November 19, 2017

RESPONSIBILITY

Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, D.C.

I got to meet my two nieces and nephew for the first time this past October. I could not stop holding on to them for the duration of their visit as we drove from Washington, D.C. where a family was reunited at Dulles Airport, through Maryland, and Philadelphia. In New York City, my mother and I shared a king size bed at night in one of the hotel bedrooms. The two girls––the oldest five, the other threelay between us, recalling events of the day, asking me questions sposmadically in my half awake state, and then, suddenly, asleep before I was.

Their voices overlapped one another's in the dark as they told me about their visit earlier to the zoo––we had split up in two groups and only rendevouzed at the hotel later that night.

"What did you feel when you saw the animals in the cages?" I asked. The both of them went silent, unsure of what I meant. The oldest responded after a moment, "Ummmm...". 

So I asked, "Did you think it was right or wrong to keep them in cages?" I felt guilt rise inside of me right as the question left my mouth because it was more of a leading question. Clearly I was suggesting a particular response, one that I desired. Much like a certain type of lawyer or journalist would. Conflicted, I wondered if I was being irresponsible, or already too severe on two kids enjoying their childhood experience. I'd prefer not to be the spoilsport aunt who's quick to point out everything that's wrong with the world, but this generation of entitled halfwits, groomed by their similar parental units haunts me daily.

After we had a big lunch at Dean and Deluca in Georgetown, D.C. earlier in the trip, one of the girls announced that she wanted chocolate. "No," I responded before anyone else at the table could, as her parents had gone for a stroll. She starts to tear up quietly in the corner, and I am immediately demonized by my mother, who says to my brother and father, "Zihan semua tak boleh!" (With Zihan, everything is a no!) I proceed to protest the accusation hurled at me by my mother, who, along with my father, had denied me and my siblings most things growing up, regardless of how many tantrums we threw.

Another conflicted moment for me. I found myself apologizing sweetly to my niece like the many spineless adults of today while everyone continued judging me, the vicious oppressor. Coaxing her into the store, I buy her and her sister ridiculously expensive icing-coated cookies she picks out, which isn't her fault, since everything in Dean and Deluca is a rip off.


But I suppose there are less manipulative ways to educate children, especially when it comes to important issues like animal rights. When I was in the third grade, my teacher, Mrs. Rogers, a calm, exceptionally kind woman who always wore long A-line skirts that swirled gently around her legs when she walked would read to the class after break time. She would sit on a chair in the back of the room and us students gathered around her on the floor to listen. One day she read from a short storybook about elephants. I can't remember the name of the book, but there was an injustice that the theme touched upon. Towards the middle of the story Mrs. Rogers began to cry. She cried as she continued reading, until she had to rest the book on her lap and wipe at her face while the rest of us stared at her wide eyed. She apologized, and explained that she really loved elephants, and the story broke her heart.

"It's wrong," my older niece replies to my earlier question. We explain to each other in the darkness why we think it's wrong to cage animals, kept from their natural habitats for human profit and amusement. I fall asleep thinking how frightening it is to navigate through that duty called responsibility as there is no compass for it, and how I can be the best aunt in the world despite that.

April 13, 2017

THE HYPOCRISY OF AUNG SAN SUU KYI

In 1989 Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi wrote in her essay, In Quest of Democracy, “human life is infinitely precious.” This is true, and she was handed numerous awards for her role as an advocate for human rights in Myanmar for saying so. Yet journalist Mehdi Hasan recently called her, “an apologist for genocide against Muslims.” Her silence, or indifference to the violent attacks on the Rohingya people of Myanmar raises some questions. 

Did she really mean some human life is precious? Perhaps when you’re trying to maintain the support of the largest constituency in Myanmar––the nationalists? Can a group of people be dehumanized by a majority group to the point that the term "human life" does not apply to them? History has shown that yes, that can happen, and does (the Native Americans, black people, the Jews, the Shia Hazaras of Afghanistan and Pakistan, the Palestinians, the Bosniaks, the Chechens, the Tibetans, et cetera).



Known as stateless people after having had their citizenship stripped from them since 1982, despite having lived in Myanmar for centuries, the Rohingya have endured murder, torture, starvation, loss of property and harassment by the Burmese nationalists, including Buddhist monks. Thousands of Rohingya have fled the country, seeking refuge in neighboring states. Those who remain face more intimidation, the women and girls raped and degraded.

The UNCHR reported earlier this year of how an 11 year old Rohingya girl detailed her gang rape by soldiers until she lost consciousness. The report noted that, “several women would be targeted for rape within a particular house, school or mosque.” While more of these injustices are being exposed, Suu Kyi has gone out of her way to deny the reports. They are merely exaggerations. The accounts of sexual abuse against women and girls she dismisses as “fake rape.” And when not admonishing journalists for criticizing such brutalities in Myanmar, Suu Kyi champions women’s rights on a global platform, warmly preaching to a camera, “more women’s rights means more human rights.”


March 29, 2017

INTO THE DARK



My friend Julio, who lived a life wracked with dark secrets, passed away today.

It is strange to think only six months ago we were walking, driving, hanging around the streets of Philadelphia. He gave me things, like William Zinsser's On Writing Well, because we both struggled with telling our stories. He cooked me meals in his small apartment when I visited. He was a lonely soul, like many of us.

I did not get to say goodbye to him one last time. I was too late. It's strange to know that someone is leaving, their time is up, and you will never see them again, never have another meaningful conversation with them again. And when they are gone, the world becomes an even lonelier place, because you have one less friend, and those are hard to come by.

The Amtrak train had just arrived when I heard he had passed away. I did not get on the train to Philadelphia, but walked around the streets of Boston until late in the evening, feeling an inescapable grief for my friend.

February 7, 2017

REBEL



Ai Wei Wei's Fuck Off
at the Museum of Fine Arts gift shop


January 10, 2017

ETIQUETTE


Travel always makes for sublime observations of people in their habits of entitlement. What I consider to be bad form is taking liberties with reclining your seat just because you can. For many people this means reclining it as far back as it will go, and who gives a crap if there is another person sitting behind you, because your comfort is of the utmost importance on a planet that is made up of many other people that are not you.

I felt bad for the guy on that long Amtrak trip heading towards New York City. He was absorbed in his work on his laptop, and this lady gets on at some point, unlatches the tray in front of her, spreads her food and beverage out, and reclines her seat all the way back, pressing on the button even after the seat would not go back any further. It pushed against the guy's laptop behind her, and he sat there for a awhile trying to continue his work with his laptop positioned at an awkward angle, and keeping it from sliding off the fold-down tray. After about twenty minutes, he got up and went in search of another seat on the crowded train, while the lady continued lounging in what she thought was her bed, and chewed noisily on her carrots and celery for the remainder of the trip.

If there should be any public service announcements for airlines, buses, and trains, companies should target the entitled snowflakes who think paying for a ticket means you have the right to impinge on other paying passengers' comfort.