From Outer Voices
| 00:58:56
Producers: Jack Chance

Kawthoolei
An Outer Voices Documentary
Produced by Jack Chance
Billboard 1:00
SFX: Karen Traditional Music
Host: For nearly 60 years, Burma has been at war with itself
SFX: machine gun fire
H: Political repression and ethnic cleansing are a way of life in the country now known as Myanmar
KWO Anon: They came and destroyed our school, our church?
Lydia: ?the women and the children, they make them walk in front to be the minesweepers?
H: Neighboring Thailand plays host to an ever-increasing number of Burmese refugees
Cynthia: 1 million Burmese people are living in Thailand illegally
H: In between are the Karen, an ethnic group struggling for survival and an independent homeland called Kawthoolei
Lydia: Kawthoolei is a place where there's no bad things, it's all things pure
H: In the midst of the world's longest running civil war, we talk to the w...
Read the full transcript
Timing:
0:00-1:00 Billboard
1:00-5:00 newshole
5:00-19:00 Part 1
19:00-20:00 Station Break 1
20:00-39:00 Part 2
39:00-40:00 Station Break 2
40:00-59:00 Part 3
Title: Heavenly Space
Artist: Ko Myint Sein/U Kyi/U Tin Maung
White Elephants & Golden Ducks: Musical Treasures From Burma
Label: Shanachie
Year: 1997
Length: 2:17
begins @ 5:38 of Segment A
Other recordings used in this piece, though typically unavailable in the United States are available from the Assistance Association of Political Prisoners and the Borderline Shop of Mae Sot, Thailand.
All other music was taken from field recordings by Jack Chance, Gregory Scarborough, Hsamu, and Nicole Huck.
Yolette Garcia
Posted on September 05, 2006 at 08:17 PM | Permalink
Review of Kawthoolei with newshole
This documentary is stunning work. Simply said, it gives the unheard voices of the repressed Burmese a chance to relate how the government's cruelty, torture and ethnic cleansing has nearly annihilated them, except for the hope that still lives in the quiet work of women activists. The listener becomes captivated by the determination of these people, and the sounds of their everyday life, as difficult as it may be.
The world has come to know of their aspirations through Aung San Suu Kyi, but just as eloquent are the voices of women who have organized illegally to advance not only their people's survival but dreams of a peaceful homeland. Kawthoolei is the name the Karen people--the largest ethnic group in Burma--give to their mythical place of origin. Their wish is to recast that place in Burma. The Karen Women's Organization has trained refugees living in camps on the Thai border to become literate, to gain life skills, and more importantly to receive medical care. The stories of Dr. Cynthia's clinic and her Backpack Medics are astounding.
Producer Jack Chance guides us through this Burmese journey with insight, good writing, and exquisite use of sound, music and tone. The hour is gripping because of the way it is put together, and also because it delivers an exceedingly complex topic in a crystalline way.