KyiMayKaungBurmese

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Review of my novella Black Rice, by Rosalind Lacey MacLennan



BLACK RICE  BY K. M. Kaung
Review by Rosalind Lacy MacLennan
K. M. Kaung's beautifully crafted, fascinating BLACK RICE, told in 42 pages, is a must-read to fully understand modern Myanmar.  Fractionalized political groups, that emerged after Independence in 1948 from the British Empire, strive for domination.
This well-constructed narrative builds to an ultimate high point, a twist of luck, at the end that left me gasping.
       As for structure, the black rice metaphor works well throughout the telling of the civil war with the Karens.  We follow the first person account from Black Rice, who escapes his alcoholic, violent stepfather, only to fight in an army, struggling to hold together a split nation, crumbling apart in internecine warfare.
It's a jungle where no one can be trusted, far from the romantic jingoism of a Rudyard Kipling adventure tale.
        What Kaung succeeds in showing us is the ugly and false belief that light skin is superior to dark, the divided loyalties between self-preservation and any form of idealism.
References to historical characters like Thakin Aung San, the politically savvy general and activist, who liberated Burma from Britain, and who was the father of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi, anchor us along the way.
Good show!














FIRST DRAFT: The deep-seeded prejudice against dark-skinned peoples, held by many Asians, is often unvoiced. But one senses early on in Black Rice, that author K.M. Kaung has a deeper intent. She's  blasting away more than  false beliefs and superstitions:  such as all that's needed to raise a healthy offspring is healthy blood and environment . 
Kaung's beautifully crafted, fascinating story, told in 42 pages, is a must-read to fully understand modern Myanmar.  Fractionalized political groups that emerged after  independence in 1948 from the British Empire have been striving for domination.  This well-constructed narrative builds to an ultimate high point twist of luck at the end that leaves the reader breathless.
This is an urgently told survival, jungle story, told to the author at age seven, by her deceased cousin "of the very pale skin," about an illegitimate, black, slant-eyed, Chinese child,  adopted by  upper class Burmese parents, whose life  is not guaranteed by learning to speak English, backed by an education in Rangoon.  
The reality of human biology is brutal, just like the history of Myanmar.  After losing ten fetuses, Pretty Lady  gives up trying to have babies of her own. Only then can she accept and adopt a child with a jet black skin. Her blood was Rh negative and her husband's was positive.  So the fetuses with the father's blood were rejected by her body with spontaneous miscarriages.  When her tenth baby dies soon after a live birth, Pretty Lady relieves the pain of her engorged breasts by nursing an abandoned baby with black skin, whom she names Black Rice, for good luck. The analogy of the name is not lost. Black rice is so glutinous, it is used in cement that has held temples together for centuries.  
As for structure, the black rice metaphor works well throughout the telling of civil war with the Karens. We follow the first person narrative of Black Rice who escapes his violent, alcoholic stepfather, only to fight in an army struggling to hold together a divided nation, crumbling apart in internecine warfare. It's a place where no one can be trusted, far from the romantic jingoism of a Rudyard Kipling adventure tale.   Yet Kaung keeps you gasping up to the last moment.
What Kuong succeeds in showing us is the ugly and false belief that light skin is superior to dark, the divided loyalties between  self-preservation and search for identity , and disillusion with any form of idealism.   References to historical characters  like Thakin Aung San,  who was the politically savvy  general and activist who liberated Burma from Britain, and who  was the father of Nobel Prize Peace Laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi, help anchor us along the way.




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Saturday, 5 October 2013

Heimlich Maneuver - for choking - watch now

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJDpr05zmB4
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Friday, 20 September 2013

Don McLean sings Stary Stary Night - about Vincent van Gogh

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dipFMJckZOM
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Monday, 16 September 2013

Aung San Suu Kyi says Burma should walk the path of Poland

http://www.rfa.org/burmese/news/dassk-poland-09122013220014.html
Posted by Kyi May at 08:31 No comments:
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Daw Aung San Suu Kyi's speech on Education & Politics in Warsaw, Poland -

http://burmese.voanews.com/media/video/1748702.html
Posted by Kyi May at 08:20 No comments:
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Monday, 26 August 2013

My official website KMKaung.com is now searchable on all web browsers

http://www.kmkaung.com/
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Labels: K.M.Kaung, Kyi May Kaung, official web site

Saturday, 17 August 2013

fr NPR - Burmese Rohingya subjected to new black slave trade conditions by traffickers

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/world/july-dec13/rohingya_08-15.html
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Thursday, 8 August 2013

On 25th anniversary of 8-8-88, US extends ban on Burmese gem imports -

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/41581
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Wednesday, 7 August 2013

16 year old Ma Win Mar Oo who was one of thousands gunned down in 1988

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/41434#comment-34552
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Just left on Irrawaddy site ref their excellent (but ten year old) interview of Christopher Gunness of 1988 fame -

Just left this on Irrawaddy site ref their excellent (but 10 years old) interview of Christopher Gunness see below -

This is an excellent interview and Gunness is a decent truth speaker - a true hero - However, the interview, though for the history books, is already ten years old -

Where is he now?  Why did he leave BBC? 

What about that woman who was head of BBC Burmese and fired allegedly because she was a double agent - I have it on the best authority from an international correspondent via a close friend, that a dissident was killed due to her leak, and she is now on board of Prospect Burma -

What's this??

You should have tried for a new interview of Gunness - It's your job. 

KMK
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Sunday, 4 August 2013

My mini review of Joseph Anton - Salman Rushdie's memoir -

Oh, it is excellent - although written in 3rd person, somehow he manages to recall all the trauma and details of the fatwa period - and is completely honest in what he says about himself. It is amazing that he lived to tell the story and also managed to live a somewhat normal life through it all. Also the "normal" deaths among his close ones, while he under a fatwa survived.

