Part of VOA's new Making a Difference series. Each week, VOA introduces a different individual - famous or lesser-known - working to help others.
Thousands of people flee Burma each year, escaping poverty, oppression, and civil
war. The nearest escape for most is Thailand, where they experience both
despair and hope. Burmese refugee, Dr. Cynthia Maung, runs a small, modest public health clinic near the border in
Thailand, and is making a difference in her
community by providing essential services not available
to most residents of the poor region.
Mothers
line up with children, waiting for immunizations. In another line, couples with
newborns wait for documents certifying their children were born in Thailand.
The documents take the place of birth certificates Thailand refuses to
issue. These people are refugees, and in the eyes of Thailand's
authorities, they do not exist.
But to Dr.
Cynthia Maung, they do matter. Dr. Cynthia is a Burmese physician and a refugee
herself. She makes a difference for thousands of her fellow refugees in
Thailand and for many more inside Burma. For example, the Burmese physician
founded the Mae Tao Clinic, a safe haven where miracles happen every day.
Dr. Cynthia fled Burma
in 1988 following an army crackdown on those who demonstrated for democracy and
justice.
"I joined with the demonstration group and then when the military seized power, people started disappearing, or missing, or fled to the border. I myself also decided to come to the border to continue struggling or working for political change," she says.
In a two-room shack,
she started doing amputations and delivering babies using instruments
sterilized in a rice cooker. Young volunteer medics trained by Dr. Cynthia
treat everything from landmine injuries to gastroenteritis. With donations
from NGO's and foreign governments, including the United States, Dr. Cynthia's
work has a reputation for a making a little money go a long way. Each year 150,000
people come here for treatment. Those who can, pay under a dollar.
Dr. Cynthia lives in
modest quarters next to the clinic. She could have immigrated to the West and
be making a huge salary. But for Dr. Cynthia, this is a greater calling.
"When we live here, we are not only treating illnesses, we can also
educate young people who can go back and work in their community and who are
very willing to promote the health activities in their village. So it is a very
good opportunity for young people to give education and to give more
hope," she says.
The clinic trains volunteer medics who fan out into the ethnic Karen and other isolated areas of Burma. Some of the volunteers are former patients who, once desperate for help, are now the ones helping. It is they who embody Dr. Cynthia's vision.
The
Burmese physician says young people should be taught "not to feel as victims."
Instead, she says, they should see themselves as "people who can change or
improve the situation."
Dr. Cynthia is reviled
by Burma's military government. To the generals, she is a terrorist and an
insurgent. To the thousands she treats and trains, she is a
saint.