Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

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11/5/07
An early morning wake-up and breakfast at 5am? Not real hungry at that time of day but a coffee to get started and off we go to mild early morning traffic to the airport. Our guide takes our tickets and passports and all we have to do is linger around and all is arranged and we are at the gate and on the plane for the short flight to
There are many books written about the history of
We then met with Arun Sothea, a holocaust survivor of the Cambodian genocide and an activist with CVCD, Cambodian Volunteers for Community Development. This soft spoken young man related to us his life as a young boy during the Khmer Rouge. I had read several true accounts of these times and the consistency of his story to those I had read was powerful, but the way in which he is giving back is inspirational. Arun’s childhood was broken in many ways and he wanted to do something that would help today’s youth to help assure that the genocide of the 70’s never happens again. CVCD was formed by street youth in 1992 and at that time there were 500 volunteers. Their activities included:
CVCD now has 60,000 volunteers!
After lunch, we went to the S21 Museum. This museum is a memorial to the genocide of the Khmer Rouge regime.
These meetings lasted till late afternoon and we were able to walk to the central market and have a quick look-see prior to our evening program.
Ruth Messenger, President of AJWS spoke to us in the evening about
A terrible statistic of
AJWS has been very active in the divestment campaign in Darfur/Sudan. Two and one half million people are displaced and 4 million people need outside support. In Ruth’s words,
Overall, this was a very emotional, depressing, yet hopeful day. As a Jew, I have always felt it is important to “Never Forget”. Today reinforced that in that genocide keeps occurring, the places change but the cruelty of humankind persists. Greed, corruption and power fuel hideous behavior and it cannot go on without active and forceful resistance. I again count my blessings that I have not had to endure what so many in the world endure every day of their lives and I feel the responsibility to do my small part to insure that my children live in a fair and peaceful world.
11/4/07
We start the day by visiting the THAI AIDS TREATMENT ACTION GROUP (TTAG) and Karen and Ott who we had met at our Shabbat dinner. AJWS was the first funder of this organization in 2002. We learned a brief history of AIDS in
Former Thai Senator John Umphakorn then spoke to us from the governmental/political/social perspective. His current work deals primarily with advancing the concerns of marginalized citizens. He also spoke about the traditions of philanthropy in
Once again I was very impressed by the empowerment, dedication and energy of this grassroots organization. The determination with which this group works against all odds is inspirational.
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http://blog-mh.bethadam.org/__oneclick_uploads/2007/12/ott.pdf


