Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Politics | 06/11/2008 1:37 pm

Adelle Lutz on the Latest From Burma: 'We Watch As They Beat Their Children'

By Adelle Lutz
Burmese refugee
Adelle Lutz

‘wOw Friend’ Adelle Lutz, an artist and Burma activist, is reporting from Bangkok, Thailand, on the post-cyclone situation in Burma.

Special Express no.1 is a creaky, squealing old thing that pitches and lurches as unpredictably as a bad dance partner. The door opens incessantly with a pneumatic pah-ffffff sound.

It is just before sunrise. With too little sleep, yawning and yawing, I roll with its punches to the endless pah-fffffs and cacophony of train orchestrations. Then I think of how easily I boarded, how I was served a tasty duck curry with vegetable soup dinner and how graciously the attendant made up my bed with crunchy sheets and a clean toweling blanket. There but for the grace of God; the luck of the draw – I am not a captive citizen of Burma.

It is now more than a month since Cyclone Nargis claimed 134,000 lives and left 2.5 million people in urgent need of help. Four long weeks have come and gone and half of the victims have yet to receive any care whatsoever. Access, vehicles and even basic means of communication are still routinely denied to humanitarian workers. Those hanging on in the Irrawaddy Delta speak of spotty aid — at best — with most relief coming from monks and intrepid citizens braving treacherous byways for hours at a time in small crafts with smaller loads of life-saving supplies.

They buy guns and worse from China, India and Russia to use on their children. Still, we politely avert our eyes and say, 'It is a family matter ...'

"The people can survive with self-reliant efforts even if they are not given chocolate bars from the international community," snarled the regime through official mouthpiece newspapers. They added that plump frogs were aplenty in the mud — get moving, stop being a nuisance, start planting.

How? How does one pick up when hungry and thirsty, sick and homeless, when grieving for family, friends, homes, villages, animals and even soil and seeds? All means of support are gone. I am told over and over that the revered monks must now soothe the spirits of the dead – not only the human spirits but the animal spirits that perished as well. All sentient beings are precious; their souls are restless. This must happen to allay the great fear of the ghosts of those returning to the chaos of nothingness that is the Irrawaddy Delta.

The “USS Essex” has now been ordered away. What a massive psyche attack on the people of Burma that news must be and what hoots of triumph around the generals’ table.

"We need two things: physical rehabilitation and, equally important, we must have psychological rehabilitation," said Bo Kyi, director of Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) with deep feeling. "The people need the spokesperson. Aung San Suu Kyi is the hope for the people. They are so low right now. She is the key to Burma’s psychological rehabilitation. She is the hope we cannot buy with money."

I can think of no comparable world leader. After her party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), won the overwhelming mandate with more than 80 percent of the popular vote, the junta immediately put her under arrest and imprisoned NLD officials. Aung San Suu Kyi is the only Nobel Peace Laureate under lock and key. Word is now official; her sentence has been extended again, and will now total 20 years with 13 in detention.

How must she feel separated from the millions who so dearly need "the lady," as she is affectionately known? In their not wanting to "politicize" the cyclone relief effort, the United Nations, ASEAN (Association of South East Asian Nations) and international NGO (non-governmental organization) leaders have, across the board, evaded mention of her name for fear of reprisals from the wacko generals.

But it has, in fact, been absolutely political from the beginning. It is precisely why this morally bankrupt regime never warned the people, why humanitarian aid still sits in Rangoon (and in stalls in the markets), why only seven helicopters are available to deliver WHO supplies when the "USS Essex" had 23 at the ready. Larry Jagan, a freelance journalist based in Bangkok, gave confirmation to what had been hearsay for weeks – that Gen. Than Shwe had ordered planes moved out of Rangoon and safely north before the storm.

Why was his navy left out of the loop? Those stationed in the delta were decimated along with the locals. Odd. Could this peculiar behavior point to rifts in the military? If not before Nargis, then surely now. The generals have monumentally screwed up and they know that the people know.

