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The Karens of Burma: Victims of War


Article # : 12501 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  2,268 Words
Author : Roger P. Winter
Roger P. Winter is director of the U.S. Committee for Refugees. This is an adaptation of an article originally published by the United States of Committee for Refugees in 1986.

       Since 1975, Thailand has provided asylum to hundreds of thousands of Indo-Chinese refugees from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Fleeing an internationally condemned occupation of their homelands and the ensuing genocide, they crossed the Mekong River, risked assault by current-day pirates, and navigated the Gulf of Thailand to arrive there. In doing so, they have properly received substantial media attention and a massive international humanitarian response.
       
        The situation of Karen refugees in Thailand is different. Despite the continuation of the nearly four-decade-old military conflict in Burma that spawned them, their numbers are smaller, their dream of an autonomous state little understood, and their situation generally unknown to the rest of the world. They are Thailand's other refugees.
       
        The characteristics of many of the Karen refugees in Thailand today immediately convey traces of their history. Their names are often unusual for Southeast Asia - George, John, Julia - and English is commonly spoken among them. Although most are Buddhists, Christianity is also common, particularly among the leadership. Nationalism is strong; their focus is not on refugee problems, but on the struggle back in Burma. They are "well organized" in a Western sense; the Karen Refugee Committee invites visitors to see a videotape about the Karen national movement before discussing how the refugees came to be in Thailand.
       
        Background of the problem
       
        Burma, a land of some thirty-five million people, features an ethnically and culturally diverse population. Although dominated by ethnic Burmans, it also serves as home to a number of other groups, including Kachins, Chins, Mons, Karenni, Shans, Arakanese, Karens, and others. In fact, the Karens, who number over three million in Burma, probably entered the area (including present-day Thailand) before the Burmans did, some one thousand years ago. Historically, friction between ethnic groups in the area has been characteristic.
       
        Christian missionaries found a receptive audience among the Karens in the late 1800s. Perhaps a fifth are now Christian. The Karens aligned themselves with British colonialists and fought on the side of the British from the early 1800s through World War II. At times, this alliance inflamed their relations with other ethnic groups, particularly the Burmese. Thousands of Karens were allegedly massacred resisting Burmese-Japanese collusion during World War II. As Burma
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