11/3/07
Shabbat…a day of rest and relaxation and taking care of some business. I went with several of the ladies from the study tour to some clothing shops and tailors and after purchasing several silk kimonos for my wife and daughter had to make my exit…I’m still convinced that as far as shopping goes, a guy takes care of business and is ready for flight while women can spend days…. I hailed a Tuk-Tuk and explored the city and relied on my driver to take me to the appropriate places for me to acquire gifts and souvenirs for friends and family. I must say that the drivers have a definite agenda and want to take you to specific shopping venues where they apparently get some kind of kickback for bringing their customers. I found that I had to be friendly but firm to keep the driver on my agenda and not his agenda and go to the places that I and not he wanted to go. Driving around in the Tuk-Tuk is a great way to see Bangkok and to experience all the sights, sounds and smells of the city. After this exploration, I only hoped that I had made the right selections…confirmation for which would only be known upon my return home. The group got together again in the evening for Havdallah and then off to dinner.
11/2/2007
We have an early morning start for the airport…no straggling allowed since our flight leaves when it leaves and we are headed for the sprawling city of
BURMA ISSUES was founded in 1990 and although it is based in
BI also works with the international community to advocate using 3 strategies:
IDP’s generally do not have schooling and educational opportunities. The number 1 priority is FOOD so schooling is discouraged by parents who need their children’s help in the fields. Even if they go to school, it is a necessity to help in the fields after school. There is a general shortage of educational materials and teaching skills and BI provides these to the IDP’s.
There are 10 ethnic groups in
Burma Issues was yet another example of the drive, motivation and commitment of these grassroots leaders. The problems here have been ongoing for decades and generations and change is soooo slow, yet these leaders continue and expand their work building a long sought after society through non-violent change. ALL people have dreams and desires…
We check into our hotel that afternoon and have lunch to rejuvenate ourselves for the rest of the afternoon off. Short initial explorations of
11/1/07
Up early and 4 hours back to Chaing Mai. I didn’t mention before but the scenery along this route, as everywhere we have traveled is breathtaking. Lush, rugged and mountainous jungle everywhere.
We arrive at the Four Seasons Hotel in Chaing Mai and eat while looking out at this beauty. We are also fortunate to have a guest speaker, Dr. Voravit Suwanvanichkij, MPH, MD, Dr. Vit to us. Dr. Vit spoke eloquently and with great knowledge and insight about the state of public health in
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Cho Cho Win, a Burmese migrant worker suffering from AIDS, shortly before her death in a clinic on the
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By Yasmin Anwar, Media Relations | 28 June 2007BERKELEY – As Congress debates extending political and economic sanctions against Burma’s military regime, a new report from the University of California, Berkeley, and Johns Hopkins University documents how decades of repressive rule, civil war and poor governance in the Southeast Asian country have contributed to the spread of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious diseases there.Extreme travel restrictions imposed by the Burmese government have forced Médecins San Frontières (Doctors without Borders) in France and the multinational Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria to pull out of the country, and have severely curtailed the work of the International Committee of the Red Cross, according to the report co-authored by researchers from UC Berkeley’s Human Rights Center and The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The report was released today (Thursday, June 28), and can be viewed online.
David Scott Mathieson; Human Rights Watch: mathied@hrw.org, 087-176-2205
Voravit Suwanvanichkij, MPH, MD; Center for Public Health & Human Rights, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health: vsuwanva@jhsph.edu, 081-240-5720
After our informative lunch, we visited another impressive AJWS grantee THAI YOUTH ACTION PROGRAMS (TYAP). TYAP began as university based initiative that trained Thai youth to serve as HIV/AIDS peer educators. The program has expanded to include teaching students to take action on a number of other social issues such as drug prevention and minority rights. The school and community based programs help young people develop critical decision making skills, build support networks, and challenge discrimination against minorities and people living with HIV/AIDS. These kids were a true pleasure to witness. They are enthusiastic, well informed and motivated about their schooling. They were eager to share their stories with us and confident in asking us about our lives and our thoughts. This visit was very uplifting. After our visit with TYAP, we had our first “break” of the tour. We actually had the rest of the afternoon and evening free to do as we pleased. For many of us, including yours truly, this included a 2 hour massage. All of the knots, aches, and pains of the long flights and drives of the trip thus far were erased. Chaing Mai hosts a night market every night. The night market is quite large and consists of souvenirs, handicraft, Thai silk items, apparel and a great food court of local delicacies. Uh Oh…is it time soon to buy an extra suitcase?

October 31, 2007Given the current events in
EARTHRIGHTS staff met us at the nonprofit heath clinic started and run by Dr. Cynthia Maung, “Dr. Cynthia” to the local community. Dr. Cynthia is a Burmese who came to the Thai side of the border in the late 1980’s and has been here ever since. A tireless humanitarian, Dr. Cynthia recognized the need to serve an expanding population of IDP’S, refugees, and migrants from her home country. For most people in these groups, Dr. Cynthia’s clinic is the only source of healthcare and she set up her clinic to treat sick Burmese who could not afford healthcare services in
The clinic is primitive by our western standards and by Thai standards as well but for the majority of Burmese here, this is their only source of healthcare. If not for the selfless efforts of Dr. Cynthia and her dedicated staff and volunteers these Burmese would have no access to medical treatment. In addition to being a clinic, it was apparent that the clinic compound serves as a community for these displaced Burmese. This “community” serves a wonderful need and is a fine example to our communities and how we as a community can always do more. These people here with absolutely nothing work so hard and so selflessly…
My father, a survivor of the holocaust, was naturalized in 1945 and what this has meant for him and my whole family is recognized and appreciated. Dad said from as early as I can remember, “Those born in
“Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” is one of the most famous phrases in the United States Declaration of Independence. These three aspects are listed among the “unalienable rights” of man.These rights are ones we often taken for granted and we must keep in mind that our roles could easily be reversed with the oppressed and disenfranchised around the world. A role of the dice and we are here and they are there. Happiness and all that it entails we expect as a basic right by our western values and is brought down to earth quickly when happiness in the context of these Burmese and 40-50% of humanity is knowing that you have the next meal for yourself and your family. I try to keep this in mind when I bitch and complain about petty things.We later met with the HUMAN RIGHTS EDUCATION INSTITUTE OF BURMA (HREIB), an NGO, non-profit Burmese institute for human rights education in












