The River - Part II
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|








Many Americans and Europeans might be afraid of people who live like this, but from my travels, I know that if there is a problem, I can come to that home, not speaking a word of their language, and they will feed me and give me rest, and they will smile and wave when I leave, seldom asking for anything in return.


Gathering coconuts. It’s amazing what native peoples can do with bamboo and coconuts. All they need is a good river, and they can survive. The river is everything from highway to cupboard. In Thai, the word for river is Mae Nam. Mother water. In India, the Ganges is called Ganga Ma. Often the Indians would simply say, Ma. Cyclone Nargis was a horrible event, but the Irrawaddy is still flowing and life will go on.
While Charlie and his team made their journey into darkness, I remained in Thailand. The Thai people look at Burma in a similar way that some Americans look at Mexico. Cheap labor, a bit backwards, but hardworking people. And similar to our experiences with Mexico, Myanmar provides a river of smuggled and illegal workers, who sometimes can die by the dozens by suffocation in the back of a truck. The Thais I have talked with are afraid to go to Burma now. They are afraid of the ghosts. The ghosts created by Cyclone Nargis.
Those ghosts will haunt Myanmar for a long time. It’s one thing to oppress the living. But to disrespect the dead of Cyclone Nargis is a crime that the junta will, one day, have to answer for. The cyclone was an act of nature, but the suffering and indignity that followed is entirely the junta’s fault. While the rest of the world, led by America, offered help, the junta turned it away. Instead of welcoming humanitarian assistance and the media who help stir the global conscience, the junta closed its borders and tried to keep the truth from being known. By valuing their own power and pride over the lives of their people, the junta turned a natural disaster into a human tragedy.
Although the Burmese people are brave and resourceful, the need for aid is still acute. Many of the farmers in the most affected areas will not be able to plant this year, so the damage wreaked by the cyclone will continue long after the media turns its attention elsewhere.
And the last victim of the cyclone might be the junta itself. Along the Irrawaddy River Delta, the people’s hatred for the government was clearly expressed. My friend Charlie said that he would not be surprised to see disaffected factions rise up against the government, perhaps similar to those in Sri Lanka and Tibet. Burma might erupt in violence within a few years, which could have serious implications for neighboring Bangladesh and Thailand. Also, the Chinese seem to be muscling in up north, creating an anti-Chinese sentiment with the potential for violence. The Russians have advisers in Myanmar, though just what they are up to remains a mystery. Meanwhile, ASEAN apparently lacks the desire to take any decisive action that would upset the government of Myanmar. There are too many business interests at stake, and keeping Myanmar as a source of cheap raw materials rather than have it become a new Asian Tiger might very well be in the interests of other member states. The United States is not anxious to arm and train an insurgent force in Myanmar, unless our interests are directly threatened. Meanwhile, Charlie asserts that the Burmese dissident groups living in Thailand have largely lost touch with the situation inside the country, though apparently they get much attention, and funding, from Washington. Myanmar might be a powder keg with a slow-burning fuse already lit, and many Burmese people, who set great store on astrology, believe that great calamity is in the stars.
By bringing these photographs back from an atrocity the world is not supposed to witness, Charlie and his team has ensured that the ghosts of Cyclone Nargis will not be forgotten. They were men enough to face the darkness. And so, too, are the Burmese people, who live in the shadows of their own dead.
Reader support is crucial to this mission. Weekly or monthly recurring ‘subscription’ based support is the best, though all are greatly appreciated. Recurring and one-time donations are available through PayPal or Authorize.net.
To send a check or money order:
Michael Yon
P O Box 5553
Winter Haven, FL 33880-5553
I will continue to do my part in telling the stories that are not being told. Readers must also do their part by keeping the cash flowing. Cash is essential .
Thank you!
Michael









Comments
For those that will look, they show the full glory of another Socialist Proletariat Paradise.
Keep up the good work.
May God Bless America.
God bless you, Michael Yon and your friends and your allies.
a soldier's mom
Great read.
One of these days, payback will come. However, what the total cost of that payback will be is unknown.
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/article.cfm?id=2804
More photos and articles... another source advocating for people of Myanmar.
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/article.cfm?id=2738
Again, more related articles and photos. Good to see aid being given but as detailed much more is still needed.
Since May 5, MSF teams have distributed:
* 1,250 tons of rice,
* 410 tons of beans,
* 190,000 liters of cooking oil,
* 70 tons of canned fish,
* 1,400 kg of salt,
* 125,000 packs of energy biscuits and therapeutic food,
* 120,000 plastic sheets,
* 20,000 mosquito nets,
* 48,000 jerry cans,
* 3,000 blankets, and
* 16,500 soap bars.
On a more pragmatic level, what agencies are doing the most good in Myanmar? i.e., where should I donate to help these people? Do -you- accept donations for these souls? (a few hundred dollars for a river boat is something I can do).
SPC -J. Robinson-
It's one thing to post a comment publicizing your own good work, which I'm sure is admirable. It's quite another to criticize others, and with such a sense of entitlement to his and Charlie's work, and on his blog.
Superb stuff. Your story reads like a Joseph conrad novel alright. The Burmese junta are beyond any comment or criticism. There's no point even talking about these Chinese finger puppets. What disgusts me is the inaction of the UN in this affair. That organisation seems to think that its only function is to provide soup kitchens and teach pacifism. It's gone beyond any really useful purpose in the world.
The Burmese are quiet heroes. I'm going to buy shares in a thakka paste factory.
Regards,
Best wishes
The soldier on the cover is a member of the same outfit I was proud to be a member of back in 1966. It is a siduation we constantly saw. I never had the nerve to take a photo like that. I pray it gets to the minds and feelings of many Americans to show just how crual these people are.
Thye story of little "Farah is not unusual as people think. I so wish I were 20 again and had the power to lead men into this mess and clean it up once and for all. God bless!!
I leave you now for the world to see,
resplendent in your nudity.
But, oops, so naughty, I caught you bare!
Gosh, mom, they ainƒ??t wearinƒ?? underwear!
When Natureƒ??s strife lays waste the land
and forgotten humanity just canƒ??t stand,
then lay yourself down and never wake.
But remember the undies, for goodness sake!
And if, forgotten, you rot away;
dead youƒ??ll be and dead youƒ??ll stay.
Remember that others might see you there.
Remember to have clean underwear!
Blame the victims! The dead donƒ??t care;
scattered, tattered and everywhere.
The tide goes in and the tide goes out.
Boxers or briefs, the voters shout.
Turn your eyes and avert your head.
Ignore the piles of untimely dead.
Forget the past, your future lies there!
Lookit, ma, they ainƒ??t got underwear!
The walking skeletons nude in Treblinka
The storm tossed bodies of typhooned Burma
Whatƒ??s worse; the nudity or tyranny there?
Hitler died in his underwear!
What more can be said, what more done?
A good manƒ??s ignorance or an evil oneƒ??s care?
Baked, bared bodies under the Son . . .
Jesus Christ! Put on some underwear!
Oh, I forgot, Jesus was a Jew;
Crucified , yes, but wearing underwear too.
How many sins can we not see
past the bare naked nudity?
RSS feed for comments to this post