Become a Subscriber

Search
Become a Contributor
Shop for Books by Our Contributors

Also Recommended

Global Adventure with Judith Fein and Paul Ross

Support This Site
Navigation
Powered by Squarespace
Explore
25 Van Ness 25-word essays 40 State 40 Days 99cent store Adventure Travel Africa Aging Air Saftey air travel Airline fiasco Airline Passenger Bill of Rights airline safety Airplane airplane seat selection airport fiasco Alaska all-inclusive resort American Airlines American ignorance Amish Amsterdam Amtrak anger Arab Arabia architecture Argentina Arizona arm chair travel Art Artist Asia Authentic Travel awards Backpack travel bad day baggage Bahamas Bali Balloon Festival ban whale watching Bangkok Barcelona beach being arrested Being authentic Belize Bellingham Washington belly dancing Belmont University Bhutan bicycling bike tour bikes bikes as therapy Billy the Kid bioluminescence Bird watching Birding birthday book contest Boycott Brattany Brazil Breaking news British Columbia Budget travel Buenos Aires Burma bus travel Cahokia Mounds Cairo California Cambodia Camino de Santiago Camping Canada Canadian Geese Cancer car travel Caribbean Caribbean rainforest Carnac Carnival Caving Central America Ceramics change your life Cheap travel Cheap trips cherish life Chetumal children China Christmas Christmas Day Bomber Claridges Class trip Classic Hotels claustrophobic flyer climate change coffee Colombia color contest continental airlines controversy Cook Islands Copenhagen Costa Rica courage cowboy culture Creative travel creative writing crisis Croatia Crop Circles cruise travel cruising Cuba cuisine Culinary travel Cultural travel Culture Cusco CVS cycling Czech Republic dance Death Death Valley National Park Denmark dining dining guide divorce Dominican Republic Dordogne Dubai Earthquake Easter Eco Travel eco-tourism eco-travel Ecuador Egypt elephant seal emergency preparedness England environmental commentary environmental problems Ethiopia Europe European Union excellence in travel writing expat living expats Faith falling family family resort family travel family vacation Fat Tuesday fear festival fiesta Filipino restaurant finances fitnees flight Florida Food forgetfulness forgiveness France French Camp Friendship frustrated flyer frustration gadgets Galapagos Garifuna Gaspe Peninsula Genealogy Germany Ghana gift guide Girona giveaway Glastonbury Festival global curiosity Global eating habits global nomad global warming good day Gorilla Trek Government GPS Grand Canyon grandparents Greece grief guys getaway Haiti happiness Hawaii healing healing journey hearing loss Helicopter tours hiking Historical travel Holiday Celebrations Home Honduras honeymoon horseback riding hotels How to how-to humor Hurricanes i do not love Venice i need a vacation Iceland Volcano Incas independenc India Indonesia inn reviews Inner Child Internal Reflection international marriage introvert iPhone app Ireland Islam isolation Israel Istanbul Italy Jack London Jamaica Japan JetBlue Jewish journaling Judith Fein Jules Older Kansas Karl Rove Kenya kindness of strangers land Language Las Vegas Latin America learning vacations Leukemia Library life lessons life transformation literature living abroad living like a local London Los Angeles loss Louvre at night love luxury hotels luxury travel