Original
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From: "Anna May Say Pa" <annamaysaypa@gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2008 5:14 PM
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Subject: Cry Tears for Burma |
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Cry
Tears for Burma
Once, this was Thabyekyaing village, a quiet
coastal village in
Labutta township, Ayeyawaddy Division.
Once, the laughter of children filled the
air as they played football or toke-si-do
in the fields and yards.
Once, men went out on fishing boats or worked
in the fields. Women planted rice, fetched
water and firewood and kitchen fires burnt
brightly.
Once, on Sunday mornings, the church bell
would ring and people would gather to sing,
praise and worship god and listen to the
pastor, Rev. Maung Bay's or his son, Pastor
Klo Htoo's sermons.
Once, on Lenten days the monastery gong
would sound and the Buddhists would go to
hear the Sayadaw's sermons while observing
a fast.
Once, the village was shady with fruit trees,
the gardens with
vegetables and the fields green with rice
plants or yellow during
harvest time.
Now,
there is an eerie silence over what once
was Thabye Gyaung.
The sound of laughter, song and raucous
shouting is stilled.
The trees, the fields, the houses, school,
church, monastery, clinic are no more.
Now, what remains is death and destruction,
bloated bodies, shattered lives.
On
the night of May 2, the cyclone Nargis with
gale force winds, rain and sea water that
rose to 17 feet and higher destroyed the
village and all the life that had made up
that village.
The
pastor, Thra Maung Bay, MIT (Burma Divinity
School Certificate) Class of 1969 died in
that disaster.
Once, in 1992 Thra Maung Bay had faced flood
waters, that time of a political nature
in what is known as Bogalay Ayay-Akin (Bogalay
Affair). Pro-democracy forces had infiltrated
the delta region from across the border.
Thra Maung Bay was interrogated, tortured
and sent to prison. But once released, he
went back to his village and people and
ministered to them as best he could in spite
of his broken health. His son, Saw Klo Htoo,
following the steps of his father went to
seminary, Karen Baptist Theological Seminary
for his Bachelor of Theology and after graduation
became a pastor.
But
on that fateful night, Pastor Saw Klo Htoo
also died, never fulfilling his dream of
studying at MIT. Mrs. Maung Bay, a KBTS
graduate, survived as she was visiting relatives
in Rangoon at that time. Now, she is alone,
without family, home and village.
This
family's, this village's, tragedy is replicated
in the areas struck by Nargis Cyclone, Haingyi
Island, Labutta, Bogalay, Daydaye, Pyapon,
Mawlamyinegyun and Rangoon and nearby towns.
The latest govt. figure of deaths (12 May
'08) is 85,000 the final figure will be
higher. Relief work is going on but at a
slow rate. Relief goods are accepted but
not personnel with expertise. Some camps
are experiencing medical problems. Some
peop0le still in isolated pockets are without
food and water. In Bassein, there are over
2000 survivors in Ko Tha Byu Camp with more
arriving every day.
In the Myanmar Baptist Convention, the hardest
hits are Karen Baptist Convention, Pwo Karen
Baptist Conference, and Myanmar Baptist
Churches Union and Asho Chin Baptist Convention.
KC reported over 39 villages totally destroyed
in Bassein area alone and 13 pastors dead.
The Self-Supporting Kayin Baptist Churches
also report destruction of churches, seminary
and houses. MBC Headquarters suffered damages
totaling about kyats 1500 lahks. It was
to host the Myanmar Council of Churches
Bienniel General Meeting May 20-24 but now
had postponed to middle of June. MCC's main
meeting hall is wrecked and some glass windows
were blown off. Judson church's roof was
also damaged and worship services could
not be carried out.
MIT's
buildings' roofs were lifted off and the
computer lab with 12 computers totally water
logged. Our newly appointed chaplain, Dr.
Khin Kyu Kyu has just moved in to the Guest
Apartment and she agrees with Neil and Diana
Sowards that the apartment should be named
"Falling Waters," though very
different from Frank Lloyd Wright's model
house, "Falling Waters" in America.
Trees fell on Alan Po's, Ashee's and U Tha
Wah's houses. The roofs are all gone. Alan
and Nyunt moved to Maharsaung Dining Hall
just in time.
The
Rangoon streets are blocked with fallen
trees and electric posts. Water and electricity
is a problem. BARS classes have been suspended
until further notice. Summer School closed
for a few days but have re-started. Master
of Ministry classes started today but some
students from Bassein area are too busy
with relief works to attend.
MICT
had pushed back the opening date of 2008-2009
academic year to September because of lack
of electricity, water, building repairs
and rising costs of rice and other food
commodities. MIT will hold a meeting on
May 14 on how best to carry on with limited
resources. Dr. Simon and Faculty are determined
to begin classes as scheduled. The main
costs will be diesel oil to run the generators
for light and water and food costs. It's
a challenge as we face the ATESEA Accreditation
team visit in August.
Say
Pa and I had the roofing over one bedroom
blown off and water in the bedroom so our
computer also is water logged. 23 fell in
our compound. Some mango and jackfruit trees
planted by my mother but still bearing fruit.
Workers were very scarce at this time for
repair work and cutting trees and clearing
the land. Our loss is minuscule compared
to the loss of family, homes and villages
suffered by so many people.
You will want to know how to respond to
this disaster. We certainly need your prayers.
The people also need aid to recover from
destruction of this magnitude. Please send
donations to MCC, MBC, KBC, PKBC who are
directly doing ground level relief work.
MCC is coordinating with various NGOs and
ecumenical partners to provide immediate
relief. Send financial help only to trusted
individuals. There are many people profiting
from this disaster. The merchants are raising
their prices and even some relief goods
do not reach the victims but are being sold
off. So be careful in your response.
MIT
needs help with buying 12 computers for
BARS program, roofing and other building
materials for staff houses, Mahasaound and
Ann Judson Villa, diesel to run generators
(for now only water is available for Mahasaung
where there are 2 section, for male/female
use), funds to buy food commodities for
180 hostel students.
Cry for bleeding, suffering Burma –
she is so small, her people struggling so
long for survival. It seems as if not only
political forces but God herself/himself
is determined to teach us some sensible
lessons. Sermons nowadays sound like platitudes.
Our land and our people are being put through
the wringer, squeezed dry till there is
no more life juice left. Cry with us, cry
for us in solidarity in our despair.
Anna
May Say Pa
13 May 2008
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