Has the unerring eye and total recall of a born writer.

Kyi May Kaung
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Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Black Rice - a novella by K.M.Kaung - reviewed by ko ko thett

Ko Ko Thett's review of K.M. Kaung's novella Black Rice - this review was published on Monday in Myanmar Times -

Black Rice, 45 pages
Kyi May Kaung
Words Sounds and Images (2013)

Black Rice by Kyi May Kaung, first published in the spring 2007 issue of Northern Virginia Review, has been released in print and e-book formats. It is a meticulously crafted bite-size delight - bite-size because you wouldn’t even know how it dissolves on your literary palate until you come to realize you have savoured it in one sitting, wanting for more.
    Set in the 1940s and 1950s in colonial and decolonizing Burma, the nascent state almost ripped apart by a war of all against all between the government forces, the communists and the ethnic Karen rebels, Black Rice is the story of a black-skinned boy, who describes himself as ‘the black mascot in their white-skinned family.’
    Black Rice was adopted and doted on by a food-binging mother, a survivor of multiple miscarriages, and firmed up by a whimsical and booze-binging father. ‘It was as if she blamed him for his blood, which did not agree with hers … It’s good I had those miscarriages. They might have grown up to be drunkards like you.’ Black Rice’s mother laments. Black Rice fled from home at sixteen, after convincing his best friend to tag along with him. They joined the army, whose task was to annihilate the communist and ‘multicoloured’ ethnic insurgents. Their lives and fates seemed set on the same course until the boys ended up prisoners of war in the hands of Karen rebels.
    In the quaint lyricism of the protagonist, the author manages to unpack many of the Burmese cultural idiosyncrasies in a most efficient way – Black Rice’s insider’s observations of his own family, his society and the war he fought were first-hand and vivid. The reader is bound to relish layer after layer of Burmese obsessions with astrology, amulets and the skin colour, a Burmese mother’s ritual to cope with her miscarriages, the Burmese women’s soft power over their husbands, the Burmese men’s thoughtless manners, the brutality of the Burmese armed forces and rebel groups alike, and their food and eating culture (from naan bread to fried water convolvulus).
    To avoid repeating unpronounceable words and to improve a sense of wonder, Kyi May Kaung has calqued some Burmese names to great effect. General Ne Win, the source of Burma’s military dictatorship, becomes General Bright Sun and Daw Hla, Black Rice’s mother, becomes Pretty Lady who actually suffers from consumption, a disease often associated with Victorian novels. While many of the social, cultural and political issues remain eerily relevant in the transitional Myanmar today many others, the kind of fun and play the protagonist and his best friend had as Burmese children cracking the almonds, may be felt as nostalgia. 
    When we read the disclaimer in the opening of a book, ‘This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and not to be construed as real...’, don’t we almost always expect a true story? Black Rice could as well be a true story or a combination of many a true story common to Burmese life. True story or not, Black Rice is a novella of what Salman Rushdie calls human truth, as opposed to ‘photographic, journalistic, recorded truth’ but ‘the truth we recognize as human beings…our strengths, weaknesses, how we interact.’ I hope she extends the novella into a novel someday.  

ko ko thett – July 2013
 


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Monday, 1 July 2013

La Cirque du Soleil - Ka - the complete version - sad condolences for athlete who died -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ldWC1EQ5X0
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Sunday, 30 June 2013

Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma: A Strange Collection of Clear Victories by Kyi May Kaung -

Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma:  A Strange Collection of Clear Victories by Kyi May Kaung - first draft written in Nov. 2012 - an edited version was published in International Gallerie -

During his historic six-hour visit to Rangoon, Burma, newly re-elected U.S. President Barack Obama mispronounced Aung San Suu Kyi’s name twice, calling her “Aung Yann Suu Kyi” – one almost saw Suu Kyi hiding her wince.
Yann means “reckless.”
Her real name is:
Aung San – from her famous father – the George Washington of Burma.
Aung = victory or victorious
San= strange, glorious or unique, rare or scarce.
Suu—her own given name, based on the day of the week on which she was born, and the name of Aung San’s mother, whose father was hanged by the British during the Saya San uprising of 1920.
Kyi – based on her mother’s name.
As Jack Healey, the former director of Amnesty International said, “We should learn how to pronounce her name correctly.”
Be that as it may, on Nov 13, 2010, a week after the rigged election, the junta released her from her third bout of house arrest, which had started from a roadside ambush – and is now known as the Depayin Massacre.
Daw Suu was truly between a rock and a hard place.  She cannot be blamed for having sent out feelers that she could help get sanctions lifted in exchange for being treated better by the junta, now hiding behind its front man, the so-called “moderate” PM turned president.

