Dear friends, This is a story about a good friend and teammate in the Free
Burma Rangers. His name is Soe Naing and he is the leader and coordinator of
the three Arakan FBR teams providing relief to IDPs in Arakan State, Western
Burma. He attended his first FBR training in 2002 and then with very little
support trained three relief teams of his own and conducted numerous relief
missions to help Arakan people who were being attacked by the Burma Army.
Soe Naing, Leader of the Arakan State FBR
In 2007 Soe Naing was arrested on the Bangladesh/India border and spent 11
months in a Bangladeshi prison for helping a journalist to do a story on the
situation of the displaced people of Arakan State. He had finished escorting
the journalist on a relief mission in Burma and was taking the journalist' camera
equipment back across the border thru Bangladesh. He was arrested at the border
and charged with illegal border crossing. We prayed for him, advocated for him
and the journalist helped to pay a fine to get him out When he was released
11 months later, he immediately went back into the Arakan State of Burma to
help people under attack of the Burma Army. He then helped us to coordinate
the training of all western Burma FBR teams- Kachin, Chin and Kachin. We met
again at this training and I said, "I am so sorry about your time in prison,
we prayed for you and tried our best but could not get you out very fast ".
Soe Naing replied, "It was a good experience for me, don't worry about it.
It was a good opportunity for me. When they put me in prison right away I
prayed and began to get to know the other inmates. I encouraged them and
told them that there were many productive things that could be done in
prison. I told them, that we should not give up and do our best.
I encouraged the Arakan prisoners and helped to strengthen their morale and
to organize them. We developed a good information network in the prison and
organized the inmates into political action teams for when they were
released from prison. We encouraged many of them to join the Arakan
pro-democracy resistance and they began to be happier and to have a new
purpose in their lives. Seeing this change in attitude and the reduction of
problems among the prisoners, the prison guards were grateful and soon gave
me my own room, a TV and a cell phone! So you see, God took care of me and
I was able to use that time to raise up more people who wanted to work for
freedom in Burma. Thank you for your prayer, and God worked out my prison
time for good."
I wanted to share this story because it inspired me and helped me to live
with more faith and to remember that God can bring good from every
circumstance. I also wanted you all to know what kind of people you are
supporting and how the light of love, faith and courage is bright in Burma.
Thank you and God bless you,
Dave, family and teams
FBR
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.