Maine Malta Manatee Mardi Gras marriage Masonic Temple Massage Maui Maya meditation Mexico Michigan Middle East Military wedding Minnesota Missouri Molokai money Montana Monterey Moose Morocco mother's day mother-son travel motorcycle travel multigenerational vacation Music Musings Myanmar Namibia Nancy King National Prayer Day Native America nature Nepal Nevada New Mexico New Orleans New Year New York New Zealand Newfoundland Nicaragua Nigeria NNew Mexico noise Northwest Airlines Pilots Norway Nova Scotia Ohio Older parents Olive Oil Olympic Peninsula Washington orcas Oregon Orkney Islands outdoors ownership Pacific Northwest Parent's love Paris Partners Passover Paul Ross Pennsylvania personal essay Peru Pets Philippines photography contest Pilots Plane plastic plastic bags Poem Poetry police Politics Portugal postcards Pottery poverty Prague Prayer procrastination pueblo culture Puerto Rico Q&A Quebec Quito ranch vacation random acts of kindness rap song reading reasons to travel recession rejuvenation relaxation Religion Religious holidays remembering mothers Responsible travel. Sustainable travel restaurant reviews revolution River Rafting Road trip roadtrip romance romantic travel Rosemary Beach runway delay Russia Sacred Places sadness Safari sailing Samba music San Andrés de Teixido San Francisco Santa Fe Sardinia Saudi Arabia Scotland sea kayaking Sedona self discovery senior travel Serbia Shakespeare Shamanism shame Shopping short stories Sicily Siena silence Sisters ski vacation skiing Slow travel Slum Tourism Slumdog Millionaire small-group travel Soaking tub Sociology Songwriting South America South Dakota Southeast Asia soviet satellite Spa Spain spirituality Springtime SSan Francisco St. Louis St. Petersburg Standing Stones Steinbeck stress stuff happens Sumatra Summer cottage surfing surviving disaster Sushine Coast Switzerland Tacoma Taiwan Tanzania Taos Taxi Taxi Driver Tbex Texas Thailand The Netherlands the writing life Tokyo Tourism train trip Transformative travel transportation trash travel travel advice travel agents Travel Blogging travel commentary travel confession travel contest travel essay travel gear travel hassles travel humor Travel interrupted travel musings travel opinion travel photography Travel Reviews travel safe travel safety travel security travel technology travel traditions travel trends travel videos Travel with Kids Travel Writing traveling alone traveling with kids traveling with teens trekking trip to the dentist truffles TSA complaints Ttrain trip Tunisia turbulence Turkey Tuscany typhoon UFOs Uganda uncensored travel opinion UNESCO World Heritage Site Union Station United Arab Emirates United Kingdom Upstate New York Utah vacation vacation rental vacation tips Valentine's Day Vancouver Venezuela Venice Venice California Vermont Veterans Day Vietnam Vinayaka Chaturthi virtual vacation Wales Walking Washington Washington D.C. water project waves we don't care airlines weather wedding White Oaks Pottery White Sands National Monument why I fly why not to cruise why travel wildlife spotting wine Women travel workout World Festivals world peace World War I World War II writer's block Writing Yoga Yucatan Peninsula zombie boot camp
« Transportation As If People Mattered | Main | An Expert Hacker in Amazonia »
Thursday
Dec122013