Thein Sein went to see her.   When Obama called her by phone this time last year, she had only to say “I trust him.  I think I can work with him,” for him to send Secretary of State Mrs. Hilary Clinton.  (See my poem in Foreign Policy in Focus, In the Garden by the Lake.)
This unleashed an unreasonable euphoria which has only now started to wear a bit thin as BBC 4 uncovers mass graves in Western Burma, where a genocide against the Muslim Rohingya community has been going on since June, even as Suu Kyi traveled internationally and gave impeccable speeches.  In the northeast of Burma, the junta, now in civilian dress, broke a 17 year ceasefire.
What are the Lady’s prospects?
One should note, she did not win a majority in the April 1 “April Fools’ Day” by-elections -- she won the majority of the few seats she and her party were allowed to contest.  Nevertheless, she campaigned all over the country and won – once again demonstrating her popularity.
But it is not about popularity, is it?
It is about what the junta allows to happen in Burma.
What seems to have happened is due to a coincidence of wants and needs by major actors:
Suu Kyi’s situation was a no-win one.
The junta itself was said to have been scared of what happened in the Middle East, and wanted an exit and an out.
The USA and Europe are in the throes of a major recession – the United States itself hugely indebted to China, which is holding the bulk of its national debt or treasury bills.  The foreign media and the Burmese exile media are compromised as they have apparently traded access for “doing PR for the junta.”
But the Lady is losing patience again – she said “Nothing will happen if the constitution is not changed.” She also said two days ago -- “The military is already the most powerful entity in the country.  We in the parliament (hluttaw) should not make decisions that increase its power.”
Her prospects over-all are not good. 
One can argue that they never were and I used to think she has a martyr complex.
She can surely win in 2015. 
But then, what?
Every day on Burmese language news from VOA and RFA, we see tearful farmers whose land has been taken by the thousands of acres by the junta cronies.  We see miners in equal desperation.  We see workers, each one a Fantine out of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables, who sold her hair, her teeth and her body to stay alive.
Maybe the junta will let Suu win, and then let her “handle” these deep-seated structural and systemic (to do with the system) changes.
Then everyone will hate her.  Already there’s a growing chorus of those who think she did not speak up forcibly enough about the plight of the Rohingya.
Like all politicians, she will, when she comes to power, have to pay off supporters.  Then she can easily be accused of corruption as Benazir Bhutto was.
I don’t wish to sound flippant or disrespectful – she is one of my greatest heroes.
But some days I think she should leave and carve out a life for herself as an international figure who is deeply respected.
                                                         *





 



Posted by Kyi May at 07:16 No comments:
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"Fakebook in Burma" (The Irrawaddy) is a misleading title -

"Fakebook in Burma" is a misleading title -  people in Burma use fake names out of fear of the junta for revealing the truth - Junta-aligned people use it to spy on and infiltrate democracy networks - Some people use it just for innocent and naive or commercial reasons.

See --

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/38770#.Uc4PRjJHxtY.twitter
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Friday, 28 June 2013

Bayingyi or Portuguese-Burmese in Burma -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=6HWMj-7DPhg#at=131
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Monday, 24 June 2013

Visit me on Facebook folks - and thanks for reading this blog too -

https://www.facebook.com/kyi.m.kaung
Posted by Kyi May at 20:35 No comments:
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K.M.Kaung's novella Black Rice --

K.M. Kaung's novella Black Rice is about an extremely dark-skinned man who is adopted by a pale family in Burma.  His tormented coming of age coincides with the outbreak of multicolored insurgencies in Burma a year before independence from the British in 1948. 

Follow him from the jungle where he goes to escape an unhappy family situation to a surprise event and ending in the gorgeous, lyrical, visual prose of poet and political scientist K.M.Kaung --

 http://www.amazon.com/Black-Rice-Novella-K-Kaung/dp/0615797520
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Friday, 21 June 2013

Interesting article on Yadana Nat Me - Burmese Princess - in Burmese

http://www.myatshu.com/2013/06/21/%E1%80%9B%E1%80%90%E1%80%94%E1%80%AC%E1%80%94%E1%80%90%E1%80%B9%E1%80%99%E1%80%9A%E1%80%B9%E1%82%8F%E1%80%BD%E1%80%84%E1%80%B9%E1%80%B7-%E1%80%81%E1%80%8F%E1%80%90%E1%80%AC/#more-4014
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Monday, 10 June 2013

Dr. Kyi May Kaung quoted in Khin May Zaw's article on World Economic Forum, Rangoon and Burma growth prospects

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=393254867462748&set=a.268275419960694.63683.268229929965243&type=1&theater
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Monday, 27 May 2013

Intv of Min Ko Naing by Thar Nyunt Oo (VOA)

http://www.youtube.com/user/voaclips
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Labels: Burma, so-called reforms, Thar Nyunt Oo, VOA

Sunday, 26 May 2013

K.M.Kaung's novella Black Rice now out in Kindle edition

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00D0EHGYQ

Thank you everyone who bought it, liked it, sent me kind words -

you make the hours of sitting alone typing worth while -

kmk
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Saturday, 25 May 2013

Excerpt from request for review of K.M.Kaung's novella Black Rice -

An excerpt for a request for a review of Black Rice -

Dear Professor --

I know of your literary interests and wondered if you would be so kind as to review Black Rice.

It is only 48 pages long or short and a recent reviewer called it "riveting".

Also I know of you as a close friend and long time supporter  of Burma -

I hope you will agree to kindly review my work -

It can then be posted on the Amazon site

or anywhere you please.

The other recent reviewer said he would write a full review and submit it with a literary magazine.

If you agree, I would like to send you a review copy.  It is also available now in print form on Create Space and Amazon, and shortly will also be out on various platforms as an e book.

I do hope you will read it -

As you probably know, there are so few of us who think that the "change" in Burma is so far only cosmetic -

Black Rice could have been about yesterday.

Kyi May Kaung

Posted by Kyi May at 06:58 No comments:
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Friday, 24 May 2013

Price of novella Black Rice by K.M.Kaung further reduced to $3.25 on Amazon -

Price of novella Black Rice by K.M.Kaung further reduced to $3.25 & free shipping on orders above $25

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0615797520/ref=rdr_ext_tmb

Riveting - says the latest reviewer -
Posted by Kyi May at 20:36 No comments:
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Dr. Kyi May Kaung has accepted new board membership with Burma Independence Advocates

Accepted new bd membership

http://t.co/Gtqp2DPcJN

Founder Nay Zaw Aung @ London School of Economics.

xcited to work with my colleagues.

