Portraits of Myanmar’s Democratic Awakening
On February 1, Myanmar’s army invalidated the nations’ second democratic election, seized power, and abruptly sank the coup-prone country back into a retrograde military dictatorship. Myanmar’s political leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, has been arrested.
For the first few days, Myanmar’s population of more than 54 million people seemed stunned into silence. But by the fourth day, after police raids and arrests began, people flooded the streets in peaceful protests led by the youth of this conservative Buddhist nation. Even older citizens—who had endured five decades of ruthless military dictatorships and had tasted some freedoms during the past decade of hybrid democratic rule—joined in resisting with exuberant fury.
Within days, the military and police began shooting unarmed protesters. As of August 18th, 1007 people have been confirmed killed and 5747 people have detained according to AAPP. It has been reported in international and local media outlet that the torture and sexual harassment of several women activists in custody.
Who are these brave people?
Faces of Change will provide an intimate answer to that sprawling question: a subtle, human-focused portrait gallery of ordinary individuals who are participating in the revolution and—as strangers acting in unison—radically changing their country’s history.
This gallery of ordinary people—at an extraordinary juncture in their lives—is aimed to bring a needed counterpoint perspective to the imagery of Myanmar’s Spring Revolution.