Clowning Around With Burmese Refugees

A Partner Post by PerpetualExplorer.com contributor, Emma Corcoran. 

The dense, mountainous jungle on the Thai-Burmese  border serves as an inhospitable home to around 14,000 refugees. Over the last three decades, fighting between Burmese hill-tribe militias and government forces has turned the Burmese side of the border into a danger-zone of murder, rape and hunger. As a result, thousands of Burmese refugees have fled into Thailand seeking a stability they can’t find in their homeland.

The refugees are housed in nine ramshackle camps along the rugged border region or live precarious lives as undocumented migrants in towns outside the camps. Many of the children born to Burmese parents in Thailand enter the world as stateless infants, because they´re denied birth certification from either country.

Early Morning in a Thai Refugee Camp

“I think the first time I went to the camps was around eight years ago,” says Andrea Russell, speaking on the phone from her home on the Canadian west-coast.  “I just couldn’t believe how many people there were and how little awareness there was in the rest of the world about their situation.”

Andrea had been a regular visitor to Thailand since studying there at the age of 17 as an exchange-student. In 2005,  a friend who ran an informal circus took her to the Mae Sot region on the Thai-Burmese border to perform for some of the refugee children.

Eight years later, Andrea is the soft-spoken, but passionate “ringmaster” and director of Spark Circus, a nonprofit organisation which brings together circus performers from around the world to perform an annual series of concerts and workshops for the Burmese refugees in the Mae Sot area. The volunteer circus performers use music, dance, games and clowning to bring a day of levity into the lives of thousands of underprivileged children, many of whom don’t own even a single toy.

Ringmaster Andrea Russell (on the right)

 “Some years we go into the camps,” says Andrea, “At other times, we focus on the refugees that don’thave status; the illegal migrant workers clustered along the border areas. They’re kind of  living in the jungle. Some of the children are orphans, and some of the children aren’t totally orphans, but their parents have sent them across the border alone, because it’s considered safer than the life on the other side.”

Children Enjoying a Sparks Circus Visit

Although the political situation in Burma has improved in the last year, many of the refugees are wary of this latest outbreak of stability.  In the past, peace in Burma has proven to be as fleeting and illusory as the morning mist in its steep mountains, and the refugees don’t yet feel confident to making the return journey across the border.

Whilst Andrea says she knows refugees who are confident and optimistic about a brighter future for Burma, she has also talked to many who are distrustful of the Burmese government.   She says that many Burmese refugees who were born in Thailand feel “frightened about being sent to a country they have never set foot in.”

When asked about a memorable incident during the eight years she’s been running Sparks Circus, Andrea talks about a “really short, funny moment…it was in a refugee camp during the evening show. I was sitting in the audience, and stilt-walkers came on during the finale. And these women beside me were speaking in Thai to each other in total confusion, saying ‘How are these women so tall?’ They didn’t know about stilts, so they thought that these foreign women actually grew over eight feet tall! So, it was pretty funny when I explained to them that the women were wearing wooden stilts underneath their costumes.”

During their month-long tour of the Mae Sot region, the colorfully-costumed Spark Circus troupe travel with equipment such as hula hoops, violins and juggling balls, which are used during choreographed performances. In the day they give interactive play workshops in schools, hospitals, orphanages, refugee camps and special needs centres.  In the evenings, the performers put on a spectacular fire-show for the entire community.

Evening Fire-Show

Andrea says that leaving the children she has connected with is always a difficult experience: “The most emotionally fraught thing is just leaving the kids at the end of the day. There’s always one or two children that you really bond with, and I wish I could take them out of the situation. But because  the children, for the most part, don’t have any identity papers, most of these children you couldn’t even adopt. So, unless you were to steal them (which occurs to us every once in a while!) you have to leave them.”

Interactive Games During a Spark Circus Workshop

The Sparks Circus members are keen to ensure that their impact is felt in the local communities during the eleven months between their annual visits. Along with giving artistic performances, they raise funds before their arrival in Mae Sot and purchase much-needed items for the local refugees. The group gives out toys, games and school supplies, provides funds to local NGOs to buy food, and also donates equipment such as water pumps.

 Andrea says that the organisation is always in need of financial support and people who can run Spark Circus fundraisers in their local communities. She says that “larger donors can guide us in what they’d like their donation go to — to the performers themselves or to something like a water tank. We try to send back photos showing where the money has gone.”

If you have performance skills and would like to run away with the circus, you can also apply for a volunteer position through the Sparks Circus website (although the positions for the January 2014 tour are currently filled).

A Young Burmese Refugee

About Perpetual Explorer

Taking an inquisitive approach to accessing cultural news, resources, and information,PerpetualExplorer.com challenges readers in their understanding of people and places, creating a global community of participation, interaction, engagement, and dialogue.

[photography courtesy sparkcircus.org]

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (2)

What a great review of a wonderful organization! I've spent time in Mae Sot and the Mae La camp and the plight of the kids that are born within and grow up in the camps is concerning as the lack of documentation leaves them without a country. It's nice to know that there are groups like Spark Circus with the main objective of just bringing some light and happiness into their lives. I'm donating now!

December 12, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterKirsten Gardner

We thought so too, Kristen, and are glad the article inspired you to bring your support to the cause.

Kindest thanks for reading and joining the conversation.

December 12, 2013 | Registered CommenterEditors

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...