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The United Nations World Refugee Day: “Real People, Real Needs”
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Greetings, kind viewers,
and welcome to
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Today, June 20,
is World Refugee Day,
designated by
the United Nations
to affirm the solidarity of
the international community
to assist refugees
in creating a bright future
for all.
This day also recognizes
the significant contribution
of refugees
around the globe.
In today’s program,
we will take a closer look
into the plight
of our brethren
who are unfortunately
deprived of their homes.
A refugee is someone
who flees
his or her hometown
to seek safety elsewhere.
Although refugees are
more commonly understood
as people
who seek asylum
outside of their country,
internally displaced people,
who have to
evacuate from within
their own native land,
also share similar
desperate situations.
The term “boat people”
came to the forefront
during the exodus
of Aulacese (Vietnamese)
refugees in the late 1970s.
Many lives succumbed
in the high sea
to capsizing waves and
boat damage, or endured
food and water shortage,
and pirate attacks.
Boat people have also
come from other parts
of the world, such as
Cuba, Haiti, Morocco,
and Albania.
Even when they stay
in temporary camps,
they could face
forced repatriation and,
in hopelessness,
some have been known
to end their precious lives.
Empathizing
with their deep suffering,
several times
in the late 1980s
and early 1990s,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
visited refugee camps
in Hong Kong
and the Philippines
to care for and comfort
the Aulacese refugees.
In addition,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
tirelessly traveled
around the world,
including to
the United States,
the Philippines, Costa Rica,
Thailand, Formosa (Taiwan)
among other countries
as well as
the United Nations,
to speak with government
officials and the media,
offering her
unconditional assistance
to relocate the refugees
and brought
much needed attention
to this urgent issue.
Today still, millions of
people around the world live as refugees.
The combined population
of both refugees
and those displaced
within their native lands
is approximately
37 million in
more than 150 countries.
About half the refugee
population are children.
As of December 31, 2005,
Sudan has
the most number of
internally displaced people,
with over 5 million.
Countries with the
largest source of refugees
are Afghanistan, Iraq,
Myanmar (Burma),
Sudan, and
the Palestinian Territories.
Some endure life
in refugee camps
for months, or even years.
Oftentimes,
members of families
are separated, sometimes
for long periods of time.
They must live without
knowing when they may
see their loved ones again.
The most common causes
of refugees are wars,
climate change,
persecution, oppression,
and economic hardship.
Sometimes,
multiple refugee issues
affect an entire region.
For example, Bangladesh
hosts approximately
230,000 refugees
from Myanmar (Burma),
while concurrently
coping with 6.5 million
climate displaced persons
within her land.
The Democratic Republic
of Congo
provides residence
for over 180,000 refugees
from neighboring nations,
yet it’s also the place of
origin of approximately
450,000 refugees.
Not only that,
there are about 2 million
internally displaced people
in the country as well.
While waiting
for resettlement,
refugees reside in camps
set up by governments
or non-governmental
organizations for shelter,
food, and medical aid.
There are approximately
700 refugee camps
around the world,
each holding about
20,000 people on average.
Although camps are meant
for temporary stay,
sometimes they become
long-term residence
because refugees
have nowhere else to go.
The majority
of Palestinian refugees
in Lebanese camps,
for example, have stayed
for generations since 1948.
Wars are one
of the biggest root causes
of present-day
worldwide refugee issues.
The 2003 Iraq war
rendered over 4.7 million
people homeless,
which is more than 16%
of the Iraqi population.
The war between
the Pakistani government
and Taliban in Pakistan’s
northern territories
has uprooted more than
3 million civilians
since 2004.
Beginning in 2003,
one-third
of Darfur residents, or
over 2.5 million people,
fled their homes
during the Darfur conflict
in Sudan.
The Colombian conflict
that lasted almost 50 years
has led to an estimated
2.6 to 4.3 million
internally displaced people.
Refugees reportedly
suffer from physical,
emotional, and
psychological traumas.
Not only have they lost
their homes, loved ones,
and valuables,
they may also lack food,
clean water, and medicine.
Some refugees suffer
from the life-impairing
post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD).
The symptoms include
frequent flashbacks
of traumatic events,
anxiety, memory loss,
insomnia, nightmares,
and survivor guilt.
PTSD has been diagnosed
among 28.3% of
Bosnian refugee women
3 to 4 years after
they arrived in Sweden.
In another study, 34%
of Palestinian children,
mostly refugees,
were found to have PTSD.
All refugees also have to
cope with the stress
of adapting
to a new environment.
