Superstition, Rumor and Gun Law
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BOOK REVIEW

Superstition, Rumor and Gun Law


By Bertil Lintner JULY, 2006 - VOLUME 14 NO.7


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An academic study of Burma proves to be long on humorous anecdotes, but short of real political analysis

 

Burma at the Turn of the 21st Century, edited by Monique Skidmore, University of Hawaii Press, 2005. P304

Burma at the Turn of the 21st Century purports to be “the first collection of essays about everyday life in Burma in forty years”, which is a mild exaggeration. Aung San Suu Kyi herself has written a book called Let’s Visit Burma, which covers most aspects of everyday life in the country. But this new book may be the first written by academics, mainly anthropologists, and, therefore, includes chapters about esoteric subjects like lottery-ticket numerology, the question of masculinity in Mandalay, and a detailed description of the Taungbyon spirit festival, including maps of the fair grounds.

 

But it is, nevertheless, a book well worth reading. It is divided into four parts, the first covering “spirituality, pilgrimage and economics,” the second “political and moral legitimation,” then “public performance” and ending with a one-piece contribution on the issue of “the domestic domain.” All a bit fluffy, but Gustaaf Houtman’s chapter on the personality cult surrounding Aung San Suu Kyi, and Jennifer Leehey’s account of the media and literary life in contemporary Burma stand out as excellent studies of issues that really matter.

 

Keiko Tosa’s chapter about the importance of rumors, and superstition, is also interesting. In 1991, for instance, people believed that fortune tellers had predicted that a woman would take a position of leadership. Then, intelligence chief Maj-Gen Khin Nyunt—described erroneously by many as a “pragmatist” and “moderate”—dressed up like a female actor and climbed up on a hilltop. His subordinates, the rumor went, called out three times to him, ‘Ma Ma Nyunt’ (elder sister Nyunt), to which he replied, ‘shin?’ (the word for “you” in female speech), before turning around three times.

 

At about the same time, then junta leader Gen Saw Maung attempted to accentuate his own chance of success by associating himself with an ancient Burmese king, Kyansittha, because that name brought together the words for “military” (sittha) and the wish to “survive or remain” (kyan). On another occasion, leaders of the armed forces together with senior Buddhist monks flew over Rangoon in a helicopter chanting the Mangala sutta (Blessing Discourse) to bring tranquility and happiness to the city.

 

Comical as these examples may sound, they show how important traditional beliefs are in a Burmese context, for the men in power as well as the population at large.



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