For more than 50 years, Burma has been ruled by a succession of military regimes which rank among the most oppressive dictatorships in the world. Accused of crimes against humanity, they have brutally mistreated their people.
Yet, in the last few years, the pace of change has been breathtaking. Much is now hoped for. However, Burma is one of the most ethnically diverse nations in Southeast Asia: there are roughly seven major ethnic groups living along its borders. They have a long history of conflict with the government and have been cruelly treated by the current regime. Their future affects the country as a whole, as Benedict Rogers explains. Drawing heavily on his many fact-finding visits both inside Burma and along its frontiers, he gives a unique appraisal of the current ethnic situation and its implications for the nation as a whole.
Wide-ranging, expertly researched, and full of brand new accounts of the courage and determination of the Burmese people, Burma: A Nation at the Crossroads explains the country's conflicted history, as well as its contemporary struggle for justice. Burma stands poised for freedom, or for further repression. No one can be sure. This fascinating and accessible book describes what is really happening inside this beautiful, secretive, and potentially prosperous country.
A searing and uncomfortable narrative of Burma's recent history. Rogers draws on decades of reporting to discuss the fractures within the 'Union of Myanmar'.
It's extremely detailed and the alphabet soup of Burma's political landscape often gets tedious but overall a good read for anyone interested in understanding how there is more to Burma's ethnic conflicts than the Rohingya crisis.
This is a book about a long-suffering country named Burma, or Myanmar. For most of its life, Burma is under the iron grip of military rule, which is painfully inept at ruling yet succeeding in holding on to power through sheer brutality and utter ruthlessness. From forced labour and child soldiering down to outright genocide, Burmese military, the Tatmadaw had done it all. Many momentous events of Burma were explained in this book, from the fall of Ne Win regime, the (failed) ascendancy of Aung San Suu Kyi, the Saffron Revolution, the Cyclone Nargis, right to the military regime’s efforts to implement reform in kind of ‘disciplined democracy’. What amazes me are the tenacity of Tatmadaw, what they lacked in administrative competence, they covered it with an amazing sense of political survival, managing its own safety and its even independence from the new civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi, which started with so many promises, yet ended up bending its knees to the whims of the military, the solid proof being Suu Kyi’s reluctance to stood against the ethnic persecution of the Rohingyas and other minority ethnic groups, which was promoted by radical xenophobic buddhists and military. My reaction after reading this book would be a feeling of numbness, which is caused by being angry again and again at the Tatmadaw’s atrocities and the world’s ignorance of it, while being amazed by its own ability to get away with it.
Burma has not had a chance to be a unified. Ethnic minorities have engaged in uprisings to gain independence and equal rights. The Burmese military regime has responded with armed forces to restore order ever since it gained power in 1958 and regained its rule after a coup d’état in 1962. What initially was seen as uprisings has developed into a form of civil war which political organisations were set up and villagers were trained to become armies, such as one of the ethnic groups’ long and powerful resistance force, Karen’s Karen National Union (KNU) and its Karen National Defence Organisation. The atrocious attacks on Karen people by the military regime have lost many lives and burnt down many villages. This fact is what almost everyone in the world has become aware of today. However, what we have heard less of is that a Karen man was caught, tied up to a tree upside down, eyes gouged out and drowned (55). Or a Shan women and her two daughters being “gang-raped by over fifty soldiers (64)”. Or a twelve-year old Kachin boy recalling “how his mother was shot dead (86)”. This is only few of the stories the author aims to deliver. The situation of Burma and the struggle of the people is not happening in one place or in one ethnic group, but there are various other factors involved. The author argues that this can only be understood by looking at Burma as a whole and by telling their stories of suffering “almost in silence, virtually unheard, unknown, and un-helped (p. xxi)”. The author successfully accomplishes this by narrating stories he heard from his multiple visits to Burma’s ethnic regions and meeting actual people with first-hand experience of the brutal attacks by the military. However, his encounters are not limited to victims of this ethnic fight, but also Burmans who are fighting for democracy, displaced people for religious reasons, and former soldiers. His wide range of sources allow him to achieve his goal of taking a holistic view on Burma. The author introduces several organisations that fight along them by issuing reports about them to gather attention from the outside. He strategically takes the book to the conclusion that with the solidarity among various groups of people and the support from outside, Burma can change itself, as it is now at the crossroads. Since 2000, the author has visited Burma multiple times to the borderlands where the ethnic groups are. He has also visited the borders where many refugees are displaced. He has “looked into the eyes of (xxiii)” the people fighting for freedom in their own country. His visits are not limited to the peripheries but also main cities, such as Rangoon, Mandalay and Naypyidaw. The variety of people he encountered can be seen from the arrangement of chapters; ethnic groups in the East, North, and West; “Stateless people (127)”, who he calls the Rohingyas of; former adult and child soldiers of the Burma Army; and protestors of the Saffron Revolution. He does not separate one group from the others and specialise in them. He instead categorises them all into one group as fighting against the same enemy. On the one hand, he is speaking for the victims of the military regime. However, he does not blame the people carrying out the attacks. The uniqueness of the book is where he includes episodes with officers of the Burma Army which show that they have a soft side and are just taking orders. He includes his casual interaction with one of the officers while waiting for the plane in the process of his deportation and an account from a foreign woman when the soldiers came to her house with rifles but all naturally focused on her smiling baby. Through this he is able to show that the fault is not entirely on the people but on the system that forces them to act brutally. As one of the groups fighting for Burma’s freedom, he