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Go: Burma
The back roads of Burma
by Anna Delano
 Click for a slide show of photos from Burma. Photos by Anna Delano
Burma: To go or not to go?
Share your views on travel to Burma on our blog Bear Bites.
I had well-founded doubts about going to Myanmar (Burma). Warnings from travelers
and journalists cannot be ignored. If you photograph a certain building, the wrong
bridge, or anyone in uniform, you lose your film. People get detained. Then there
were further misgivings about putting more U.S. dollars in the coffers of the
military junta. Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Prize-winning activist and thorn in
the side of the military regime even while under house arrest, was saying: “Don’t come.”
Had I heeded the warnings and shied away, I might never have seen the Shwedagon
Paya, its spires burnished by the setting sun; not visited old Bagan and its ancient
pagodas at sunrise, or floated among the flower gardens of Inle Lake. Nor would
I have traveled the Irrawaddy, the famous “road to Mandalay,” on an
ancient white river-boat, its hold filled with rice and its lower deck packed
with families and groups returning to their villages after shopping in Yangon.
Most of all I would not have met Khin, a young Kayan ethnic minority whose tribe
was from the mountains. For two weeks, Khin took me where I could take photographs
without feeling a rush of paranoia -- even within sight of one or two officers
on foot. The people we encountered were gracious, although suffering from poverty,
repression, and isolation. In his own village, four generations turned out to
greet us. They wanted proof that Khin had been the first in his village to swim
in the sea. Nobody had believed him. They didn’t believe that there was
a sea. Friends of mine (whom Khin had guided previously) and I were there to
testify. Yes, Khin had swum in the sea.
In turn, Khin wanted people to see Burmese, spirited, enterprising, happy
in their work and family lives, living the Buddhist belief that it is up to
each to work out his or her fate. Khin, for one, wanted me to be there, with
my camera, to show that they were simply living out their hope that in their
reincarnation they would be reborn beyond the reach of the current regime.
Anna Delano is a freelance photographer based in Northern California.
For further exploration and information
Burma has been ruled by a brutal military junta since 1962, and travel to this charming country
is a hot-button issue. Some argue that the tourist industry in Burma only supports the regime, not the
people, while others maintain that contact with outsiders is vital to educating the world about Burma's plight and
supporting the country's crippled democratic movement.
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