Golden Earth (31 page)

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Authors: Norman Lewis

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First reaction to this morality: if a Burmese evil-doer could really be deterred by such propaganda – and the Government evidently thought he could – it showed that heaven and hell were nearer to a Buddhist than I had ever suspected. Secondly, I found it hard to think of the Burmese woman, outwardly so tranquil and so demure, in the role of a Lady Macbeth.

* * *

The organisation of such a show struck me as a praiseworthy and heartening attitude on the part of the government of Burma, which, whatever its failings, possesses in full measure the politically saving grace of self-criticism. They knew that their administration was riddled with corruption, and instead of trying to hush it up, they gave it all the publicity they could. And that, it seemed to me, was the quickest way to mend matters.

No one could have been more cheerfully frank about their
shortcomings
and their failures than the Burmese. Were things better in the British times? Nine out of ten of them laughed out loud at the absurdity of such a question. ‘Better? … Why even bring it up? Everyone was well off then. We didn’t know how well off we were.’ The Burmese seem to be above nursing old scores, and they either forget or pretend to forget the other side of the picture – the disdains and exclusions by which it was made clear to them that they were regarded, in their own country, as an inferior people. The Burmese never bitterly remind the British visitor of this, and he is freely welcomed by them within the portals of those institutions from which they were debarred.

But in any case these were the minor irritations of the skin, which did not amount to much, except as symptoms of a deep-seated ailment. What was really wrong was that under colonial tutelage the Burmese or any other people lost – or as in this case were in the process of losing – their national character. The only culture they could rebuild for
themselves
was never much more than a poor, provincial imitation of that of the occupying power. Colonies – and Burma was an example – were sometimes prosperous, but colonial prosperity is a wretched substitute for lost nationhood. Before they could be real Burmese again, and not – at least, so far as the upper classes went – imitation Englishmen, the Burmese had to stand on their own feet, and left to fend for themselves. Whatever the temporary material consequences, I regard it as the greatest possible good fortune for them that this has happened.

* * *

And now on the eve of my departure from Burma, I re-gathered my impressions in an attempt to form some kind of personal estimate of this fascinating country’s prospects. From my record of the present-day somewhat chaotic travelling conditions, the reader may have deduced a pessimism which would not be altogether justified. The Burmese nation stands upon foundations, both economic and psychological, of peculiar solidity. These provide a resilience which has pulled it safely through several historic crises of the gravest kind.

To deal with the psychological aspect; Burma has, in the first place, the extreme fortune to be entirely free from the damaging myths of colour, race and caste, that bedevil the internal relationships of so many nations. Secondly, it has freed itself from Western domination almost with the ease of removing an unwanted garment. As a result, no trace of bitterness remains, and a Westerner can travel with at least as much safety as a Burmese from one end of the country to the other, meeting, as I did, with nothing but the most genial and touching hospitality. Then, once again, owing to the nation’s background of Buddhist
indoctrination
it is free from the delusion – the bane of the West, and much of the East – of the supreme value of material accumulation. There is some corruption and money-grubbing in high places, but real prestige in Burma – and it is very real – lies not with the millionaire, but with the penniless monk. On the national scale this means that there is no reason why the Burmese should not avoid or bypass that grim interlude in human development heralded in the West by the Industrial Revolution, and rest content to live within their present very adequate means, leaving Tennessee Valley Projects and their like to those who believe that the kingdom of heaven on earth will be here when every family has its refrigerator, as well as two cars in the garage. I state here my sincere belief that the average Burmese peasant working his own land, lives a fuller and happier life, and is a more successful human being than the average Western factory hand or office worker. His work is creative, free of clock-punching and deadly routine, and allows him an enormous amount of leisure, which he consumes with expertness and relish. From the leisure aspect only, it is the difference between filling in coupons,
and keeping one’s own fighting-cocks; between standing in the four and sixes on Sunday afternoon, and the full-blooded pleasures of a three-day pwè.

As for the material basis for Burma’s future, it is excellent. The country is wonderfully fertile, and reasonably populated. That is to say that without much effort enough food can be grown for everyone. Even in the present state of tragic disorder the Burmese can still export annually several million tons of rice. All that is necessary, then, is to cure the people of their infantile craving for manufactured trash from
overseas
that fills their markets, and to import only essential medicines, hospital equipment, means of transport and agricultural machinery. If necessary a little teak could be cut, and oil pumped to help pay for this. While the population stays at its present level the Burmese need neither kolhozes nor Boulder Dams (nor, since they cannot afford an atomic pile, do they need armaments); and there is no mysterious natural law which compels a country to produce a greater population than its own soil can support. Above all, they do not need the glittering baubles described in the advertisement sections of American magazines. The Burmese way of life has never been based on unnecessary consumption, and there is no reason why it ever should. It is as good as any, as it is.