About BIA
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Labels: Burma Independence Advocates, Dr. Maung Zarni, LSE, Nay Zaw Aung

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Mars review of K/M.Kaung's novella Black Rice - link

http://www.amazon.com/Black-Rice-Novella-K-Kaung/product-reviews/0615797520/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1
Posted by Kyi May at 12:57 No comments:
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Mars' review of my novella Black Rice on Amazon site -

By 
mars - See all my reviews
This review is from: Black Rice: A Novella (Paperback)
A quick read regarding the Burmese struggle to rid themselves of Japanese occupation and the brutal infighting that resulted after their departure. Many sensorial images told through the eyes of a soldier bring Burma to life. History buffs may want more. This story is just a taste of the terror suffered by the Burmese in the 1940's..
Posted by Kyi May at 12:53 No comments:
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US to help Burma's energy sector be more transparent

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/35204
Posted by Kyi May at 12:24 No comments:
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Monday, 20 May 2013

Conversation with Dr. Myo Nyunt on my novella Black Rice - from Facebook -

  • Kyi May, congratulations. A struggle in the struggles. With Metta Sayar
    14 hours ago · Unlike · 1
  • Kyi May Kaung Thank you, Saya and Khin Myo - I wrote it long ago, about 1994, when my cousin was still alive. Re-reading it made me remember all the strange Burmese politics my cousins talked about all the time, when I was just a child and coming home from UK, where my father told me on my first day of school that I could ask "the Bobbies" -- the policemen for help if I needed anything. In Burma he bolted the doors carefully at night and told us not to go along with strangers as so many kidnappings of children happened in the 50s. I am glad this story Black Rice is published, as it makes it easier for me to write about Burma in the 50s. Actually, I have written a good deal already, but it all needs more work to be ready for publication, as written on my old Apple computer, in the Rittenhouse Writers Group in Philadelphia.
    a few seconds ago · Like
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Sunday, 19 May 2013

Review of K.M.Kaung's novella Black Rice, from a reader inside Burma -



·       I have just finished reading your two short stories, non-stop, sitting in a not so comfortable chair, forgetting to stretch my back.  To be totally honest I never imagined you could write this well.
Black Rice describes another true and painful episode coming out of decades of unending armed struggle in Burma.   

All cannot be all bad all the time, is the only tiny silver lining of exceptional hope.

A non-active, quiet Myanmar reader.

Posted by Kyi May at 11:19 No comments:
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K.M. Kaung's novella Black Rice, now $3.79 - be the first to review on line at Amazon.com

http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0615797520/ref=rdr_ext_uan

Mother eats too much, father is a drunkard - what chance has a dark skinned man in a country and culture that prizes pale skin?
Posted by Kyi May at 10:16 No comments:
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Friday, 17 May 2013

Big excitement for today - K.M.Kaung's novella Black Rice listed on Amazon

Big excitement for today - my novella Black Rice, print version is now listed on Amazon - happy happy happy - and has the "look inside feature"

so you can read first pages -

http://www.amazon.com/Black-Rice-Novella-K-Kaung/dp/0615797520/ref=sr_1_cc_1?s=aps&ie=UTF8&qid=1368859043&sr=1-1-catcorr&keywords=K.M.Kaung+Black+Rice#reader_0615797520

This is the Mother's Day gift I gave myself.
Posted by Kyi May at 23:48 No comments:
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U Thaw Kaung's short address on literature in Burma -

Dr. U Thaw Kaung's short speech at Sarpay Lawka (Literary World Conference)

Summary:  Although I cannot come myself due to health reasons, I am thankful for this chance to speak via video.  I wish first to urge all to read more widely, not just literature, but all kinds of writing.  (People) need to know how fine literature is written and other sorts of writing.  Also, through Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the Daw Khin Kyi Foundation, we are setting up mobile libraries so that everyone, even in remote villages can read.

Many books are in English and so we urge you to translate more -

There is a lot I wish to say, but as time is short also, please let me stop here.

informal translation - kmk

video is on my Facebook page
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Thursday, 16 May 2013

Thousands of Rohingya stranded by sea as storm approaches -

http://www.dvb.no/news/thousands-of-rohingya-stranded-by-the-sea-as-cyclone-looms/28243
Posted by Kyi May at 10:03 No comments:
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Wednesday, 15 May 2013

Novella Black Rice by K.M.Kaung - 1947 Burma, race, love, war - On CreateSpace

https://www.createspace.com/4232789?ref=1147694&utm_id=6026
Posted by Kyi May at 20:04 No comments:
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Questions I might ask if I were there -

Some questions I might ask if I were there:

What did you promise Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and the NLD with reference to 2015?

Were you behind the racial targeting of Rohingya and other Muslims?

Why do you and your government insist on calling them "Bengali Muslims"?

If you say "Peace" why are you still bombing the Kachin?

What oil and gas and other projects do you have on the table with US firms?

How have you explained your so-called reforms to President Obama?

People say after your USA visit (2nd or 3rd time here) you will get another award.  Is that true?

Do you like Starbucks coffee?

Do you think people can say anything they want when they are sitting in a coffee shop? 

How many political prisoners are there still in Burma - who are they and where are they?

Do you think Rohingya in Arakan in refugee camps are political prisoners?  When will you decide on that?

When will you give farmers back their land?

What is your government's connection to 969?

Why aren't the laborers given a living wage?

Why is the date and time of your town hall meeting in DC not publicized.

