Adventures in LauraLand

Welcome to LauraLand. This blog documents my time living & working on the Thai-Burma border. The accounts on these pages are true & offer you, dear reader, the opportunity to be exposed to something likely foreign to your daily life. I encourage you to share this blog with others & thus do your part to carry the message of the inequity & human rights abuses that occur in such faraway lands like Burma. Thanks to AJWS & their support for my wanderings. Cheers to adventures and world change...

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Cell

Bloggosphere:

I write to you from my beloved desk with the electricity flickering in and out and a deluge pounds my roof. The only consistent light is that of my laptop as it relies on its battery for survival, its neglective attendant (me) typing away and crossing her fingers it won’t die before I get my thoughts down on its electronic surface.

And in the meantime all the bugs in the house are magnetized to this very computer screen, preening themselves and flexing their back legs in what I assume to be some animal kingdom mating ritual.

It’s nearly midnight and I am scrambling like mad to impart my words to you, for fear all my thoughts will leave my head if I go to sleep now.

Things here are, per usual, beautiful, rewarding, rainy, sunny, hilarious, surprising, fascinating, and inspirational. They are also confusing, and raw. So raw that I don’t know what to make of it at times.

Tonight is one example. The “social life” to which I was accustomed in my first month here, consisting of a great British dude taller than Pinnochio’s nose is long, a German man who shadily shares his home with his “woman” and engages in some sort of “importing and exporting,” and a man named Jimmy with the largest girth I have seen on this side of the planet, (Jimmy hails from America, of course, and is an ex soldier who first came over this way as a confused and rebellious 17-year-old during “‘Nam.” He is intensely convinced that all of Thailand and Thai people are going to hell in a hand basket, and emphasized his rationale with the ever convincing and frequent use of the word “fuck.”), has given way to a more consistent and optimistic crew, marked mainly by their shared desire to advance human rights.

I joined a group of 8 or so for an incredible dinner. We meandered down to one of the “houseboats” populating the shoreline here on Sangkhalia Lake (the lake around which my town is centered) and sat down there for some delicious Thai food.

After consuming chunks of a fish so large that it warranted a Kodak moment, wading through the grease-infused omelet and inadvertently sucking down two chilies, my friends and I delved into conversations more indulgent than the food we had just eaten during which we discussed development, opportunities, human rights, independence, cultural differences, the paths that had led us to this table and more. While the houseboat swaying led some to near seasickness I settled on a feeling of absolute contentment and amazement that I had arrived at this moment surrounded by a group of open-minded, interested and interesting individuals who look at the world as something larger than themselves and take action to be a part of that world.

Bellies full, we paid our bill and wandered back towards home, laughing and making snarky comments as one individual shared an anecdote of a near death experience on the NYC subway.

And with that I felt this scene of my dreamlike lifestyle here had ended and would pick up again in the morning. At least this is what I thought.

It’s funny how when you run into a person you know randomly, or see something crazy you think that if you hadn’t done this or that that you would have never seen that person, never witnessed that thing, never heard that cry.

So there I was walking home—not biking like usual, delayed just so due to the time I took saying goodbye, turning the corner, etc., doing all these things that determined the very second I would walk by this random house and see what I would see.

And this is what I saw: a man dragging a woman on the floor. And this is what I heard: yelling. And this is what I did: I stood, watching, in front of their house, paralyzed. I did not ignore it because of my outrage, and I did not run towards them for fear of this abuse and my place as a total stranger who does not belong in it. And in five seconds the yelling was over and I could see the woman getting to her feet, and I hide behind a nearby fence and listened.

And then she emerged from her house into the drizzle and dim light on the street and she was crying and holding the back of her head where a huge welt had formed.

At this point I had turned and feigned walking as though I’d heard nothing. I approached her as she gasped for air through her sobs and began to speak. I spoke in English, in broken bits and pieces of Thai and Mon and it seemed none of these words had an effect. So I just did what I could—I took her hand and walked with her away from her house, going to wherever we were going—friends by accident, by odd fate.

