Kandi kandi din katailam
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Kani kandi buk vashailam
Arkan nor vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Gura gura doodhor jadu
Gura gura doodhor puain
puashsha kene more
Pori thori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Kandi kandi din katailam
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Mogor puain dui class
pori chori dhori thake
Valor puain BA pass
hoile panor khili beche
Gura gura doodhor puain
puashsha kene more
Helom pori no parilam
Arkan not dore
Helom pori no parilo
Biyaginor dore
Gura gura doodhor puain
Na khai kene more
Helom pori no parilo
Biyaginor dore
Helom pori no parilam
Militarir dore
Kandi kandi din katailam
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Kani kandi buk vashailam
Arkan nor vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Gura gura doodhor jadu
Gura gura doodhor puain
puashsha kene more
Pori thori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Kandi kandi din katailam
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
Mogor puain dui class
pori chori dhori thake
Valor puain BA pass
hoile panor khili beche
Gura gura doodhor puain
puashsha kene more
Helom pori no parilam
Arkan not dore
Helom pori no parilo
Biyaginor dore
Gura gura doodhor puain
Na khai kene more
Helom pori no parilo
Biyaginor dore
Helom pori no parilam
Militarir dore
Kandi kandi din katailam
Mog Bormar vitore
Helom pori no parilam
Hokumote dore
inviata da Dq82 - 2/12/2016 - 14:52
Lingua: Inglese
Traduziome inglese di Farzana
WE SPENT OUR LIFE CRYING
We spent our days crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
We spent our life crying
In a home called Arakan
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
We spent our life crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
Mogs attend elementary
Yet they pick the stick to rule,
But we get to sell betel leaves
Even if we earn a BA*
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left behind Arakan
So we’ve left due to fear of everyone
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left due to fear of everyone
So we’ve left due to fear of military men
We spent our life crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
We spent our days crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
We spent our life crying
In a home called Arakan
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
We spent our life crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
Mogs attend elementary
Yet they pick the stick to rule,
But we get to sell betel leaves
Even if we earn a BA*
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left behind Arakan
So we’ve left due to fear of everyone
Tender babies and charming lovely kids
Why should they starve to death?
So we’ve left due to fear of everyone
So we’ve left due to fear of military men
We spent our life crying
Surrounded by the Mogs in Burma
So we’ve left behind homeland
Fearing torture of the government
* higher degree above school
inviata da Dq82 - 2/12/2016 - 14:59
×
Sono una popolazione musulmana, probabilmente proveniente dal Bangladesh, stanziata in Birmania. Dal 1982 la giunta militare birmana privò i Rohingya della cittadinanza birmana facendone degli apolidi, li ha poi rinchiusi in dei "campi profughi" per la loro sicurezza, in realtà si tratta di campi di prigionia.
L'unica soluzione è la fuga via mare verso la Malesya, ma si pensi ai naufragi nel "tranquillo" Mediterraneo, facile immaginare nell'Oceano.
dailymail.co.uk
Testo trovato in Farzana, K. F. (2011). Music and Artistic Artefacts: Symbols of Rohingya Identity and Everyday Resistance in Borderlands. ASEAS – Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 4(2), 215-236.
La seguente tarana (poesia/canzone) è stata raccolta da Aleya Bahu, emigrata in Bangladesh nel 1991 da Arakan
This song tells about what we encountered in Arakan. Our life . . . our memory about our homeland. We could not tolerate the persecution (julm) any more. . . . We had to leave our place. This tarana is all about that feeling.
Although the context of this song is about life in Arakan, it was later reproduced by their popular local singers to depict their displaced life in Bangladesh in a bid to keep their memories alive. To Aleya, this song reflects her own life in Arakan. Watching her sing, it was difficult to overlook the intensity of her facial expressions and emotional involvement with the song, magnifying her frustration and insecurity in life, and her resentment articulated as the song’s lyrics.
The word dor (fear) is used eight times in this song, in nearly every stanza, to explain why they had to spend a lifetime crying in their own homeland.
Specific sources of fear mentioned are the torture at the hands of the Burmese government, the military men, and the Mogs (Rakhines). It raised the issue of difficulty living in a land surrounded by Buddhist Rakhines who are entitled to all the economic, social, and political facilities in life, while the Muslim Rohingyas remained completely deprived. In particular, it raised the issue of hunger caused by poverty, especially when watching their babies starve to death. It also indicates their joblessness and poor economic condition in life due to discrimination in education and job opportunities between the Rakhine and Rohingya communities. All these indicators of discrimination painfully exemplify the hierarchical relationship between the powerful and the powerless in society.
The song is a perfect reflection of their stateless life. It illustrates the traumatic experience of why and how they were forced from their homeland. It clearly expresses their sorrows and frustrations in life, and certainly shows their resentment
towards the Burmese government and its military as well as towards the local Rakhines.
It challenges their domination, especially in asking the question “why”. This mode of articulation certainly shows that something went very wrong for them. It serves as a painful memory of their homeland and how their lives have changed. The song is targeted at refugees who share similar experiences.
Farzana (op.cit.)