Swimming From Burma

There’s been a new face hanging around the restaurant for a few days. She is a tiny young girl of about twelve, who looks like a puff of wind would sweep her away. She has a beautiful face and smiles huge crinkly-eyed smiles whenever I pass her.

Being used to the ebb and flow of people around here I don’t think to question who she is for several days. Until it becomes clear she’s sleeping here, at which point Crab explains she is Ooh and Bo’s daughter and she swam here from Burma.

“She what?” I ask, complete incredulity written across my face. Crab re-iterates, “yes she swam here”. Ooh and Bo couldn’t afford to pay the people traffickers who smuggle people over the border from Burma, so she went illegally in a boat with 14 other people.

Crossing the foul straits between Ranong and Thailand, they were chased by the Burmese police, the boat overturned and she had to swim for it. Five people died. This little slip of a girl swam to Thailand, and then presumably with no money, certainly with no Thai language, managed to make her way across the country to the island.

A few weeks later, I am actually in Ranong, Burma, doing the annoying three-monthly visa crossing required on most long term visas. I arrive at the port having mini-bussed across the country, spent hours on the ferry and finally arrived at the hell hole of a port.

The place stinks. The smells of rotten fish, rancid sewage and gasoline hang in the air and choke everyone, along with the sweltering heat. On the dock, hundreds of boats are crammed along the edges of the water, packed in like starving kittens, bobbing at their mother’s teat.

When we clamber into the boat, the clean highway from Thailand cushions us on one side of the river, and on the other side the smoggy jungle hills of Burma, with all their secrets and their deathly struggles, rise into the distance. I look down at the water, which is black, putrid, oily foulness. The stench is almost unbearable, and I have literally never seen water that looks like straight oil. It’s disgusting.

In our wooden longtail boat we chug our way out into the wide water stream that divides the two countries. Belching gasoline, as we pick up speed the air clears a little bit. I cannot believe that this little girl was in this water. Cannot imagine her cheerful eyes and sweet smile racing under cover of darkness across this waterway with the Burmese police on her tail. I cannot begin to contemplate the fear as she lands in the filthy water, or the strength she must have had to swim across the miles of water, and haul herself oil coverd and exhausted from the obnoxious river.

I dread to imagine the life she has come from. Something in her demeanour, something in her eyes speaks to me that she is a victim. Unfortunately in a place like Burma, with no protection, no women’s rights, a war torn, bloody land, just a beautiful little slip of a girl making her way is unlikely not to have encountered hardships. I wonder what she has seen, what those intelligent gentle eyes have borne witness to. What she thinks behind that luminous smile. Of course she just gets on with it: is happy, smiles, enjoys being with her family, is glad to be alive, is glad of the moment she is living and the opportunity to enjoy it.

A few weeks later the girl gathers her things in a plastic bag and swinging it against her leg waves goodbye. She is off to another beach to work in a resort. I hope she is well treated, I hope they are good to her, that someone there will be protecting her, that she wont be abused, violated, exploited or hurt in anyway. She is perfectly happy as she gets on the bike to go, this is her chance, a shot at Thailand, a shot at a good life, work, food, some comfort. She is glad to take it and I pray with all my heart it works out for her as the bike speeds out of the village and up the dusty dirt road.

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Comments

  1. Mike says:

    I’m not sure what to say, its such a heart rendering story and one that I guess gets played out many times.

    It makes me sad but also happy that she made it, like you I hope she is not exploited.

    It also highlights the problem that the Thai government has with illegal immigrants and is often criticised for. I often wonder what happened in Burma, since most ex-colonial countries seem to have fared better.
    .-= Mike´s last blog ..Loan Sharks in Thailand =-.

  2. tom yam says:

    I really enjoyed this post. Interesting content that was well written and heartfelt. You would have to be made of stone not to be even slightly moved by this story.
    I hope things turn out well for her but of course, we will never know.
    .-= tom yam´s last blog ..The price of being a farang =-.

  3. malcolm says:

    Wow , what a story , I hear the from Kat the lady who has the Bamboo School in Bon Te near the burma border , they don’t swim they walk for days thru the jungle to get a little help and matbe a new start in life . You have a great story , and one that touched my heart strings , I will share it with othes I know . thats for sharing . I love your blog , such wonderful , attention grabbing topics . I would love to add you to blogs I follow would you do the same for me ? thanks in advance , and for sure I’ll be reading you again soon, now I have to read some of you older post , you’ve got my attention . Malcolm
    .-= malcolm´s last blog ..FISH MARKET DAY IN WHANG PHO =-.

  4. malcolm says:

    Sorry for a few misspelled words , Someone was calling for me and I was typing to fast , I’ll do better next time I promise. Malcolm
    .-= malcolm´s last blog ..FISH MARKET DAY IN WHANG PHO =-.

  5. tom yam says:

    Hi, I added you to my blogroll and look forward to reading your posts in the future…
    Tom…
    .-= tom yam´s last blog ..The bridge over the river dry =-.

  6. Martyn says:

    What an excellent post. A great story, packed full of emotion but typed I’m sure with a quivering heart but a steady hand. I hope the girl finds the good life but I guess it’s what has happened to her on the other side of the oil filled water that will shape it. If she’s been previously abused then there’s every chance she’ll one day fall into the seedier side of resort life. I hope not and if she does ever return to your village then please do update us all on the waif’s progress.

    Great post, I could just about smell the oil but I’m glad I couldn’t whiff the fish.
    .-= Martyn´s last blog ..Udon Thani’s Night Market Scene =-.

  7. I have had your article bookmarked on my Google reader for a few days but only now got around to reading it. What a story. I think most of us feel we have suffered a bit in life, but it is usually small peanuts compared to what others have to endure. Since my son was born I’m hit even harder by stories like this one; how can we humans allow this type of thing to happen.

    You have told this story perfectly and I really felt it; this is type of thing that stays with me after I pull myself away from the computer. I won’t leave your articles on my to-do list for so long next time.

  8. Was Once says:

    Thank you for this real life story of pain and misery that keeps happening. We don’t know how lucky we are until we hear these.
    .-= Was Once´s last blog ..Buddha-Dhamma-SanghaX-LARGE =-.

  9. Holy wow!
    What a story.
    .-= 6512 and growing´s last blog ..You scratch my back- I’ll scratch yours =-.

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