An San Suu Kyi |
I had met Max on my first day in Burma
nearly three weeks before but had not seen him again until we almost literally
bumped into each other at our grimy little hotel. He had looked pale and told
me of his horror train ride from Mandalay
during which he had been struck down with stomach problems while crammed into a
wooden seat for thirty hours. He had bounced back manfully the following day
and we wandered Myitkyina’s markets and dirty, tree-lined streets for two days
while he taught me to swear in German and we tried to determine whether our
grandfathers had shot at each other during the war.
The town was abuzz with talk of the
upcoming visit of An San Suu Kyi. Hotels and family homes filled and then
overflowed with the tide of people coming in from outlying towns and villages.
Many of them had walked for days and were easy to spot with their dirty hands
and traditional Kachin clothing. When they saw us, kids hid in their mother’s
sarongs and men muttered to each other, called out greetings or just stared.
An San Suu Kyi is a national hero
and on the day of the rally Max and I were swallowed in a honking, singing jam
of people and cars as we made our way to the overgrown sporting field where she
was to speak. We were joined by a Japanese girl who had gained my undying love
by a) having the fantastic name of Misaki Nakayama and b) offering me Indian
chapatti bread on our first meeting.
The world's happiest traffic jam. |
The Australian government travel
advisory warns against both traveling to this part of Burma and
attending any pro-democracy events. But then according to the government
advisory any country besides New Zealand
and Switzerland
is a seething den of murderers and scary foreign types. I had long ago taken as
my motto an unusual mash of two of last century’s greatest thinkers – Sir Winston
Churchill and Austin Powers.
“We have nothing to fear but fear itself, and carny folk,” I muttered to
myself as the crowd sucked us along. Again my insane pseudo mantra was proved
correct, it was a perfect carnival atmosphere – like AFL grand final day in Melbourne, but without the
Collingwood supporters. And not a carny in sight.
Outside the sports field traffic was
stopped and we edged between tooting trucks overloaded with singing, chanting
people waving the red flag of the National League for Democracy, An San Suu
Kyi’s once-banned political party. A dark 4x4 with black windows pushed it’s
way silently through the chaos and we watched as it clipped the back wheel of a
motorcycle that hadn’t gotten out of the way fast enough. The rider and the
bike fell onto the road but the 4x4 didn’t stop or even slow as it disappeared
into the throng.
“Government,” a man said to me with
a tight smile. The rider got up and a couple of guys helped her with the bike.
No one even looked at the government vehicle.
By the time we had squeezed through
the gate the woman they simply call ‘the lady’ had already begun speaking. I
guessed the crowd to be about 20,000. I stood hard against the back fence and
peered through a thicket of red flags. An San Suu Kyi stood on a raised dais
flanked by supporters. Dressed symbolically in ornate Kachin dress, she looked older than I expected but still slim and ramrod straight.
Every few minutes the crowd roared their approval and ten thousand red flags
flicked back and forth. Often she was interrupted by a question from the
audience to which she listened carefully before replying, usually to gales of
laughter. I hadn’t the faintest idea what she said but she was clearly a superb
speaker and adored – even worshipped – by the crowd. I listened for half an
hour and then wandered through the crowd. The occasional English speaker would
ask me where I was from and if I was a journalist, to which I would squeak an
alarmed, “no!” I got chatting to a well-dressed man with perfect English which
he kept apologizing for. He told me that only a couple of years ago a rally
like this would have been unthinkable. As I was leaving he grabbed my elbow,
darted his eyes from side to side and whispered, “Be careful.” Then he let me
go and began laughing. “Ha! Got you.” Ha bloody ha.
The crowd. |
After the rally we sat in a tea shop
and watched the crowd leave, still waving their flags, singing and honking. A
pick-up crammed full of men pointed to my camera and posed for a photo,
laughing.
On the walk back I thought how
refreshing it was to see people so passionate about the future of their
country. It felt like a population that could finally taste the end of decades
of repression and violence. And that, my new friends and I decided, was a
pretty good reason for a beer.
The following day we all boarded an
Air Myanmar flight south to Bhamo – another no-no according to the Aussie government
due to the supreme dodgyness of their fleet of old prop planes. But the road
south was in the control of one or another of Burma’s rebel armies and the
ferry we had hoped to catch downstream could not navigate the shallow, silted
river at this time of year. As it turned out the plane was a boringly modern
jet rather than the WWII military surplus clunker I had secretly hoped for. The
only pulse-quickening moment on the 17 minute flight was the deep thud of an
overhead locker door shooting open soon after take off. Safely in Bhamo we
found a hotel and went in search of the ferry ticket office.
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