Tuesday, 10/30/07Gotta go, gotta go…many partners to visit but so little time. Chiang Rai and north to the Golden Triangle is a beautiful and rugged area that certainly deserves further exploration but we are off this morning to Chiang Mai. We start off at 8am sharp except, as I explain to our Thai guide for a couple of “stragglers”. Straggler is a word unfamiliar to him and I must explain this bit of English slang to him. I’m not used to group tours but being a “yekke”, straggling is something that I personally do not do. Once the “stragglers show up, he fully understands the term and we get on our way to Chiang Rai’s southern cousin, Chiang Mai. By this time in the journey, all study tour participants have removed the name tags and are getting to know each other. We have a very diverse, interesting, and compatible group of 13 tour participants and 4 AJWS staff. Major cities like
Control over the HIV-AIDS epidemic has been a relative success story in
We continue our journey and arrive in Chiang Mai, where we check into the beautiful Chedi Hotel and have lunch. Now fat and happy after our very physically active morning bus ride, we proceed to our visit to AJWS grantee EMPOWER FOUNDATION. One of Judaism’s highest values is that of freeing a captive. EMPOWER is a great example of people gaining freedom through empowerment and education. In its most simple form, EMPOWER stands forE =educationM =meansP =protectionO =ofW =womenE =engaged inR =recreationEMPOWER is a sex workers rights organization that promotes economic opportunity, training, education, outreach, and support for migrant sex workers. This is accomplished through computer training, Thai and English literacy, non-formal education, counseling, health information, alternative livelihood, advocacy, and translation.As many here are migrants and have no education at all, EMPOWER provides collaborative education opportunities. These efforts help to give these people confidence to become part of the wider society.My sense is that they do great work here and the results are obvious. We had discussions with this group and the pride, self confidence, and empowerment of these women is impressive. We had a very candid discussion and question and answer session that were inspirational, enlightening, and thought provoking.By now my study group partners were learning about me what my wife already knows…I am “THE INTEROGATOR”. I have a great interest in knowing about things at a detail level. Many of these women were the primary providers for their extended families. I had a question that was gnawing at me…How did these women feel about having the responsibility…the burden of being the sole support for their families, even to the extent that they were putting brothers through school? They unanimously said that they felt a great pride in supporting their families. They then asked me if I had a family, how many people I supported, and if I was proud of supporting my family. I answered Yes, 3 and Yes again. They responded rightfully that they are supporting many more people than I am so they are even more proud…touché’! These are confident, proud, empowered and responsible young women. I am very impressed. They also expressed that for many people, it is more important what they do versus who they are. They are correct. Think outside the box.We headed back to the Beautiful Chedi Hotel for a quick shower and to our dinner program. We had a guest speakers from AJWS grantee MIGRANT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (MAP). MAP program areas are community health, education, women’s empowerment, and labor rights and advocacy to assist the large number of Burmese migrant workers. Recently their work has expanded to address violence, exploitation, and human rights.







As my overview of
After our morning orientation, we traveled several hours to a tribal village in the border area. Here we visited with an AJWS partner, Hill Area and Community Development Foundation (HADF). HADF is one of over 300 civil society partners in 39 countries that are supported by AJWS. Currently, AJWS has more than 100,000 supporters and takes a grassroots/ holistic approach to it’s support of it’s grantees. Most of the projects deal with human rights service delivery, hunger, poverty, disease, and social justice through the efforts and support of the Jewish community. The activities of AJWS and it’s partners empowers people to make change in their lives and the lives of those in their communities. This is accomplished through a human rights lens and includes advocacy relating to the grantee’s work. HADF is one of 21 partners in
This was our first meeting with a project partner and was representative of all the partners that we visited in that they are all highly motivated, empowered, and dedicated to their work. It was very inspirational for me to see people living in what by western terms are “primitive” conditions and environment and how the leadership is accomplishing repair and change to their world. We were treated to a cultural exhibition of tribal costumes and dances as well as a tour of the village. We were fortunate to spend time in the home of a villager and were able to discuss with her through an interpreter her life and the life in her village. The attitude of the people is unbelievable. Our lives are so far from this…On the way back to the hotel, we stopped at the Golden Triangle, the intersection of