A Quiet Revolt in Burma (by Eugene Cho)
Don't forget the situation in Burma.
Teresa and her husband, Rich, have been at my church for about four years now. Like several of our members, their faith in Christ and desire to live out the gospel not only humbles me but helps shape the depth and direction of our church. Teresa started a blog titled Jewels in the Ashes and actively serves on the board of directors at World Aid based here in Seattle. World Aid focuses much of their energy and work serving and empowering Internally Displaced People (IDP) in Burma and refugees on the Thai/Burma border. If you're looking for someone trustworthy to donate money toward the relief efforts in Burma, Teresa and World Aid will get those funds where they need to get to.
I got this incredible "insider's look" from Teresa, who received this from friends who are working within Burma. Do yourself a favor and take three minutes to read this:
As Westerners we want Western solutions for Burma. We want planes to fly in supplies to save people who we know could be saved. We live in a world where we can replace bad hearts with good hearts, clone organs, and do bone marrow transplants. We think putting men on the moon is old school. Flying in a planeload of life-saving supplies should be child's play.
In Burma making a phone call is difficult. Only seven percent of the country's 52 million people have electricity. For Burma's excessively paranoid generals we might just as well ask them if we can fly in a planeload of anthrax as one of aid. To them, this act might save lives but it would poison the culture, and while it may be a culture of fear and defeat, they unfortunately see it as their culture to defend.
To make a difference in Burma we have no choice but to deal with what is, not what we as Westerners think should be. I detest the current regime. I can't for the life of me comprehend their cruelty. This is the side of humanity that makes me want to throw up my hands in utter despair and quit, but I can't because quitting is what allows governments like this to continue.
I am so proud right now to be working with a group of people who haven't quit Burma. A group that spans the globe, a group that is organizing in the face of utter despair and effectively getting help to cyclone victims in ways that could get many of them arrested if they were ever found out.
What is in Burma is that international aid is failing; goods sent in to help disaster victims are being co-opted by the government. The military, once stuck with the problem of how to feed and clothe their 400,000 soldiers, now has enough rice stores to feed them for years to come. Likewise with medicine.
However, what is also happening in Burma is that internal aid is working. Granted that it lacks the fairy-tale effect of a white horse riding in, complete with knight in shining armor, or wizards with magic wands that can turn the horrible truth into a happy ending, but in a very real way, in a very empowering way, Burma's people are saving themselves -- despite the generals.
Supported by those who refuse to quit, a quiet revolt is taking place. A strong grassroots movement is evolving to bring goods to those in need. It travels many routes and is crossing continents and cultures -- some routes are above ground -- small convoys of concerned citizens with used clothing and humble donations, businessmen with enough clout and connections to get permission to transport small quantities of relief – many adopting a village and rallying friends to sustain support - and some routes go underground – traveling through bank accounts and well-established black market trades long used by insurgents and smugglers. Even many military officials, appalled by the suffering they face each day, are denying orders and secretly transporting aid.
I was really amazed when the Saffron Revolution was so easily quashed. I was saddened to see the despondent faces of those I passed every day on the street afterward, people who had had the opportunity to support their most revered and had failed to do so. Defeat went well beyond the monks and deep into the heart of the entire country.
But this time is different. Perhaps because of that defeat, perhaps because the general's decisions to refuse lifesaving aid is just more callous than anyone can accept, I'm seeing strength and unification among people who otherwise may have continued to remain passive.
I really don't know if this will come to fruition, if this will be the catalyst that actually unites an active resistance movement and that that movement will grow. I don't know if the temptation of controlling a well-fed army will serve as the tipping point for internal conflict in the military, but what I do know is that in the face of it all, my faith in humanity is once again being restored. So long as we don't give up, there is hope for those cyclone victims still surviving. So long as we don't give up there is still hope that Burma will change for the better, and in our lifetime. So long as we don't give up, others won't give up.
My thanks really goes out to all those of you who continue to lend support, to all of you who understand that the gap between what should be and what is is currently too wide to jump in Burma, that even planes can't cross it, but that this is not a reason to stop helping.
What should be may never come to Burma, but what is is still worth saving.
Many thanks,
Name omitted by request.
Eugene Cho, a second-generation Korean-American, is the founder and lead pastor of Quest Church in Seattle, Washington, and the executive director of Q Cafe, an innovative nonprofit neighborhood café in the city with only a handful of cafés. You can stalk him at his blog at: eugenecho.wordpress.com.









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Comments
Thanks for sharing this story.
Posted by: Greg | June 9, 2008 5:21 PM
Thank you for this essay, Mr. Cho. Thank you also for continuing to say "Burma." There's no reason why Western media should play by this regime's rules.
Posted by: I and I | June 9, 2008 11:29 PM
Very interesting. Thanks.
Does anyone know the story behind "Myanmar" as opposed to "Burma"?
Posted by: carl copas | June 10, 2008 11:02 AM
A very good comment on the situation in Burma. It recalls the statement that "it is better to light a candle than curse the dark". Unfortuately too many in the media and elsewhere have been cursing the dark in Burma rather than lighting candles. I have lived in Burma and am confident that the Burmese people will pull through despite the huge challenges they face. They have been doing this for centuries, which is why Burma continues to survive, and in some respects even thrive, despite its many problems. The hand wringing by outsiders about the plight of Burma results mostly from ignorance not only of what is possible under current conditions there but also of what Burma is and has been for centuries.
Posted by: Don Jameson | June 10, 2008 12:48 PM
In response to the enquiry about the origin of the name of Burma/Myanmar, see the Wikipedia article "Names of Burma"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Burma
My neighbor, former missionary in Burma, agrees with the basic info in this article.
Posted by: Norman Abell | June 10, 2008 1:29 PM
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