Myanmar's Young Artists and Activists
In the country formerly known as Burma, these free thinkers are a force in the struggle for democracy
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Adam Dean
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
After a few days in Yangon, I flew to Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city, to see a live performance by J-Me, one of the country’s most popular rap musicians and the star attraction at a promotional event for Now, a fashion and culture magazine. Five hundred young Burmese, many wearing “I Love Now” T-shirts, packed a Mandalay hotel ballroom festooned with yellow bunting and illuminated by strobe lights.
Hotel employees were handing out copies of the Myanmar Times, a largely apolitical English-language weekly filled with bland headlines: “Prominent Monk Helps Upgrade Toilets at Monasteries,” “Election Turnout Higher Than in 1990.” In a sign of the slightly more liberal times, the paper did carry a photograph inside of Suu Kyi, embracing her younger son, Kim Aris, 33, at Myanmar’s Yangon International Airport in late November—their first meeting in ten years. Suu Kyi was married to British academic Michael Aris, who died of cancer in 1999; he failed to gain permission to visit his wife during his final days. The couple’s older son, Alexander Aris, 37, lives in England.
At the hotel, a dozen Burmese fashion models ambled down a catwalk before J-Me leapt onto the stage wearing sunglasses and a black leather jacket. The tousle-haired 25-year-old rapped in Burmese about love, sex and ambition. In one song, he described “a young guy in downtown Rangoon” who “wants to be somebody. He’s reading English language magazines, looking inside, pasting the photos on his wall of the heroes he wants to be.”
The son of a half-Irish mother and a Burmese father, J-Me avoids criticizing the regime directly. “I got nothing on my joint that spits against anyone,” the baby-faced rapper told me, falling into hip-hop vernacular. “I’m not lying, I’m real. I rap about self-awareness, partying, going out, spending money, the youth that’s struggling to come up and be successful in the game.” He said his songs reflect the concerns of Myanmar’s younger generation. “Maybe some kids are patriotic, saying, ‘Aung San Suu Kyi is out of jail, let’s go down and see her.’ But mostly they’re thinking about getting out of Burma, going to school abroad.”
Not every rapper treads as carefully as J-Me. Thxa Soe needles the regime from a recording studio in a dilapidated apartment block in Yangon. “I know you’re lying, I know you’re smiling, but your smile is lying,” he says in one song. In another, titled “Buddha Doesn’t Like Your Behavior,” he warns: “If you behave like that, it’s gonna come back to you one day.” When I caught up with him, he was rehearsing for a Christmas Day concert with J-Me and a dozen other musicians and preparing for another battle with the censors. “I have a history of politics, that’s why they watch me and ban so many things,” the chunky 30-year-old told me.
Thxa Soe grew up steeped in opposition politics: his father, a member of Suu Kyi’s NLD Party, has been repeatedly jailed for participating in protests and calling for political reform. One uncle fled the country in 2006; a cousin was arrested during student protests in the 1990s and was put in prison for five years. “He was tortured, he has brain damage, and he can’t work,” Thxa Soe said. His musical awakening came in the early 1990s, when a friend in Myanmar’s merchant marine smuggled him cassettes of Vanilla Ice and M.C. Hammer. Later, his father installed a satellite dish on their roof; Thxa Soe spent hours a day glued to MTV. During his four years as a student at London’s School of Audio Engineering, he says, “I got a feeling about democracy, about freedom of speech.” He cut his first album in 2000 and has tangled with censors ever since. Last year, the government banned all 12 tracks on his live-concert album and an accompanying video that took him a year to produce; officials claimed he showed contempt for “traditional Burmese music” by mixing it up with hip-hop.
During a recent trip to New York City, Thxa Soe participated in a benefit concert performed before hundreds of members of the Burmese exile community at a Queens high school. Some of the money raised there went to help HIV/AIDS sufferers in Myanmar.