What is your favorite food?

If you understand English, why don't answer in English?

Are you nervous when you have to face the western press?

They say your military history is both very"distinguished" and full of oppression - is that true?

How many times a month or how often do you have to report to the one more senior than you?

Why did you resign or was resigned from USDP?

How many people in USDA are still in USDP - how many total number of people.
Posted by Kyi May at 13:58 No comments:
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Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Rangoon University - glory days clouded - from Wall Street Journal

http://blogs.wsj.com/searealtime/2012/11/02/glory-days-at-myanmar-school-clouded/
Posted by Kyi May at 10:53 No comments:
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PROTEST THIS!

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/34482

He's not a "reformist president" - has made no significant systemic reforms and is presiding over targeted genocide and civil war - There is no reason Presdt Obama and USA should give him a good housekeeping seal of approval.
Posted by Kyi May at 09:23 No comments:
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Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Tim Aye Hardy's adaptation of important poem out of Nazi Germany -

"First they came for the Mons, and I did not speak up . . . "

Excellent, Tim,

sad sad sad

but

true true true -

Thanks for writing it and posting on line.

kmk

From Tim Aye Hardy's Facebook page:
 
Long and agonizing ethnic conflicts and recent vicious religious violence back in my motherland compelled me to adapt this infamous and provocative poem (“First they came…”) by pastor Martin Niemoller into Burmese version..


**********
First they came for the Mons,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Mon.

Then they came for the Chins,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Chin.

Then they came for the Kayahs,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Kayah.

Then they came for the Rakhines,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Rakhine.

Then they came for the Kayins,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Kayin.

Then they came for the Kachins,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Kachin.

Then they came for the Shans,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Shan.

Then they came for the Jews,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for the Christians,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Christian.

Then they came for the Muslims,
and I did not speak out because I was not a Muslim.

And I did not speak out because I was Bamar Buddhist.
Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak out for me.

~May peace and love embrace each and every one in Myanmar (Burma).
**********


Adaptation by Tim Aye Hardy

Photo of Rohingya begging to land somewhere - from Internet.
 

Posted by Kyi May at 12:51 No comments:
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Labels: Chin, Christians, Jew, Kachin, Martin Niemoller, Mons, Muslims, Nazi Germany, Rohingya, so-called reforms in Burma

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

The Life of the Buddha - part 1 of 2 - highly recommended -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HrPBCGNc18
Posted by Kyi May at 21:52 No comments:
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Labels: The Life of the Buddha

Thursday, 18 April 2013

U Win Tin says it like it is --

http://asiancorrespondent.com/105636/burma-democracy-veteran-win-tin-warns-of-dark-times-ahead/
Posted by Kyi May at 21:37 No comments:
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Labels: Aung San Suu Kyi, Ellen Wiles, Letpadaung Taung, U Win Tin

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Thanking my Facebook fans and friends -

Thank you Facebook friends and guests - It is only about a month since I started, and I feel so much better with a Community - even if (only) electronic - but some of you I know personally and professionally too, some of you I know through your good & excellent reputation as activists.

Thank you all whose lovely photos I shared. Some are of places I have never been and things I have never seen, especially the friends in USA and Burma.

I am so happy to have such talented and committed friends.

I am going to take the leap and go to Twitter soon, so I hope you will follow me there too.

Kyi May Kaung - sometimes writing as K.M.Kaung.
Posted by Kyi May at 16:45 No comments:
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Labels: Facebook, K.M.Kaung, Kyi May Kaung

U Win Tin asked to return his prison uniform

http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/32011
Posted by Kyi May at 07:25 No comments:
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Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Dr Sean Turnell on Burmese agriculture -

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/aussie-economist-advising-suu-kyi/story-e6frg6so-1226577442394?sv=a921128e53ff5cfcc540e0f79f402641
Posted by Kyi May at 07:35 No comments:
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Friday, 5 April 2013

From 1997 - still relevant - Tongues don't have Bones -

a video by Lisa diLillo with poetry by Kyi May Kaung.

http://movingpoems.com/poet/kyi-may-kaung/
Posted by Kyi May at 10:14 No comments:
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Labels: Kyi May Kaung, Lisa diLillo, Tongues don't have Bones

Electronic resource for Burma Studies Group -

H-ASIA
Apr 5 2013

Electronic Resource for Burma/Myanmar Studies
****************************************************
From: DC Lammerts <dc.lammerts@rutgers.edu>

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the launch of a new e-list, the Burma Studies
Group electronic discussion forum (BSGF). The Burma Studies Group (
www.burmastudiesgroup.org) is a subcommittee of the Southeast Asia Council
of the Association for Asian Studies. The BSGF was created in March 2013
for the purpose of facilitating communication within the community of
international scholars active in Burma/Myanmar-related studies.

Membership in the forum is open to active members of the Burma Studies
Group, scholars working and publishing in Burma/Myanmar-related studies,
and graduate students pursuing an advanced degree in Burma/Myanmar-related
studies.

To request subscription to the BSGF:

1) Visit http://groups.google.com/group/burmastudies
2) Click the link “sign in to view this group.”
3) Sign in with a Google account. This will require that you create a
Google account if you do not already have one.
4) Click “apply for membership.”
5) Choose the type of access you prefer (web, digest, email).
5) Enter your real name in the field that asks you to chose a nickname.
Subscriptions under aliases or pseudonyms will not be approved.
6) In the text box below your name please provide a brief biographical
statement attesting to your institutional affiliation, academic
credentials, publication record, and/or additional bona fides as a scholar
or student in Burma/Myanmar Studies. Requests for membership unaccompanied
by such information will not be approved.
7) Click “apply to this group”
8) Your request for subscription will be evaluated and acted on by the
moderators.

