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All, Explore, Other 4

He’s been running since he was four…

By Kimanh · On September 12, 2012

He’s been running since he was four years old. “Could you actually hear the army coming?” I asked. “Oh yes, you could hear them. They come. They take everything. They shot my uncle and my brother. Three of my uncles have been killed. One of my uncles is a porter.” “You mean a slave?” “Yes, he is a slave.”

In his thirties, married with children, and one of the best people I know here, Thur is persecuted for no reason apart from his race. As we drove our 2 hour journey in the back of a pickup we travelled parallel to the river that separated Thur and his homeland in Burma. I watched him as he looked at what once was. I asked him where home was. He motioned with his head across the river and then said, “Home is not here.”

We spoke about many things. I told him how when Burma (Myanmar) comes up in the news it’s never about the Karen persecution. It is about their own internal conflict and politics. I saw anger and disappointment in his face, at the very least people around the world should know. We talked about some Karen people getting refugee status overseas. I heard of a family that went to the US. The father cried everyday he was there as he longed for the mountains. He spoke of others. Never was there a picture of estatic happiness that someone got a “ticket out”. It isn’t without extreme compromise for a “taste” of freedom. We think we do them a favour by letting them come into our country. We do, but we don’t understand completely and never will. This place is beautiful. The mountains are among the most spectacular I’ve ever seen. There is water in abundance. The foliage is lush and green. There is community here. Their way of life is so different I could barely hope that any of them would ever get a ticket out and face the ways of the western world.

They should be on their land, without fear of persecution.

Thur is one Karen out of thousands who shared a brief part of his story. The Karen people are one ethnic minority out of many in the world who are or have been persecuted. Why?

We stopped by the Karen refugee camp to pick up some students we dropped off earlier that day. As we waited I was able to have a closer look at a home on the edge of the camp. From a distance the camp with thousands of bamboo huts decorating the hillside looks picturesque and stunning. It’s a deceiving view. I looked at a lady lying on the floor of her hut. The home was surround by rubbish. The bamboo walls, floors and pillars were rotting. Everything was dirty and damp. That was her constant reality.

There are people who have spent decades in the camp. People have been born there and know nothing else. There are three checkpoints on the road with military guards we pass each time we drive into town. These checkpoints are to check for the Karen people. Any passing without papers are arrested.

For the rest of the journey home Thur sat quietly. If I could do something about this injustice I would. But who am I? Even though I live in a western, developed country if my thoughts and concerns can’t have a podium what freedom of speech do I really have if no one in power will listen and take action?

So you are reading this and word may be spreading, but please don’t confuse being informed with action. Talk is cheap, but yes, the starting point. We could all know about the Karen persecution and still what success is there until the nation exists in peace? Until there is no worry of land mines, village raids or being ambushed while you sleep with your children at night. With my inability to do anything to help I’m left feeling empty and frustrated. This note doesn’t end on a positive note at all. I hope for a better solution, but not being Karen I am so far removed from the reality of their situation it’s hard to comprehend and far easier to divert my thoughts.

A quote that a friend shared recently… “I saw the horror of the Rwandan crisis on tv. It was so unspeakable in its scope and sadness that I knew as a human being that I had to take action. So I switched channels.”

Quoted in ‘Symposium on Mission and social action’ 1997

I’m left not knowing how to end this letter. I have no words of clarity or sufficient direction. This is what it is; a very small glimpse at a people who are confined, who are forced to live on handouts with lost dignity, who live without freedom.

—-

I’m officially the most inconsistent blogger in the world. Mark and I are volunteering in Thailand, helping at a Karen children’s home. I hope to post more. We shall see how time permits!

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Kimanh

Hi my name's Kimanh. I blog about stuff I like. Cooking. Eating. Making. Exploring. Taking photos. & Blogging. I'm married to a humanitarian worker and we live in Vanuatu - a tropical paradise in the South Pacific Ocean. Nice to meet you.

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4 Comments

  • Alex says: September 12, 2012 at 2:15 PM
    Thanks for writing! We struggled with many of the same feelings when we were in Cambodia this past March. To be honest, I had not heard of the Karen people, though we have a large Chin population in Indiana. Thanks for starting the conversation with awareness, and for serving with your husband at the children's home! We just spent some time with a woman this weekend who spent the first 12 years of her life in a refugee camp on the Thai-Cambodian border escaping the Khmer Rouge and civil war. The reality of refugee camps really hit me hard for some reason. As a moment of hope for those being raised in border camps, she is now directing an organization that provides job training for women and attempting to combat persecution in her country. Thanks again for writing and sharing what you are going through!
    Reply
  • Donna says: September 14, 2012 at 5:54 PM
    There is a small Karen population where I live in Cleveland, Ohio and there is an organization called The Healthy Asian Pacific Islander (HAPI) Fresh Farmer's Market provides that provides agricultural job training, farming and management skills for refugees and Asian immigrants--the participants then sell their produce at local farmers markets. Until I read your post though, I didn't really understand what they had left behind in Burma.
    Reply
  • Jeanne says: September 17, 2012 at 3:12 PM
    "We think we do them a favour by letting them come into our country. " Thank your for reminding us of this point. It's easy to think that because we love our country and we're offering a safe place to live, that a refugee shouldn't be completely ecstatic. Yes, it's a gift but home is home is home no matter where in the world one lives. Wow, you're going to be a new person after this experience. Thanks for sharing.
    Reply
  • Charlee says: September 23, 2012 at 2:00 PM
    "...So I switched channels." Wow. That hit me right between the eyes. I've been so caught up in all the US political pre-election drama and feeling intensely affronted, offended, and outraged about the right-wing BS-ery that will affect my rights as a woman that I forget there are people who have had their rights as humans taken away - or the horror has been going on so long, they never had them at all. Not to minimize the BS-ery in my country, but the ability to switch channels certainly puts things in perspective. First world problems, indeed. I found your blog via a Pin which led to Craftgawker where I found your shrink plastic buttons. Your presentation was so well executed, I wanted to see more. Then I hit the Home button and read this post. Please post more as you can. You're doing something rare, fantastic, and so very needed in this world. Thank you.
    Reply
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