also introduces a variety of non-profit, non-government organisations that are fighting with the people and also playing an important role in informing the world of the situation through newsletters, reports, and articles. These organisations include Free Burma Rangers, Women’s League of Chinland, the Human Rights Foundation of Monland, Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, and so the list goes on. Most of these organisations are unheard of and yet crucial to the battle for freedom, as they have reliable statistical data of deaths, displaced, raped, child soldiers, and many more violation of human rights. In the case of Shan State, which is the largest state located in the east and has the largest population, from 1996 to 1998, 80,000 Shans fled to Thailand, 1,400 villages were forcibly relocated, 300,000 people were attacked by armed forces, 300 people were killed in one town, and 664 people were executed, according to the Shan Human Rights Foundation (64). Shan Women’s Action Network (SWAN) reported in 2001, between 1996 and 2001, there were 173 incidents of rape involving 625 women and girls, which 61 percent were gang rapes and 25 percent ended killed (64). The issue of rapes in Shan state was brought into awareness for the first time by the reports, which prompted investigation by the US State Department. These numbers have drawn public attention from outside the country. Burma: a nation at the crossroads, is a new type of book on Burma, which is unlike the others that specialise in one dimension of the country or take a viewpoint of an ethnic group. Instead, he aims to illustrate the fight of the people in Burma as a whole. Ethnic groups scattered in the borderlands, Burmans in the cities led by Aung San Suu Kyi, Christians and Muslims, former Burma Army soldiers, all have been abused by and suffered from the military regime. Yet, they stand up against the regime and continue to fight for their freedom. In addition, non-governmental and non-profit organisations have also joined the fight to raise awareness outside. The author concludes that the combination of courage of the people and support from outside will bring peace to Burma. With abundant sources of first-hand interviews and information from a wide range of groups of people, the author successfully achieves to demonstrate his equal position among the people, although biased on them as a whole against the military regime, and lead to the conclusion that Burma is at the crossroads to become a better country. With solidarity among the people and support from the outside, Burma is able to accomplish the change.
Can’t help but feel Rogers is exaggerating slightly, but he makes no pretense about where he stands and his work is incredibly important for documenting and giving voice to the events and people of Burma.
A necessary book and a well-written one.
My only other thought, as I contemplate this now, is the extent to which the groups are incredibly fractured / misunderstanding / dismissive of one another, e.g. do the Karen support the Rohingya? Were the monks protesting during the Saffron Revolution at all sympathetic (or aware) of the plight of the Shan? To what extent are the Buddhist Burman ethnic minorities more privileged than the non?
Based on conversations with my uncle, who is working in Burma, it seems the situation is currently just as dire as ever, with very little leadership calling for a unified or federalist state. Certainly the treatment of the Rohingya is absolutely deplorable and a human rights nightmare. The well-touted benefits of social media for democratic revolution, it seems, can be just as easily turned to the cause of persecution and mob rule.
This book provides a comprehensive summary of what has happened during the oppression. It is horrible to know that such peace loving people could do horrible acts. Burma has seen lots of her people being oppressed, not just Rohingyas.. If what the author said is true, may all sentient beings in Burma be well and happy. Your voices will not be unheard again.
I looked forward to reading the book and to learn more about the subject.
I stopped reading about one-third of the book. I do not doubt the atrocities that the ethnic peoples of Burma have suffered.
However, the author kept recounting the atrocities of one people and then those of another. I learned that the Burmese military hade inflicted great sufferings on the peoples. But what else?
I thought the book provided a fantastic summary to the post independent struggles faced by the country. I enjoyed Rogers' storytelling technique of moving through the events and struggles chronologically.
Recommended for an introductory read about modern Burmese politics.
The book briefly covers Burma gaining independence in the mid-20th Century. The remainder provides accounts of how the military dictatorship has ruthlessly oppressed minority groups and political opponents in various parts of the country.
Other than the familliar names Thein Sein, Than Shwe, and Aung San Suu Kyi; the book was a mish-mash of acronyms, names, dates and location. The book reads as an effective piece of advocacy and political essay (as the author has intended). The narrative of Burma's modern History and it's people is not as well described. For example, the stories of ethnic minorities and survivors of political imprisonment are featured as 1-2 page vignettes.
One particularly important part of the book is the discussion in the epilogue about anti-Muslim violence and persecution of Rohingya in Burma. Having personally worked with Rohinya refugees, this minority of Burma is not discussed enough.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu calls this "An important introduction to Burma - comprehensive, vivid, and powerful." I agree on all counts. Having recently travelled through the country, I was looking for more information on its history, on what led to the crossroads it now finds itself at. Benedict Rogers doesn't disappoint. While incredibly informative in a way that is easy to digest, it's also impossible to read his account of those suffering in Burma without feeling moved. It has ignited in me a want to discover more about a country I knew so little about only a few weeks ago. If that isn't testament to its quality as an introductory text, I don't know what is.
No new information on Burma, except for the detailed accounts of torture done by the military regime on the ethnic minorities. The writing style is not engaging. But good for people new to Burma to have a quick overview.
This book is probably the most up-to-date and widely available book on the Myanmar regime. Technically, it is an updated version of an early print of the book. It covers the history of the country, though it emphasizes stories of human rights abuses more so than contextual detail or analysis.
Very informative and interesting book. This would be a great place to start if you are looking into the reason why Myanmar (Burma) is where it is today.