She looked like a teenager and I would have assumed it was her father who had done the beating if it weren't for the wedding ring on her left hand. After walking for a bit and feeling the back of her head swell larger we sat on the side of the road. She wasn’t bleeding, but she kept running her hand through her hair, checking for blood, and when she did not see it seeming unconvinced. I tried to think about the last time I had hurt my head so badly that I was bleeding or at least thought I was. I determined it was never.

Eventually an acquaintance of both her and her husband drove by, speaking in Burmese to her and saying something about English to me. He left and returned five minutes later with a woman who spoke perfect English and served not only as a translator between me and this woman—who’s name is pronounced Eh-Kaa—but also an informant on the general situation of domestic violence among Burmese ethnic groups.

As for Eh-Kaa’s situation, she and her husband are natives of Burma, hoping to be in Thailand for a brief time during which they can make money to support their parents back inside Burma. Both Eh-Kaa and her husband work extremely hard: a 14-hour shift each day at a clothing factory for her and a different factory job for her husband, who also drives a motorbike taxi at night for extra cash. They have been married for one year and have no children. Eh-Kaa explained tonight’s situation honestly—she had come home from work to a dinner her husband had made. She tasted it and told him it was bad and that he should throw it away. He took her suggestion, throwing the curry and then throwing punches at her.

The abuse in their relationship is regular. Tonight’s, however, was worse than normal. Embarrassed and angry, Eh-Kaa’s husband had taken to his motorbike after hitting her and fled to his parents house nearby.

As for violence among the Burmese population, the English-speaking woman reported that physical violence is common among husbands and wives and ingrained in the culture. She informed me that the best thing to do for Eh-Kaa and her husband was to tell the neighbors to keep an eye on the couple, and if the beating is really bad—life-threateningly so—we will find a way to help Eh-Kaa out of her situation. It kills you to hear something like this. And it also kills you to know that at the moment, this recourse is probably the best thing to do. Tonight I felt helpless.

The evening ended as we dropped Eh-Kaa back at her home, an austere two-room cement block. Her husband was still gone, and Eh-Kaa reported she would lock him out this evening if he did attempt to come home and I believed her.

Eh-Kaa’s face was stained with tears and the ugliness of fear and unhappiness when I said goodbye to her. She looked young and small in her concrete apartment. Her door isn’t what we think of as a traditional door, but more of a heavy, metal garage-like door and she struggled to close it by herself. I lent her a hand and as I watched her face disappear from my vision and listened to her deadbolt her door I couldn’t help but feel she was locking herself into a prison cell.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Tomorrow

" 'Tomorrow' written on the wall."

This is what one friend from Burma told me about how people think of democracy in her country.

"We write it on the wall," she said, "so that we keep our hope for democracy 'tomorrow.' But then again, writing on the wall is not easily erased."

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Catapulted to motherhood

Yelloooo brave soldiers!

Greetings, once again, from the uproariously large, claustrophobic, crowded, and, dare I say it... beautiful city of Bangkok.

I find myself here a second time in two weeks to attend a conference on human trafficking. At such conferences as these I find my head exploding with ideas throughout the day, be it through a conversation with an individual with similar interests, during a lecture, or chowing down on some coconut-curry soup. At these moments I want to suddenly jump up and down with excitement about some strange or brilliant thought that comes through my head and feel much like I've just drank three cups of coffee and cannot sit still. Does this happen to you? Please say yes.

Needless to say the information and thought-provocation that occurs at these things is priceless, more so than any mastercard ad I've seen yet.

I'd now like to redirect your attention to another subject, however. That of motherhood.

