Notes from Susan: Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

Notes from Susan: Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

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Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

Image from the upcoming film “Hossain”

By Susan MacLaury

This is a challenging time to care about human rights when so many are being trampled around the world with seeming impunity. The rights of Ukrainians to live safely in a democracy. The rights of American women to make reproductive choices. And now the rights of more than 400,000 school-age children to pursue education in the Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh.

While filming our documentary “Hossain” about a 6-year old Rohingya child whose family has lived in a Bangladesh camp since 2018, we saw that only Koranic schools existed for refugees originally. Bangladesh prohibits humanitarian groups from providing Rohingya children education beyond basic, informal primary level classes, and many community groups and schools arose to fill that gap. In November 2021, the Bangladeshi government allowed UNICEF to offer education consistent with Myanmar curricular standards as a pilot program for 10,000 older Rohingya children. However, as of today, dozens of the community schools have been summarily closed due to an unfounded fear that if a generation of Rohingya are educated in Bangladesh, they will never leave the country.

The fact of the matter is that many Rohingya parents say that their return to Myanmar and successful resettlement depends on their children being properly educated. It is time we start listening to our young people and their families; they know what they need to grow into resilient individuals, we just have to hear them.

Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/world/asia/rohingya-bangladesh-school-closings.html 
and https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/03/21/bangladesh-officials-threaten-rohingya-setting-schools

Dr. Susan MacLaury, PhD, LSW is the co-founder and Executive Director of the non-profit media company Shine Global which gives voice to underserved children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change.  She executive produced the Academy Award® Winning documentary Inocente, the Emmy Award®-winning, Academy Award®-nominated War/Dance, as well as The Harvest (La Cosecha), 1 Way Up in 3D, The Eagle Huntress, Through Our Eyes: Homefront, and Liyana. She is also the producer of the documentary films The Wrong Light and Virtually Free and co-producer of Tre Maison Dasan. Susan is dually degreed in social work administration and health education and was associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 through 2013.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

 

 

Donate to Shine Global

Support our work transforming children’s lives through film

Notes from Susan: Bangladesh Shutters Dozens of Schools Set Up by Rohingya in Camps

Notes from Susan: Who Will Protect the Rohingya?

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Who Will Protect the Rohingya? 

Image from the upcoming film “Hossain”

By Susan MacLaury

Glancing at the front page of the New York Times is not for the faint of heart. Last week’s included:  Firearms with untraceable parts being sold online; the impact of gerrymandering on the 2024 midterms; and farmers threatened by supply chain problems. But the article that grabbed my attention is titled: “Driven out of Myanmar, and Facing Death Threats in Bangladesh.”

I am, of course, referencing the more than 1 million Rohingya who fled near-certain death in Myanmar in 2017 and now inhabit 34 camps in Bangladesh that are among the most crowded spaces on earth. Beyond the expectable privation such living conditions would predict – monsoons, mudslides, inadequate food and housing and lack of education – many now also fear assassination.

Several Rohingya community workers have been killed by a militant group calling itself ARSA, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, which vies with Bangladesh security forces for power over the community. ARSA funds itself through a number of illicit activities including drug trafficking and kidnapping. Although it was ARSA’s attacks on the Myanmar government in 2017 that triggered its backlash against the Rohingya community there, forcing 750,000 to flee and join thousands who had already left, ARSA is only the latest force to move against the Rohingya.

Knowing they were being targeted for murder, a number of Rohingya leaders had sought protection from both Bangladesh authorities and the UNHCR. And therein lies the problem: Who is ultimately responsible for Rohingya wellbeing? Bangladesh is desperate to relocate them and has sent tens of thousands to Bhasan Char, an island some call a “floating prison.” The UNHCR tries to persuade Bangladeshi authorities to mediate problems and forgo efforts to dismiss the refugees’ needs but has no direct authority to ensure this.

Shine Global is helping to produce a feature-length documentary called “Hossain,” about a 6-year old of the same name who has lived in the Cox’s Bazaar camp for the past 4 years. When the film  is completed in early 2022, we will help with its international impact campaign to sensitize, and hopefully compel, world leaders to recognize the plight of the Rohingya and to mobilize efforts to safely and permanently house them. They have endured more than their share of suffering and it’s time we all educate ourselves about their plight and do all we can to end it.

Dr. Susan MacLaury, PhD, LSW is the co-founder and Executive Director of the non-profit media company Shine Global which gives voice to underserved children and their families by telling their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change.  She executive produced the Academy Award® Winning documentary Inocente, the Emmy Award®-winning, Academy Award®-nominated War/Dance, as well as The Harvest (La Cosecha), 1 Way Up in 3D, The Eagle Huntress, Through Our Eyes: Homefront, and Liyana. She is also the producer of the documentary films The Wrong Light and Virtually Free and co-producer of Tre Maison Dasan. Susan is dually degreed in social work administration and health education and was associate professor of health education at Kean University from 1994 through 2013.

Shine Global is an award-winning non-profit media company that gives voice to children and their families by sharing their stories of resilience to raise awareness, promote action, and inspire change. We produce inspiring films and compelling content about at-risk children. Through tailored distribution and outreach, we connect with our audiences in communities, classrooms, museums, and on capitol hill as part of a powerful engagement campaign to encourage social change.

 

 

Donate to Shine Global

Support our work transforming children’s lives through film

Notes from Susan: The Power of Rohingya Art

Notes from Susan: The Power of Rohingya Art

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Notes from Susan: The Power of Rohingya Art

By Susan MacLaury

Several years ago I was fortunate enough to travel to Kenya and Uganda with a non-profit called AMREF (now AMREF Health Africa) as part of the filming of War/Dance. One of our stops was in a Masai village in the heart of the savannah.

 In that village, women assumed the roles of health educators who taught how to reduce the likelihood of trypanosomosis (“sleeping sickness”), often carried by tsetse flies traveling on cattle, by encouraging villagers to keep them in pens on the outskirts of their settlement rather than its center. Because they were largely illiterate, they did this through song and dance, using a colorful banner with drawings to make their point. At one point one of the dancers pulled me to my feet to join them. I still remember my daughter falling backward off the log she was sitting on because she was laughing so hard at my efforts to imitate them.

 But I digress.

 I was reminded of that day over the weekend after reading a moving article about a Rohingya artist and refugee, Mohammed Mur, who along with hundreds of thousands of others from the Rakhine State in Myanmar were forced to flee to avoid being murdered for being stateless Muslims. One can only imagine the trauma they experienced at what they endured. 

 Most ended up in camps in Bangladesh, where they’ve been living under dangerous,  overcrowded conditions. Mohammed lives in the Balukhali Camp, site of the Artolution arts program. He is one of several refugees who have found a way to confront and share their traumatic experiences through art. Equally helpful, Artolution artists also have learned to use their talents to convey public health messages, much like the Masai women.

 The power of art to express hope is undeniable. We at Shine Global are so grateful to have the opportunity to bring the Rohingya crisis to the forefront of global consciousness through our support of “Hossain,” the feature length documentary directed by Taimi Arvidson and produced by Brette Ragland. Shine Global will do all it can to ensure that this film becomes one more way the Rohingya can educate world leaders and create positive solutions for the pressing need to resettle more than 700,000 of them safely.

Take care,

Susan MacLaury
Executive Director and Co-Founder of Shine Global