Best regards,
Christian Lammerts, Rutgers University
Alexey Kirichenko, Moscow State University

D. Christian Lammerts
Assistant Professor
Department of Religion
Rutgers University
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Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Breaking news - anti-Muslim killings in Rangoon right now -

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=4929383599265&set=a.3596969809753.2138883.1438713186&type=3&theater
Posted by Kyi May at 07:24 No comments:
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Monday, 1 April 2013

Opening pages of Wiliam Least-Heat Moon's Blue Highways

http://www.amazon.com/Blue-Highways-Journey-into-America/dp/0316353299#reader_0316353299
Posted by Kyi May at 17:28 No comments:
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Labels: Blue Highways, William Least-Heat Moon

Friday, 29 March 2013

Burma's Muslim's - A Primer - by Andrew Selth

http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/2013/03/27/Burmas-Muslims-A-primer.aspx
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Labels: Andrew Selth, Burmese-Muslim

New Burma in one photo - not happy about this -

http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/03/27/this_is_what_reform_in_burma_looks_like
Posted by Kyi May at 19:19 No comments:
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Another Chinese copper mine where it should not be - above an ancient Buddhist site in Afghanistan -

http://www.cnn.com/2012/09/22/opinion/afghanistan-buddha-site-mine/index.html?fb_action_ids=122593067888235&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=246965925417366
Posted by Kyi May at 15:17 No comments:
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Labels: Afghanistan, China, copper mine, Mes Ayak, Taliban

Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Kyi May Kaung's comment on Ko Aung Zaw's article "Buddhist" thugs make a comeback

See the inverted commas in the title? 

I agree with Ko Aung Zaw -- this has "military plot" written all over it - "Let them want democracy, they will have to call in army to restore order." 

Anyone know if Meikhtila is a predominantly NLD town?  I know in Helsinki in 2008, when we last met, Ko Aung Zaw suggested that in the Nargis obstruction of cyclone aid, it was suspected that the regime wished to punish the Delta Karen -


These incidents are also to show the world, people, that the army can do what it likes - security standing by is also a trademark - until final shootings - see 1962, 1970s U Thant episode, 1988, 2007, list goes one -

Ko Aung Zaw, this time you have really told the Truth - now what? 

Also folks, I don't know if you have seen these, but there are items going around the Internet about how bad the gold merchant couple were, complete with photos of the gold bracelets involved.  Now who would have these but?? - 

According to a reliable source, this couple, perhaps junta agents or mercenaries, have already been "fed to the mob".

There's also someone named Tony Carlucci - who is writing that "Aung San Suu Kyi's Saffron Monks" are doing this.

I don't think people know that there are monks and there are monks, and in Burmese Buddhism anyone can put on a robe and take the vows for as short as 24 hours or a few days.  And there are many sects within the mainstream - Mandalay's Yahan Pyo were always militant - Anyone can buy a robe and shave his head - does not need to go into an ordination hall.

It is well known also that Ne Win Government wanted to control and register monks -

and also USDA (Union Solidarity Development Association) a. k. a. Hitlerite Brown Shirts - were active up to 2007, and 2008, and there is also Possessors of Strength (Swan Ahr Shin) -  and in 1988 they were called Lon Htein - so, one can't suppose that these have all been disbanded like lightning and all disappeared.

If it is any comfort to you, (poor comfort of course) Nazis remained under cover in W. Germany decades after Hitler committed suicide and Allied Armies marched in, and some were even in judiciary - this is well documented.

About 2009 I heard a rumor that Swan Ahr Shin leader/founder had been eliminated as he "knew too much.'

In 1988, after the clamp down or shoot down, Ms. Maureen Aung Thwin wrote in Foreign Affairs Magazine - "Once again the military has held things together."
Posted by Kyi May at 03:07 No comments:
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Saturday, 23 March 2013

Presdt Thein Sein too quick to declare emergency, Asian Human Rights Commission says -

http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-070-2013
Posted by Kyi May at 18:17 No comments:
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Labels: Anti-Muslim violence, Asian Human Rights Commission, Burma, Meikhtila, Thein Sein

VOA news in Burmese on Meikhtila unrest etc -

http://www.youtube.com/user/voaclips
Posted by Kyi May at 17:55 No comments:
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Labels: Meikhtila, VOA

Two Aung San Suu Kyi films will air on HBO in USA

http://www.rappler.com/entertainment/24229-aung-san-suu-kyi-films-hbo
Posted by Kyi May at 17:40 No comments:
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Labels: Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, HBO, movies, The Lady

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi makes a veiled comment about

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi makes a veiled comment about racial strife in Meikhtila to reporters in Naypyitaw  --
translation:  "I am telling you now, just because a lot of people do it, and the majority does it, does not make it right.

"For instance if everyone was hitting one reporter, it is still not right."