Thxa Soe isn’t the only activist working for that cause. Shortly after Suu Kyi’s release from house arrest, I met the organizers of the 379 Gayha AIDS shelter at the NLD Party headquarters one weekday afternoon. Security agents with earpieces and cameras were watching from a tea shop across the street as I pulled up to the office building near the Shwedagon Pagoda, a golden stupa that towers 30 stories over central Yangon and is the most venerated Buddhist shrine in Myanmar. The large, ground-floor space was bustling with volunteers in their 20s and 30s, journalists, human-rights activists and other international visitors, and people from Myanmar’s rural countryside who had come seeking food and other donations. Posters taped on the walls depicted Suu Kyi superimposed over a map of Myanmar and images of Che Guevara and her father.
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Comments (8)
The real interesting subject is the broad spectrum of art in the country this is not mentioned in the articles and posts because this article is about Yangon, but Yangon is secondary in terms of art. The place where the "art music plays" is Mandalay and environs, more here: http://www.allmyanmar.com/myanmarmore/myanmar-art.htm
Posted by max meier on May 1,2012 | 11:37 AM
The young people you talk about are mostly middle class junta brats who come from military elite families and have little to fear from the authorities. They avoid politics not out of fear but because they are privileged and are not interested in political freedom. They can afford to travel to Thailand, China, and Singapore to buy clothes, gadgets and magazines and as military brats they have no problem getting passports and bribing the right people.
Your article is very naive. These people are the next generation junta. You are equating hip-hop and graffiti art with political liberalism when they are mainstream fashion trends adopted by a young elite. This isn't even a start.
Posted by Bones on June 19,2011 | 04:18 PM
As a Burmese-born artist and activist based in the USA, I found this very enlightening and, of course, sad.
I have been trying to get in touch again with Thar Soe - on a visit to the National Gallery of Art in 2009, he sat in front of a Jackson Pollock painting and meditated for a long time.
I would love to see more of Ma Ei's art and hope she can travel or live abroad.
It does not seem to me worth it to waste their youth and talent in such a thankless place. There is moreover the constant risk of arrest and death, not to mention physical and mental harm.
Kyi May Kaung
http://kyimaykaung.blogspot.com
Posted by Kyi May Kaung (Ph.D.) on May 28,2011 | 04:41 PM
Even with the mistakes, I saw this article very enlightening. Beautiful clothing, dyes and colors are part of places like ancient Tibet. And when I think of artists not having free reign, it is very unsettling. Come on world we can do better than this!
Posted by Adora on April 15,2011 | 12:11 PM
Yangon is not the capital of Burma (1st paragraph of the article). Naypyidaw has been for the past five years.
Posted by Chuck Sitkin on March 17,2011 | 01:25 AM
Alexander Aris lives in Portland Oregon, not in England.
Posted by Paul Coopeland on March 16,2011 | 05:25 PM
I also welcome this look at artists working under censorship, but I am disappointed at the dismissive tone you take with the private media here. The hundreds, maybe thousands of young journalists working in the media industry do essentially the same thing as your painters and wrappers: try to slip subversive material past the censors. However, they do it day in, day out, earn significantly less - maybe $100 or $150 a month - than the people you interview and are far more likely to wind up in trouble with the authorities.
I think it's also worth pointing out this is an essentially urban, middle class movement in a country where two-thirds of people live in rural areas. Nevertheless, it's a worthy topic for discussion and this is a well-written article.
Posted by kyaw on March 1,2011 | 10:09 PM
I appreciate this rare and encouraging look at individual Burmese artists living and working under the conditions imposed by the regime. Your readers might be interested in visiting www.MyanmarHumanRights.org, which encourages potential travelers to become better informed about conditions in Burma, presents both sides of the pro- and anti-tourism debate, and invites people to decide for themselves whether tourism is beneficial or detrimental to the people of Burma. The site also provides opportunities to write letters asking for the release of some of the (estimated) more than two thousand political prisoners.
Posted by Andrea Wolper on March 1,2011 | 09:31 AM