Here is a report from our FBR HQ team after the latest
training of Shan, Karenni and Pao relief teams. It is about love and what can
make us cry. We were there to start the training and our ethnic headquarters
team finished the training and prepared the new teams for thier missions.
After the graduation and after the last team had gone on thier missions, our
headquarters group sent us this message.
"We want to share with you about the unusual FBR training/events that happened
here after you left.
After the teams graduated and before they left for thier relief missions we
sang all the Good Life Club songs together, prayed and did push ups. Then the
teams began leaving each day in turn. The three Shan FBR girls who were part
of the training will now stay to help with the Community Health Worker training
taking place here. They are doing very well and are helping us teach rappelling,
swimming, and Good Life Club work. They try their best to lead the other students.
They are each now a lot better in doing push ups, running up the big mountain,
working hard, helping in teaching GLC songs and acting like Rangers, and they
always smile.
As the first Karenni teams left, the girls were crying but the men said ' I
want to cry but doing push ups helped me not to cry'!.
Then a day later one of the Shan teams asked us to sing together with them..
We did not know they were leaving that day. Later on the girls came down and
sang with us. We found out they were leaving when they were crying and the girls
were crying with them.
Then as the Pa-O team were leaving, one of the Pa-O girls said 'I will not
cry because even when I left my Mom and Dad I did not cry. I do not know crying'.
The 3 Shan girls were singing and crying but at first the Pa-O girls did not.
Then we kept singing and the Pa-O girls began to cry too.
As a joke to make everyone laugh, the Shan FBR leader (Sai Noung) brought a
bucket for the girls to collect their tears. Then later another Shan team joined
us to sing bfore they left.. Many men including Sai Noung cried this time. After
the team left we asked Sai Noung 'why did you cry' and he said 'all the team
have trucks to drop them off for the start of thier mission, but they do not,
they have walk even before they start the mission'.
We do not want any Free Burma Rangers to cry but we can not stop them [from
doing] whatever they have to do: crying, singing, and doing push ups at the
same time. We do not think this kind of FBR action is bad. We train people to
do [the things] they have to do and we also do not try to stop what they want
to do. The only bad thing is that the camera men are going very close to the
crying persons and taking their pictures (and laughing).
Anyway, we only want to share with you about this FBR training and what we
call "Train to Cry Training"!
Thank you and God bless you,
The HQ FBR team
The Free Burma Rangers (FBR) mission is to provide hope, help and
love to internally displaced people inside Burma, regardless of ethnicity
or religion. Using a network of indigenous field teams, FBR reports on human
rights abuses, casualties and the humanitarian needs of people who are under
the oppression of the Burma Army. FBR provides medical, spiritual and educational
resources for IDP communities as they struggle to survive Burmese military
attacks.