Burmese community in Sydney prays for Burma
The Sydney based Burmese Buddhist monks stand united with the ten thousand monks in Burma and pray for safety of the people and monks who take part in the on going peaceful protest against the military regime.
Burmese community in Sydney prays for Burma
By Sai Awn
23/09/07
The
Sydney based Burmese Buddhist monks stand united
with the ten thousand monks in Burma
and pray for safety of the people and monks who take part in the on going
peaceful protest against the military regime.
Today, the Burmese monks from four monasteries and more than hundred Sydney based Burmese democracy supporters hold a prayer
rally in Auburn Botany
Garden to support the demonstration in
Burma.
“We stand the same with the monks in Burma and strongly support their
peaceful protest against the military regime who recently responded brutally to
the monks” said an anonymous monk at the prayer rally.

The protest led by monks is the largest protest against the military regime
after the nationwide demonstration in 1988 and it has substantially increased
after the regime crackdown on a group of monks in Pakokku earlier this month.
Some monks who took part in a peaceful protest have been cruelly tortured by
the group of military regime.
“They were tied up at the tree, beaten, tortured and unrobed by the regime”
said Mr Maung Maung Aye, an organizer of the prayer rally and Burma MP. The
purpose of this event is to show our solidarity to the monks and people in Burma he said.
The monks and students are the pioneer of Burma
history who had been actively involved in the protest against the authority
when the British ruled Burma
and also during the rule of military regime since Ne Win took over power in
1962.
“Monks and people have a close connection, when people suffer the monks also
suffer. Since Burma
people are suffering in poverty under the oppressive regime, the monks have
difficulty for their survival as they rely on donations from the people. So the
monks try to help people get rid of the military regime” said Ven. Sandathiria
from Campsy monastery in Sydney.