Resettled refugees
often find that
they have less family time
due to survival pressure,
self isolation for fear of
causing burden to others,
and loss of
their own cultural pride.
Over the years,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has spoken
compassionately
on the dire predicament
of war refugees.
And these refugees
or people,
they are traumatized.
They have also
psychological need,
very difficult.
Their house has
burned down,
their pets die in the war,
their husband’s gone,
missing.
Their children lost
legs and arms and they
have no money because
they run away from home
empty-handed.
The term
“environmental refugees”
refers to people displaced
by natural disasters
and the effects
of climate change
such as rising sea level,
persistent drought,
and desertification.
It is estimated
that there will be
as many as 50 million
environmental refugees
by 2020.
Climate refugees
face issues such as
food security
and medical challenges.
For example,
increased sea level
has caused lands
on coastal communities
of Bangladesh
to immerse in salty water
and therefore
turn uncultivable.
Trees stop bearing fruits,
and vegetables don’t grow.
At the same time,
diseases such as eczema
and liver cancer
due to the lack of
clean fresh water
become widespread.
Because of this,
numerous households
have left the land
where they have lived
for generations.
Many climate displaced
households of Bangladesh
have migrated to Dhaka,
the capital of the nation,
where they live
in packed slums.
Nurnahar’s family
is one of them.
Here, she and her husband
collect discards
from the streets
and sell them to make
a paltry amount of money
for their survival.
Her husband suffers
from depression.
Their son wants
to go to school
but they cannot afford it.
Sometimes,
Nurnahar has to go out
to beg for money,
pained daily
by the loss of her dignity.
In her own words,
“there is nothing left
to live for.”
Unfortunately,
Nurnahar’s story
is not an isolated one.
More and more people
are becoming
environmental refugees
day by day.
In the documentary
“Does Anybody Care
if Bangladesh Drowns?,”
journalist
and environmentalist
Afsan Chowdhury
concluded from
his firsthand experience
that climate refugees
have become
a regular part of life.
According to
the Office of Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs,
the humanitarian cost
to respond to
natural disasters
has increased ten-fold
from 1992 to 2008.
Because of the massive
illegal migration of
environmental refugees
from Bangladesh to India,
the tension
between the two nations
has also increased
as India started
to fence its borders.
In an interview with
journalist Charles Norton
of “The House Magazine,”
a weekly British political
publication relating to
the House of Commons,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
further expounded
on the issue
of climate refugees.
As a result,
more and more countries
may have to help
cope with the swell
of displaced people,
hoping they can - if
we even can cope with it.
In this dire situation
when all countries
already have to cope with
different problems –
financial crisis,
food crisis - and
we have to cope with
this sudden surge
of immeasurable force
of refugees.
These situations will only
worsen, not improve,
until we stop the cause.
The cost of assisting
all refugees from wars,
environmental degradation
and other causes
is substantial.
In 2008 alone,
the United Nations
High Commissioner
of Refugees
spent US$1.6 billion,
while the United States,
the world’s largest
refugee receiving country,
spent US$900 million
to 2 billion
to help relocate refugees.
Over the past two decades,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has donated
more than US$28 million
for humanitarian causes,
with a significant amount
going towards direct aid
for asylum seekers
around the world, from
Aulacese (Vietnamese)
refugees to people
from Chechnya
to Rwanda to East Timor
and Afghanistan.
Some of her contributions
are also made quietly
and anonymously.
Whenever any war
breaks out,
it could be any of us who
will become a refugee.
Imagine if we have to go
through all the suffering,
all the hardship
that they have to endure,
being just a bystander
of the war, being just
an innocent citizen
of the world.
And we also thank
groups of people
or individuals
who are so noble,
who opened their heart
and opened their home
to welcome, to care
for the desperate victims
of war.
In the whole world,
we thank them all
wherever they are.
At this time, as our planet
is facing the perils of
wars and climate change,
extending a helping hand
to our brothers and sisters
in need, is not only
a true act of kindness,
but is a moral duty.
We are specially grateful
to Supreme Master
Ching Hai
for her loving care
of God’s children
around the globe and
for her profound guidance
on how we may
bring our world to a state
of peace and abundance.
May all refugees
be graced with
inner and outer peace
on a sustainable Earth,
with Heaven’s
manifold blessings.
Benevolent viewers,
thank you
for your company today
on A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms.
Up next
on Supreme Master
Television is
Vegetarianism:
The Noble Way of Living,
right after
Noteworthy News.
May generous
and sharing lives
be an inspiration to us all.
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