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Caritas International Global Pilgrimage taken in Solidarity with Migrants |
We are all migrants, sharing the journey in life. While on the journey, hopefully our home is warm and friendly but it surely is not eternal. This is a good perspective to keep as we take the long and windy journey that is life. It is a perspective I need before me as I learn that yet another close friend has died. This is the third such loss in three months. They have been three significant people in my journey. Their dying makes me think about where am I in life?
This week I go to Mae Sot with my work on migrants. Mae Sot is a town up north on the Thai side of the border with Myanmar. It is a centre for much industry and trade, being named as a Special Economic Zone. As such, there is a need for labour which is conveniently provided by the Burmese coming across the border, and here they come in big numbers. They get work but remain poor, often being taken advantage of for the sake of profit. The migrant population there is diverse, both coming for work and fleeing conflict and oppression at the hands of Myanmar military. While Mae Sot is now the big centre for migrant workers, it has been in history more the centre for Burmese ethnic refugees.
So Mae Sot is a centre for an underclass population. They need support and that is our job. On our work visit, we went to one of the many learning centres, providing education for Burmese children from poor and deprived backgrounds. Some are orphans as their parents have been killed in the internal conflicts of Myanmar. I walk around the school. It is big with 500 students. It is simple and it is poor looking. Some children live there and their accommodation looks inadequate. That is how it impressed me but I also saw that the children do not see the same physical picture as I saw they were simply children together, playing together and enjoying each other. They also had a school which was their school, the best that could be provided for them. So who am I to judge their situation with my outside eyes?
Then I refer to my three great friends and mentors, all now dead. Didn't each show me the way? Didn't they look after me and just enjoy our being together? Didn't they show me what really matters in life? Our being together was never complicated, never judged by anything other than we wanted to be together. We were friends - no, much more - companions, mates on the journey, and what a journey it is, a journey enriched by our sharing together from what little we have.
The journey is long and windy but that is no matter for what truly matters is with whom we share it.