Living to Help His Shan People
“Inside Shan State we cannot teach Shan language. And, when youth talk about politics there is retaliation. Even talking about the meaning of democracy, even thinking about the meaning of democracy is dangerous.” Said twenty year old Kawn Wan.
By Antonio Graceffo
After his family was murdered and his village Burned, Kawn Wan
completed his education and became a teacher and caretaker of orphans in
Shanland, Loi Tailang, Shan State Army (SSA) Headquarters.
“You
foreigners, when you aren’t happy with something, you go and change it. You
protest and fight. But here in Burma, it is impossible for us.” He
explained.
Kawn Wan sits in the bamboo hut he shares with several other
teachers. The orphan dormitory is just across the way, and the boys are busy
hiking a mile, down the mountain to bath in the river and wash their school
uniforms for the next day. The uniforms are comprised of Shan trousers and
pressed white shirt.
“It takes an hour to get the shirt clean.” Said a
boy, toiling to bang out the wrinkles with a rock. Life in Loi Tailang is
predicated on schedules. Kawn Wan and a few other grown-up orphans are the
official caretakers of the young kids, but the children know their daily chores
and for the most part, they do them. This includes the two mile river hike,
daily, as the thrice daily hike all the way back to the school, on the other
side of the camp, where they get their meals.
Some boys who have
finished with their laundry are playing takraw, a game similar to volleyball,
where the feet, rather than hands, are used to get the rattan ball over the net.
The orphan area is surrounded by defense trenches and air raid tunnels, where
the boys know to take refuge in the event of an attack. Further down the hill is
a line of punji, sharpened stakes, designed to keep out the enemy. The steaks
serve as a warning, to keep innocent people from walking into the landmines.
Seeing the boys laugh as they struggle to kick the ball over the net,
you would think this was a normal school, at recess, anywhere. But it isn’t
anywhere. The school, the dormitory, the base, and Shanland itself are inside of
Burma. And, if it wasn’t for the thousands of Shan State Army soldiers
protecting them, the orphans, as well as all the other refugees, would be killed
by the forces of the SPDC, the junta that rules Burma.
“In Shanland,
even the little children when you ask, what is your dream, they say, I want to
go home.” Said Kawn Wan.
Most of the children came to Shanland because
the SPDC burned their villages or killed their parents. They seem happy to be
living in a place where they have so many brothers to play with, but like people
everywhere, their instinct is to want to go home. Unfortunately, there is no
home to go back to. And, until the war is over, or until Shanland wins its
independence, a trip to Loi Tailang is one way. It would be too dangerous for
the children to consider going back.
Kawn Wan came to Loi Tailing in
2001, and has now spent nearly half his life living as an orphan and Internally
Displaced Person (IDP).
When the SPDC killed his mother and forced Kawn
Wan to leave his village, in 1996, he was so young he couldn’t carry his own
gear.
“The SPDC soldiers came to our village and told us we had to move
into the town.”
The Burmese government forces frequently forcibly
relocate villagers in order to better control them. Those who resist relocation
are often murdered, and their homes are burned. In Kawn Wan’s case, his village
was forced to move into a city.
“In the city it is hard for us to
survive because we are countryside people. We don’t know how to get food in a
city. Some people escaped from the town. From when I left until now, I didn’t
hear anything about my family. They left the town to look for food. Then people
told me the SPDC caught them.”
Eventually, Kawn Wan made it to Loi
Tailang. He finished school and Shan college. Now, in addition to taking care of
the other children, he works as a teacher of English and Shan Kung Fu. Kawn Wan
teaches the nearly lost Shan martial art to the children in the hopes of
preserving their culture.
“If we do not win,” said a Shan military
officer, “Some day, if you want to know about Shan culture, you will need to go
to a museum.”
Some of the boys living in the orphanage are not orphans
in the strictest sense of the word. One or the other of their parents was still
alive when they came to live in Loi Tailang. Inside Shan State, the SPDC has
made life very difficult. Parents cannot take care of their children the way
they want to. Shan children don’t have access to education. At Loi Tailang, at
least the parents know that their children can attend school and get three basic
meals per day.
“They come day by day.” Says kawn Wan. “Some come alone,
and some come with a relative. Their Uncle or the headman bring them here,
because inside Shan State life is so bad. The government doesn’t allow us to
teach Shan language at school.”
The orphans here are not only Shan, but
also Lahu, Pa-O and Palong. The student body is composed of all of the ethnic
groups who live in Shan State. Colonel Yawd Serk, the military and political
leader of Shan State Army stresses the importance of racial tolerance. All of
the many ethnic groups in Burma have suffered at the hands of the Burmese Army,
but the SPDC has long used disunity as a tool for controlling the ethnics. If
they combine their forces, under a single military ruler, the many tribes far
outnumber the Burmese in the tribal areas. The Burmese soldiers are conscripts,
who suffer oppression at the hands of their superiors. The tribal people, on the
other hand, are fighting for their homes and families. United, there is no way
they would lose.