See RFA TV 3-22-2013

http://www.rfa.org/burmese/
Posted by Kyi May at 17:29 No comments:
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Labels: Anti-Muslim violencem Meikhtila, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, Naypyitaw

Friday, 22 March 2013

Martial Law declared in Meikhtila, photos, trafficked Burmese children etc from Democratic Voice of Burma

http://www.dvb.no/
Posted by Kyi May at 21:25 No comments:
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Labels: Burma, DVB, Martial Law, Meikhtila, trafficked Burmese children

Thursday, 21 March 2013

Kyi May Kaung's article - "Aung San Suu Kyi: Strange Collection of Clear Victories" in International Gallerie

http://www.gallerie.net/issue31.html
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Labels: aung Aung Taik, Aung San Suu Kyi, Htein Lin, Kyi May Kaung, Vicky Bowman, Zarganar

Thursday, 14 March 2013

U Win Tin says democracy icon is too conciliatory -

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/in-burma-democratic-conscience-still-wears-blue/2013/03/12/c59b0660-8010-11e2-a350-49866afab584_story.html?fb_action_ids=10151539545764669&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_ref=sm_btn_fb&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=288381481237582
Posted by Kyi May at 10:53 No comments:
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New Pope Francis represents many firsts

http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/14/world/europe/vatican-new-pope/index.html?hpt=hp_c1

May become the People's Pope, but will have to face many challenges from the establishment .
Posted by Kyi May at 10:32 No comments:
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Friday, 1 March 2013

so-called reformer U Thein Sein hems and haws in Helsinki, Finland -


From Ko Nyo on Facebook - + contact numbers for demonstration - It is now -15 degrees F in Helsinki.
  • ဖင္လန္ သမတ အေမး သမၼတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္ မေျဖ..။
    ဒီေန႔ သမၼတဦးသိန္းစိန္နဲ႔ အဖဲြ႔ ဖင္လန္ ကိုေရာက္တယ္။
    ဖင္လန္ သမတ နဲ႔ နႈတ္ဆက္ဂါရ၀ျပဳရင္း ဖင္လန္ သမၼတ က “ ၂၀၁၅ေရြးေကာက္ပဲြ က်ရင္ စစ္တပ္ကယူထားတဲ႔ လႊတ္ေတာ္ထဲက ကိုယ္စားလွယ္ရာခိုင္နံႈးကို စြန္႔လႊတ္ဖို႕ရိွသလား” လို႕ ေမးပါတယ္။ သမၼတ ဦးသိန္းစိန္က ရွင္းရွင္းေမးတာ တည္႔တည္႔မေျဖဖူး။ “အင္း အဲ...အီးဟိုုဟာ..ဒီမိုကေရစီျပဳျပင္ေျပာင္းလဲေရးကို က်ေနာ္တို႕ လုပ္ေနပါတယ္။ ဗမာျပည္အေျပာင္းအလဲက ေနွးပါတယ္..ေျဖးေျဖးခ်င္းေပါ့” လို႔ အရူးလိုေျဖသြားတယ္။ ေသခ်ာတာကေတာ့..ဒီအစိုးရ လိမ္ေနျပီး။“ သိန္းစိန္လူလိမ္” လို႕က်ေနာ္တို႕ေအာ္စလိုမွာ ကမၻာသိ ေအာ္ေျပာခဲ႔တာ အတိအက်ပဲ။ သူလိမ္ေနတာမွန္း ဖင္လန္ျပည္သူေတြကို နက္ဖန္ အဲဒီက ျမန္မာမ်ိဳးခ်စ္ေတြက ဆႏၵျပျပီးေျပာအံုးမွာ။ ဖင္လန္မွာ သိတ္ေအးတယ္။ နက္ဖန္ အနႈတ္၁၅ အထိရိွတယ္။ ဒါေတာင္ဆႏၵျပမဲ႔သူ ၅၀ေက်ာ္ လာမယ္။ အေ၀းျမိဳ႕ေတြကေတာင္ သြားျပၾကမွာ။
    ေအာက္မွာအစီအစဥ္ေရးထားတယ္။ ဖံုးဆက္ေမးျမန္းစံုစမ္းသတင္းယူလို႕ရတယ္။

    ဖင္လန္ႏိုင္ငံသို့ မနက္ဖန္တြင္ ေရာက္ရိွမည့္ ဦးသိန္းစိန္ အစိုးရအဖြဲ့၏ ႏိုင္ငံတကာလွည့္လည္ လိမ္လည္ေရး (၁ - ၃ ၊ ၃၊ ၂၀၁၃) ခရီးစဥ္အား ဆန့္က်င္ေၾကာင္း ဆႏၵထုတ္ေဖၚမည့္ ခ်ီတက္ပြဲအား ၂၊ ၃၊ ၂၀၁၃ နံနက္ ၁၁ နာရီတိတိတြင္ ဟဲလ္ဆင္းကီးၿမိဳ့ ျပည္သူ့လြွတ္ေတာ္ေရွ့မွ ဟဲလ္ဆင္ကီး ျမဳိ့လယ္ ရင္ျပင္သို့ ခ်ီတက္ မည္ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း ရပ္နီးရပ္ေ၀းမွ စိတ္တူသေဘာတူမ်ားအား ဖိတ္ၾကားအပ္ပါသည္။

    ဆက္သြယ္ရန္ ဖုံးနံပါတ္မ်ား
    ကိုသန့္ဇင္ထြန္း +358 50 572 1630
    ကိုမင္းလြင္ + 358 46 5569 972
    ကိုေက်ာ္ေဌး + 358 40 9612 090
    ကိုၿငိမ္းခ်မ္း + 358 44 0888 016

Posted by Kyi May at 19:28 No comments:
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Friday, 11 January 2013

Protect your child during flu season - from CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/10/health/protect-children-flu/index.html?hpt=hp_c1
Posted by Kyi May at 06:46 No comments:
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ေဒါက္တာ ၾကည္ေမေကာင္း