Yes, motherhood. It seems I have become one. No, no, there are no pregnancies involved, just a process of growing ever closer to my incredible, delightful, stupendous students. True, many of them are older than me, and true, many of them are just as much a doting parent to me as I am to them, but still I can't seem to help laughing when they laugh, crying when they cry, swelling with pride when they overcome difficult situations, and raging with anger when they throw away an opportunity. In fact, in just the two nights I have spent away from them I have stopped myself from calling them to check on them on various occasions, reassuring myself that it will only be a few more nights away from these darling babies.

I think it may be fitting to first update you on who these people are and why they are so incredible. I work with 14 (formerly 15, but one recently left for Burma where she is negotiating a marriage proposal-- a difficult subject that deserves a blog entry itself) citizens of Myanmar (which I regularly refer to as its former name, "Burma"). They are all of the Mon ethnicity (there are 8 major ethnicities in Burma, all seeming to want self-determination, making things very difficult...) and are from the Mon and Karen States in Burma. They have exhausted all education opportunities provided them by the Burmese military junta government(including university-- which all agree is totally corrupt and leaves them with what is still considered a very poor education by Western standards) and are now in a "post-ten" (after grade 10) school created by the Mon State Education Department. This "post-ten" school is located in the jungle, in a place where electricity is nonexistent and mosquitoes reign supreme (all my students except for one have had malaria). The Mon Women's Organization, working with the Mon Education Department, bring the students to study in Thailand, quite close to the border of their country, so that a native-English speaker can teach them (ahem... Laura).

Unfortunately, I cannot give the bucket-load of details I would like, due to security reasons for many involved, but it is safe to say that the students are making many sacrifices to be here in Sangkhlaburi studying with yours truly.

My students come from a place where they do not have the rights to which we are so happily accustomed in the U.S. and other Western countries. Simplicities of infrastructure, health, education, gender, and economic rights-- to name just some of the areas involved-- are not granted to my students or their families. Many have spent time in refugee or resettlement camps, and many have felt imminent danger. Many have moved due to attacks on their villages by the military junta. Many have family members working in other countries to make money and send it back home, and some of these guys have never seen these family members again, as their relatives lack the opportunity to return home, or in the worst case, suffered from fatal injuries while working the least desirable jobs of the world.

Enraged by this unfairness and given the opportunity to further their education (unlike many of their siblings and friends who must work to assist their families), my students have incredible visions for themselves to be at the forefront of politics, democracy-building, international NGO involvement, health, and more.

So there you have a snippet of what they have been through and go through. Now. Let's get down to it. Who are these guys? Well, you may recall I had a photo up for a few weeks, but I recently took it down, again, due to security concerns. But for those of you who did see their shining faces, you may have guessed that my students are incredibly vivacious and happy people. They are a hilarious bunch of people. They are wise, intelligent, and take advantage of opportunities like no one I have ever known. Whether I am teaching them about Nelson Mandela or how to correctly use the terminology "that sucks," they absorb information in an incredible way. They possess a wide range of things I consider skills, but that they think of as as natural as breathing, such as cooking incredible meals, fixing anything that is broken, killing snakes and other crazy beasts that climb out of the cupboard when least expected, making their own clothes, using everything around them in nature as a means of nutrition, a tool, a medicine, or something else, and so much more.

Sometimes I suffer from communal living overload (as I eat most meals with these guys and reside next door), but I've actually found that the remedy to this situation, oddly enough, is to spend even more time with my students, which reminds me just what cool people they are. I mean, how can you not laugh when, after you teach the word "boob," one of your male students declares that he "only has a small boob." Freaking phenomenal.

Okay, enough words to swarm around in your head for now.

Small boobs for everyone--

Laura!

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Feast your eyes on this...

These kiddos just showed up at my open window one day. I put on Madonna and we had a sporadic dance party (apparently I've had a latent love of Madonna for sometime). For the next hour they proceeded to terrorize me by pretending they would leave, and then enter my house and hide in various crevices. Fab.

Jungle love. It's driving me mad. It's making me crazy.