18 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Frannie Em
Adelle, What can we do? We have donated, but that isn’t getting to the people. Can the American people email and write Asean or the United Nations to get them on the ball. This is a global problem. If it brought out that not enough steps are being taken to get the aid to the people, if we can put enough international pressure on the international groups, then maybe something will happen. The world has become numb to disaster. There is so much of it. The dinger goes off for another untenable situation and we strive to know what to do.
By Frannie Em on 06/11/2008 2:43 pm
Jackie Blue
Political genocide that is hidden by natural disaster. I think the world leaders can do what needs to be done. I think they choose to help when it benefits #1. If helping causes any political problem with the government that runs the people, or if the leaders of the country decide that help is not necessary, because it shows weakness … good luck. This makes us all feel so helpless. Our hearts sink deeper with every tragedy. We have no other choice but to become numb to the disasters of humans, what do we do? One image that comes to mind..is Air Force One flying over New Orleans with Bush looking out the window at the “tiny little dead people and all the tiny little roofs”.
By Jackie Blue on 06/11/2008 10:42 pm
M L Staats
This breaks my heart. I can rant and cry over the government of Burma but then I am reminded that our own president took five days to view the Katrina aftermath. I feel so powerless …
By M L Staats on 06/12/2008 12:17 am
Dona Howlett
Doesn’t it just make you sick when you think we (Americans) are spending Billions of dollars fighting an unnecessary War in Iraq and this kind of thing is going on in the World. My God, what’s wrong with mankind. So much suffering and it makes one feel so helpless.
By Dona Howlett on 06/12/2008 2:43 am
G T
It is most difficult to know how best to approach a hostile government (Burma) with aid for their people. We intervened in Iraq where the government was commiting genocide on a large scale and nobody seems glad that we went to the aid of those people. Prior to invasion on Iraq we did everything possible to elicit the cooperation of the Iraqi government to no avail. People were marched out into the desert. shot and dumped in large massive graves that had been previously dug. Children were buried alive with parents who had been shot and pushed into those mass graves. We intervened in Iraq and the whining about it has been non stop ever since. Everyone just focuses on who didn’t have the correct information, or lied. More Americans are shot down on the streets every year in America than are killed in Iraq. Why isn’t anyone upset about this problem. Every day in the San Francisco Chronicle or the Sacramento Bee I read where 1 or 2 or 3 people were shot down on the street in what are possible “gang related” killings. I just read in the paper that about 4000 people a year are killed in the US by drunk drivers. Why aren’t we all upset and doing something about that??? We turn a blind eye to the terrible toll that drugs and alcohol take on our young people. So, should we “intervene” in Burma, in those awful countries that Ashley Judd talked about?? I think American people have been the most generous people in the world with all kinds of help, including huge sums of money. People around the world seem to hate us for it. We keep helping and giving anyway but the problems never seem to go away or be solved. Maybe we need to solve the problems at home first. Why is it that in our country such a large portion of our population seems to need some kind of illegal drugs to get through the day? Or no entertainment is good enough unless you are stoned. Why do our kids think they have to be drugged up to have any pleasure or success in life. The money being raked in by the drug cartels comes right out of the pockets of our citizens and that money goes to arm gangster on a world wide scale. Why don’t we do something about this? I guess I see too many things right here under our very noses that need to be solved and when out of generosity and good will help is offered to some tin horned little dictator to help his people and they refuse..well, Im for one, just of the opinion that we should come home and spend our money at home and fix the illness eating away at our own people. Sorry about the rant. I think I got out on the wrong side of the bed this morning. Maybe as soon as Obama is elected President, he will walk on the water and fix everything..Im waiting for that day.
By G T on 06/12/2008 9:35 am
Jackie Blue
GT it’s true, I guess all anyone can do is “love their neighbor”. Fight the demons that destroy…….. and pray. I think the frustration and anger we all feel stems from the fact that we are all one and all connected. We all mourn every death and every tragedy and do what we can to prevent more. Each death and tragedy is like a loosing a limb. There are never enough bandages. The strong have to help the weak. When they look and do nothing for five days……. ??
By Jackie Blue on 06/12/2008 9:55 am
Ulla
Dear Jackie Blue:
 Yes: “Fight the demons that destroy…….. and pray. I think the frustration and anger we all feel stems from the fact that we are all one and all connected. ” I had just pondered on that on another thread, when I found your comment here… - ‘… this is all a reminder that we are becoming part of a ‘world culture’ … welcoming cultures to live side-by-side, non-judgemental, but also watching out and defining human rights (in our own and other societies) … not an easy task! … - this is one world, and in our precious human incarnation we are totally responsible for each other and infinitely interconnected within this world …’ Frannie Em, Jackie Blue, ML Staats, Dona H, G T … just that your are here, on this thread, reading, agonizing, wondering … that is part of the change, that is your prayer. We all already know how to help in many ways … we can sympathize, pray and hold compassion for the miseries of the world in our hearts, we “can donate”, we can put on pressure if we “think the world leaders can do what needs to be done”, and we “should come home and spend our money at home and fix the illness eating away at our own people” … whichever the choice, wherever we see our personal focus - just taking a step is part of the change, don’t wait for ‘the leaders’ … Sending aid is the compassionate step to do (even into a political nightmare void), sending ‘intervention/war’ is never compassionate (and I am sorry, intervening in Iraq was not done out of compassion for the people there, - no better image than the one Jackie B. painted here regarding the level of compassion this administration is capable of…, turning young men into soldiers/killers is never the compassionate thing to do … ) Here is something from Ashley Judd’s Speech to the UN, (and how I tried to thank her for it): “The art of compassionate witnessing is at the core of global change and peace building. / … prevention, protection and prosecution … the three “Ps” must become the norm in national legislations and policies worldwide … / ” (paraphrased) ” Dear Ashley Judd, Thank you for not being speechless and not being helpless, … thank you for finding the words, and using the power of your words to report with such intelligence and emotion, … thank you for turning the power of words into the power of action, … thank you for showing the possibility of solutions, and the responsibility and ability of each individual to contribute to those solutions. “Active wisdom, i.e. a clear analysis of reality, and active compassion, i.e. individual responsibility towards ending human suffering, those are the two wings of a powerful bird flying on the path of liberation.” (from my notes, from the teachings of HH the 14th Dalai Lama, NYC 1o/2007)” Please, dear ladies, never ever feel hopeless or powerless! Namaste.
By Ulla on 06/12/2008 2:05 pm
Frannie Em
Ulla, Great Post. Let me ask you. I have a hard time finding an “active post” to join a conversation. I have to hop around back and forth. How about you?
By Frannie Em on 06/12/2008 5:49 pm
Ulla
Dear Frannie … thanks so much … good to find you here … I had posted to you (and ML) on another thread (which one … oy vey, my memory these days…) - but: now you can actually click on my ‘avatar’ and see my posts, that is such a great feature … also, by reviewing one’s own posts one gets a bit of a look at one’s ‘ramblings’(healthy for me…) re. active post/ joining a conversation … yeah, I know what you mean … I think the web-site has changed not only in design … it’s more ‘magazine-style’, as someone remarked on the ‘new design’ thread … so there are less conversations going on … everyone is just dropping their comments here and there … re. your question, re. my ‘avatar’ (thought that term was only used in games … oh what do iI know about the web world …) - anyway, yes, it’s a bit of my own digital-art play; a cell phone picture of a shadow (of a very artistic fence) on the sidewalk and then colorized and blown-up a bit … I am trying to be a writer but also dabble a bit in art …
By Ulla on 06/12/2008 10:20 pm
Frannie Em
Ulla, That is so interesting how you made your avatar. Fabulous. I will check your posts and see what you posted. Now when I get on I check others avatars to see if they are currently posting anywhere, or take a cursory view of the number of postings on a question, otherwise it is just hunt and peck.
By Frannie Em on 06/15/2008 2:05 am
Ulla
hi Frannie Em, thanks … glad to find you again, hope you are having a lovely Sunday! … I have been off the site for a bit … can’t really get used to the new design, find it all a bit confusing, maybe the topics … still pondering to send a ‘critique/suggestions’ of the site to wow, but don’t really have the time … but I loved reading the latest thread on Edith Ann … you all are so sweet and creative there … that’s fun
By Ulla on 06/15/2008 3:53 pm
Frannie Em
Hi Ulla, Understanding the format is getting a little easier. It seems like there are more questions on with more places to go, so gives the sense that it is a little more diced up. The search engine works well. If I don’t remember where an article is I just put it in the search engine, and wa la there it is. I am getting a little faster. I love the Edith Ann posts, such a clever idea because everyone can have a little fun there and be a girl.
By Frannie Em on 06/15/2008 7:12 pm
Frannie Em
GT A very poignant post. I am also concerned about the drug cartels in Mexico. They are destroying the country, creating a nomadic class that has to leave their family and homes to come here to work. My son told me that just about everyone he knows in school has tried pot. How will they live responsible lives if they don’t get it together? We aren’t going to be around forever. crazy.
By Frannie Em on 06/12/2008 5:53 pm
Ulla
Dear Adelle Lutz … thank you for keeping us informed here! “All should use “Aung San Suu Kyi” as a mantra in every conversation, at every level. The Burmese people will hear and take heart.” … it is an excellent mantra … not only in this specific situation, but also as a reminder that there are always individuals holding out hope! (PS. a little quibble with editorial … the headline is not too well chosen, misleading, taken out of context, from something Ms. Lutz quoted and so on … these articles deserve editoral care, please)
By Ulla on 06/12/2008 1:01 pm
Tanya Whorwood
I couldnt agree more. Aung Sung Suu Kyi would be my vote for strong woman of the century. I so much admire her and weep for her.Did I see someone proposing Maggie Thatcher? I live in England and that woman did so much to destroy th moral fabric of this country. I digress. Burma has slipped from the headlines and we meed to be told what is still happening. Aung Sung Suu Kyi should be in our minds every day alongside the continuing tragedy. Tanya
By Tanya Whorwood on 06/19/2008 4:53 am