Myanmar Sangam Mn !link! [ PC ]

They came for safety. They are staying to build a world.

"In Myanmar, Sangam is just... life. You are born into the flow. But here?" she gestures out the window at the bare oak trees. "Here, you have to choose the flow. You have to drive 20 minutes to see your friend. You have to fight to get the right fish for the soup. You have to explain to your boss why you need three days off for the Pagoda festival. myanmar sangam mn

The most surprising element of the Myanmar Sangam MN is the emergence of monastic education in strip malls. Since the coup in 2021, there has been a revival of traditional Buddhist education among the Bamar majority, but also a strengthening of Christian churches for the Chin and Kachin. On Sundays, a rented space near Midway transforms into a language school. Parents, terrified that their children will lose the ability to speak to their grandparents (or read the news about the resistance back home), hold rigorous Burmese language classes. The Sangam is the sound of a 10-year-old, born in Robbinsdale, sounding out the circular script of Myanmar on a whiteboard next to a map of the United States. The Shadow of the Coup No post about the Myanmar Sangam would be honest without mentioning the elephant in the room—or rather, the general in the office. The 2021 military coup shattered any illusion of returning "home" for many in this diaspora. They came for safety

It is heavy. But it is also resistant. I sat down with Ma Khin (a pseudonym), a 34-year-old former journalist from Mandalay who now works at a Target distribution center in Fridley. She sums up the "Myanmar Sangam MN" better than any academic could. "Here, you have to choose the flow

In April, while Minnesota is still thawing from a winter that seems endless, the Myanmar community celebrates Thingyan —the Buddhist New Year and water festival. In Yangon, this means massive water fights in the streets. In St. Paul, it means renting out a high school gymnasium. You won't see hoses spraying 90-degree water; instead, you see buckets of slightly-less-frigid water and a lot of shivering laughter. The Sangam here is adaptive. They teach their children that you don't need the Irrawaddy River to wash away the sins of the old year. You just need a willing community and a waterproof jacket.