The air conditioner is going flat out and I almost feel cold,
the first time in weeks I’ve been anything but warm or hot - and this is winter
in Thailand. It even seems to get warmer
when it rains here.
Yesterday I visited three villages inside Burma –
Halockanie, Baladen Pite, and Tee Wah Doh – and today I am in a very nice air
conditioned room a thousand miles and a thousand years away, or so it
seems. The people in the villages live
in bamboo houses, or wood houses if they are well off. There is no glass, no tile, and no concrete
in their homes, and if there is a fire everything burns – everything except
their knife and cooking pot. They live
without electricity or running water, and not all of them have latrines. Dogs, pigs, and chickens are more numerous
than people. Little kids run around half
naked, playing with simple toys, but they look well cared for and most of them
appear well fed.
We visited several schools and held mobile clinics in
each. I saw several children with congenital
abnormalities - one boy had severe scoliosis (curvature of his spine); a little
girl had a strange abnormality of her eyes so that they appeared to be
constantly bobbing; like two corks in the ocean. One mother was sitting on the front of her
house holding her severely retarded fourteen year old son in her arms. He cannot talk, walk, or feed himself, yet he
was clean and appeared to be very well cared for, a testimony to the power of a
mother’s love. I don’t think he would
get that level of care in any institution in the U.S.
Most of the villagers look happy and interested in what
is happening around them, only a few of the poorest seemed apathetic. The school kids were clean and working hard at
school. No one was ‘goofing off,’ the
way we did in school. The teachers are
very young and hold very important positions in their communities; in their
culture teachers are held in very high esteem.
I was very impressed by them.
On a different note, today I learned that Terry, my
friend of more than fifty years, died quietly last night after years of
fighting Parkinson’s disease. I met
Terry when we were freshmen in high school in Portland, half the world away
from here. He was on the reunion
committee for our high school class and this year will be our fifty year
reunion – I’m sorry he won’t be there. He lived a life of honor and courage and he
will be missed by so many people.
Often I talk with my son Colin on Skype. This week he drove over miles of snow covered
roads to get to Seattle where he is starting a new chapter in his life. It is exciting and I’m sure things will work
out for him; it’s just a bit nerve wracking in the beginning –a new city, new
job, new people. What a different lifestyle
we live compared to those people in Halockanie.
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