စာေရးသူ ေဒၚၾကည္ေမေကာင္း ဟာ အေမရိကန္ ျပည္ေထာင္စု ဖီလာဒဲလ္ဖီးယားၿမိဳ႕ (Philadelphia) ရဲ႕ အထင္ကရ နာမည္ေက်ာ္ တကၠသိုလ္ တစ္ခု ျဖစ္တဲ့ ပင္စီရယ္(လ္)ေဗးနီးယား (Pennsylvania) တကၠသိုလ္ ကေန ႏိုင္ငံေရး ေဘာဂေဗဒ ဘာသာရပ္ နဲ႔ ေဒါက္တာ ဘြဲ႔ယူခဲ့သူ ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ စာေရးသူ ဟာ ၁၉၈၀ အေစာပိုင္း ႏွစ္မ်ားမွာ Fulbright Fellowship အစီအဥ္ နဲ႔ အေမရိကန္ ျပည္ေထာင္စု ကို စတင္ ေရာက္ရွိ ခဲ့ပါသည္။
စာေရးသူ ဟာ ဘ၀ တစ္ေလွ်ာက္ လံုး အႏုပညာ ကို ေလ့လာ လိုက္စား ခဲ့ၿပီး အထူးသျဖင့္ စာေပနဲ႔ ပန္းခ်ီ ပညာပိုင္းကို ပိုမို အားသန္ ခဲ့ပါတယ္။ သူမဟာ ဆယ္ေက်ာ္သက္ အရြယ္ ကတည္းက စာတိုေပစမ်ား စတင္ ေရးသားခဲ့သူ တစ္ေယာက္ လည္း ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။
နာမည္ေက်ာ္ အေမရိကန္ ျပဇာတ္ ေရးဆရာႀကီး Edward Albee ကိုယ္တိုင္ သူမရဲ႕ နတ္ကေတာ္ အေၾကာင္း ေရးထား တာကို ခ်ီးမြမ္း ခဲ့ ရပါတယ္။ Pew စာေပဆု အတြက္ ေနာက္ဆံုး အဆင့္ကို ႏွစ္ႀကိမ္ တိုင္တုိင္ ေရာက္ခဲ့ၿပီး ၂၀၀၈ ခုႏွစ္မွာ ခ်ီကာဂို Northeastern Illinois တကၠသိုလ္ ႀကီးက သူမရဲ႕ ဗမာ့အေရး ေဆာင္ရြက္မႈ နဲ႔ ပတ္သက္ၿပီး ဆု ခ်ီးျမႇင့္ ခဲ့ပါတယ္။
စာေရးသူဟာ ရန္ကုန္ စီးပြါးေရး တကၠသိုလ္မွာ ကထိက အျဖစ္နဲ႔ အႏွစ္ ၂၀ ေလာက္ အမႈထမ္း ခဲ့ၿပီး Fulbright Fellowship ရရွိခဲ့ပါသည္။
စာေရးသူဟာ ၁၉၉၇ ခုႏွစ္ ကတည္းက ဗမာျပည္ အေ၀းေရာက္ အစိုးရ၊ Burma Fund တို႔ ႏွင့္အတူ ႏိုင္ငံတကာ အသံလႊင့္ ဌာန မွာ အလုပ္လုပ္ ခဲ့ပါသည္။
Academy of American Poets ကေန စာေရးသူ ေရးသားခဲ့တဲ့ ပထမဆံုး ကဗ်ာ (၅) ပုဒ္အတြက္ William Carlos Williams ကဗ်ာဆု ကို ခ်ီးျမႇင့္ခဲ့ပါတယ္။ ၁၉၉၄ ခုႏွစ္ကစၿပီး အေရွ႕ေတာင္ အာရွ ႏိုင္ငံမ်ား၊ ကေနဒါ ႏွင့္ ေျမာက္အေမရိကား တို႔က တကၠသိုလ္ေတြ၊ ခရစ္ယာန္ ဘုရားေက်ာင္းေ ေတြမွာ (၁၂) ႀကိမ္ထက္ မနည္း ကဗ်ာမ်ား ရြတ္ဆို ခဲ့ပါတယ္။ ယခုလက္ရွိ ၀ါရွင္တန္ ဒီစီ မွာ အေျခစိုက္ ၿပီး ထိုင္းႏုိင္ငံ၊ ခ်င္းမိုင္ၿမိဳ႕၊ အင္ဒိုနီးရွား ဘာလီကၽြန္း၊ ေျမာက္အေမရိကား ႏွင့္ အျခားေသာ ေနရာမ်ားမွာ စာေရးသူ ဟာ သူမရဲ႕ တစ္ကိုယ္ေတာ္ အမ်ိဳးသမီး အႏုပညာ ျပပြဲမ်ားကို (၁၀) ႀကိမ္ခန႔္ ျပဳလုပ္ ခဲ့ပါတယ္။
ၿပီးခဲ့တဲ့ ၂၀၁၀ ႏို၀င္ဘာ လ တြင္ သူမသည္ SULU DC ေခၚ အာရွ - အေမရိကန္ ႏိုင္ငံေရး လႈပ္ရွား သူမ်ား ကဗ်ာအသင္းမွာ ကဗ်ာ ရြတ္ဆို ခဲ့ပါတယ္။ SULU DC ဟာ ဗမာျပည္မွာ ေထာင္ဒဏ္ က်ခံ ေနရတဲ့ ဗမာ့ လူရႊင္ေတာ္ ဇာဂနာ အေၾကာင္း ရိုက္ကူး ထားတဲ့ မွတ္တမ္းရုပ္ရွင္ကို ျပသ လွ်က္ ရွိပါတယ္။
ယခု ေလာေလာဆယ္ မွာေတာ့ စာေရးသူဟာ “The Black Prince of Siam” လို႔ အမည္ရတဲ့ ယိုးဒယား သမိုင္း ၀ထၳဳ တစ္ပုဒ္ကို ေရးသားေန ပါသည္။

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