older than oneself
Ko – for older brothers, men slightly older than oneself
Nyi ma – for younger sisters, girls
Maung – for younger brothers, boys
There are also specialized terms for military officers, teachers, doctors and abbots which are put in front of individuals’ respective names.
A note on pronunciation
‘ky’ is pronounced ‘ch’, thus ‘kyi’, as in the name Aung San Suu Kyi, is pronounced ‘chee’.
‘gy’ is pronounced ‘j’, thus ‘gyi’ is pronounced ‘jee’.
‘ye’ is pronounced ‘yay’.
‘we’ is pronounced ‘way’, thus ‘shwe’ is pronounced ‘shway’.
Acronyms
AAPP | Assistance Association for Political Prisoners |
ABFSU | All Burma Federation of Students’ Unions |
ABMA | All Burma Monks’ Alliance |
ABSDF | All Burma Students’ Democratic Front |
AFPFL | Anti-Fascist People’s Freedom League |
ASEAN | Association of South-East Asian Nations |
BBC | British Broadcasting Corporation |
BSPP | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
CNF | Chin National Front |
CNLD | Chin National League for Democracy |
CPB | Communist Party of Burma |
CRPP | Committee Representing the People’s Parliament |
DDSI | Directorate of Defence Services Intelligence |
DKBA | Democratic Karen Buddhist Army |
DPNS | Democratic Party for a New Society |
DVB | Democratic Voice of Burma |
GONGO | government-organized non-governmental organization |
ICRC | International Committee of the Red Cross |
ILO | International Labour Organization |
KIO | Kachin Independence Organization (armed wing: Kachin Independence Army) |
KMT | Kuomintang (anti-communist Chinese force) |
KNPLF | Karenni State Nationalities People’s Liberation Front |
KNPP | Karenni National Progressive Party |
KNU | Karen National Union (armed wing: Karen National Liberation Army) |
MI | military intelligence |
MMCWA | Myanmar Maternal and Child Welfare Association |
MWEA | Myanmar Women’s Entrepreneurial Association |
NCGUB | National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma |
NGO | non-governmental organization |
NLD | National League for Democracy |
NMSP | New Mon State Party (armed wing: Mon National Liberation Army) |
NUP | National Unity Party |
PVO | People’s Volunteer Organization |
RFA | Radio Free Asia |
RIT | Rangoon Institute of Technology |
SLORC | State Law and Order Restoration Council |
SNLD | Shan Nationalities League for Democracy |
SNPLO | Shan State Nationalities People’s Liberation Organization |
SPDC | State Peace and Development Council |
SSA | Shan State Army |
UNDP | United Nations Development Programme |
UNICEF | United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund |
UNLD | United Nationalities League for Democracy |
USDA | Union Solidarity and Development Association |
UWSA | United Wa State Army |
VOA | Voice of America |