It now remains for the Burmese to compose their differences, to cease to be intoxicated by reach-me-down political formulae and to split doctrinal hairs while the dismemberment of their country goes
unheeded
. If this can be done (and as yet there is not the slightest sign of it), all that remains is to avoid as the plague all alliances that may lead to their country’s being crushed between the millstones of the East and West, and to settle down to the carrying out of those just agrarian reforms upon which all political parties seem to be agreed. Herein lies a simple
blueprint
for Utopia.

  • Abadan,
    1
  • Abraham Ba Nyunt Dashwood,
    1
  • Aingto,
    1
  • Alaungpaya, King of Burma,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  • Amarapura,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • Alfred, King,
    1
  • Amat, The (at Nam Hkam),
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • America see United States of America
  • America, Central,
    1
  • Anawrahta, King of Burma,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • Anawrahta Pagoda,
    1
  • Annam, Emperor of,
    1
  • Annam, Central,
    1
  • Annamese people,
    1
  • Arakan Pagoda,
    1
  • Arakanese people,
    1
  • Asoka, Emperor of India,
    1
  • Assam,
    1
    ,
    2
  • Aurungzeb,
    1
  • Ava,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • Banyang people,
    1
  • Bellamy, Mr (Princess Ma Lat’s husband),
    1
  • Bellamy, June Rose,
    1
  • Bghai Karen people,
    1
  • Bhamó,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
    ,
    7
    ,
    8
  • birds’ nests, edible,
    1
  • Bodawpaya, King of Burma,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • Bogyoke Square, Rangoon,
    1
  • Borri, Father (Jesuit writer),
    1
  • Bramah, Ernest,
    1
  • British army, Burmese recruits in,
    1
    ,
    2
  • Brunnings, Mr (railway guard),
    1
  • Buddha, The, relics of,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ;
    • sayings of,
      1
      ;
    • Cakkravati sermon quoted,
      1
      ;
    • images of,
      1
      ;
    • and King Mindon,
      1
  • Buddhism, and spiritual merit through charity,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ;
    • mission shop in Rangoon,
      1
      ;
    • U Ba Thein on,
      1
      ;
    • Pali texts,
      1
      ;
    • and Arakan Pagoda,
      1
      ;
    • Anawrahta and,
      1
      ;
    • and nats,
      1
      ;
    • and Third Missionary Movement,
      1
      ;
    • Reverend Lokanatha and,
      1
      ;
    • in the Shan States,
      1
      ;
    • Mr Pereira and,
      1
  • buffalo dance,
    1
  • Burma Handbook, The,
    1
  • Burma Union Day,
    1
  • Burmah Oil Company,
    1
  • Burman, The
    (newspaper),
    1
  • Çakkhupala (devil buffalo),
    1
  • Cambodia,
    1
  • Canton,
    1
    ,
    2
  • Cape, Jonathan, Ltd.,
    1
  • Centre of the Universe, Mandalay,
    1
  • Ceylon,
    1
  • Chettyars, The,
    1
  • Chiang Kai-shek,
    1
  • Chi’ing invasion,
    1
  • Chin country,
    1
    ;
    • see also
      Chin people
  • Chin people,
    1
    ;
    • see also
      Chin country
  • China,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
    ,
    7
    ,
    8
    ,
    9
    ,
    10
    ,
    11
  • Chinese Nationalist bandits,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
    ,
    7
  • Collis, Maurice,
    Trials in Burma
    ,
    1
  • Collocalia francica
    (Grey-rumped
  • Swift)
    see
    birds’ nests, edible
  • Colombo,
    1
    ,
    2
  • Commissioner’s Road, Rangoon,
    1
  • Communist forces,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
    ,
    7
    ,
    8
    ,
    9
    ,
    10
    ,
    11
    ,
    12
    ,
    13
  • Cuba,
    1
  • Dalat,
    1
  • Dalgouttie, Mr (of the British Information Service),
    1
  • De Brito, Felipe,
    1
    ,
    2
    ;
    • see also
      Portuguese, in Burma
  • Dias, Maria,
    1
  • disease, in Rangoon,
    1
    ;
    • see also
      leper colony
  • dogs, in Mergui,
    1
  • Dolland, Mr (author’s friend),
    1
  • Domei Agency,
    1
  • Duffy, Mr (British Consul in Maymyo),
    1
    ,
    2
  • earthquakes,
    1
  • East India Company,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  • Edwin Saung Chin Stephen Min,
    1
  • Einstein, Alfred,
    1
  • Ela,
    1
  • Elizabeth I, Queen of England,
    1
  • Fitch, Ralph,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  • Forbes-Russell, Mrs (in Moulmein),
    1
  • France,
    1
    ;
    • see also
      French, in Indo-China
  • Fredericke, Caesar,
    1
    ,
    2
  • French, in Indo-China,
    1
  • Freud, Sigmund,
    1

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