“All the ethnics can bring children here to study.”
Explained Kawn Wan. The term Shan State Nationalities is often used to describe
the many peoples living in Shan State. “Some of them can’t speak Shan when they
arrive here. So, they learn it. We also teach them English, Thai, and Burmese.”
“When I lived in Shan State I didn’t know what is democracy, what is
human rights, what is other countries do. I didn’t know. I came here and I was
sent to Shan college, and I learned. And now I can use my skill to help other
people.”
Between leaving his village and coming to Loi Tailang, Kawn Wan
lived as a novice monk in Thailand.
“I was a temple boy, cleaning the
temple and studying with the monks, but could not go to regular school because I
had no Id card.”
Many of the Shan leaders were monks in Thailand at some
time in their lives. Up to about age fifteen the Thai police are rather
forgiving about asking for ID. But, once the boys reach adulthood, they have to
have legal papers to remain in Thailand, or they have to go home. The problem
for the Shan, of course, is that they have no home to go back to. Luckily, Kawn
Wan found a home at Loi Tailang.
“When we live here, our heart is
warm. These children don’t have parents, so I love to help them and be an older
brother for them.”
What is the future for Kawn Wan’s young
students?
“When they graduate, they don’t have to be
soldiers.”
The Colonel gives the boys freedom to chose their own career.
“They can be teachers. They can be whatever they want. They can go to
work in an NGO, or in a government department.”
The government of
Shanland is called the Reconciliation Council of the Shan State (RCSS). The
governmental departments are in place, and staffed with bright young Shan
waiting for the world to recognize them as an independent country.
“If
we have only soldiers, we cannot build our country. So, we need to educate our
people, to have skills, to help develop our country. Even me, I lived with
soldiers for a long time, but I didn’t want to be a soldier. I want to be a
teacher. I don’t want to have a high position. I just want to stay with the
orphans and take care of them. This is my dream.”
“It is important to
teach the children what are human rights so they know the good way for
them.”
The Shan all respect Aung San Suu Kyi, but they are realists.
“I think the NLD (National League for Democracy) cannot do anything for
us inside of Shan State. We have never seen them. They haven’t visited us.
“I like other countries, they have democracy. I like Thailand. I only
don’t like that I don’t have the ID card, but our food and everything comes from
Thailand. I like the Thai King.” All Shan people respect His majesty, King Rama
IX of Thailand. On the day of his 80th birthday, no one worked in
Shanland. The villagers put on their best clothes and met at the temple to pray
for the King’s health.
“We teach the children to respect
Him.”
On the wall in his bamboo hut, just above his Buddhist shrine,
Kawn Wan, like so many other Shan, has a trinity of kings. These include, the
last Shan King, King Rama V of Thailand, and King Rama IX.
“Even if we
don’t know the future, our leader is trying his best to find our victory. Some
of us work in different ways, but we have the same goal. Some work like
soldiers. Some have skills and can help a lot of people. Even if we cannot go
live inside Shan State we can have our school, and we can teach the children
freely. Inside Shan State we cannot teach Shan language. And, when youth talk
about politics there is retaliation. Even talking about the meaning of
democracy, even thinking about the meaning of democracy is
dangerous.”
Kawn Wan is fully committed to the path he has chosen.
“I don’t think about getting married. I think about my students. I
sacrifice my life to help them.”
I asked Kawn Wan what message he would
like to send to the American people.
“I want the American people to
know that we have a country, but we cannot live in it. We have no human rights.
The Burmese government doesn’t do anything for us. We want the Americans to help
us, to tell the SPDC to give us democracy. We want the power in the hands for
our people. We want to live freely, like other countries. I think because in
America they have freedom, and in democracy country, they have rights, and they
will use their rights to help us. Please share our information with other
people.”
Antonio Graceffo is an adventure and martial arts author living
in Asia. He is the Host of the web TV show, “Martial Arts Odyssey,” Currently he
is doing a film and print project to raise awareness of the Shan people. To see
all of his videos about martial arts, Burma and other countries: http://youtube.com/results?search_query=antonio+graceffo&search=Search
Antonio
is the author of four books available on amazon.com Contact him Antonio@speakingadventure.com
see his website http://speakingadventure.com/burma.htm
Antonio
is self-funded and seeking sponsors. If you wish to contribute to the “In
Shanland” film project, you can donate through paypal, through the Burma page of
my website.
http://speakingadventure.com/burma.htm
Checkout
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Get Antonio’s books at amazon.com
The Monk from Brooklyn
Bikes, Boats, and Boxing Gloves
The Desert of Death on Three Wheels
Adventures in Formosa

