Twenty young journalists — 11 Burmese, 9 American — help Burma tell its own story.
NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar — In May, when President Obama referred to Myanmar as "Myanmar" in an Oval Office meeting, it was a minor diplomatic coup for the country's visiting president, Thein Sein. That's because, to many people, Myanmar isn't Myanmar. It's Burma.
The choice of term carries political baggage, because the country's military changed the name from Burma to Myanmar after the country's failed democratic uprising in 1988. The West and opposition figures boycotted the name change because it came from an oppressive dictatorship. But as United States' relationship with the country thaws, the Obama administration has begun acknowledging it.
In fact, May's "Myanmar" name-drop came six months after Obama greeted the crowd at Yangon University with "Mingalabar, Myanmar Naing Ngan" (Hello, country of Myanmar) at a November speech in Yangon, but that mention escaped the notice of Western media.
The State Department hasn't fully embraced the change, and now uses a mix of both terms, mirroring a US policy that has waived broad economic sanctions against the country but leaves most of its biggest businesses blacklisted.
The media, too, remains split. CNN recently began using the name Myanmar but the BBC prefers Burma.
As for the Burmese public, most of it has adopted Myanmar. For many, the name Burma, used by the British, carries a colonial connotation that is not so much distasteful as less natural. When the national team plays football, for example, the fans chant "My-an-mar!"
Notably, the terms may share an etymology and happily co-existed in the pre-colonial period. Historically, both referred to the Burmese ethnic group that today constitutes the majority of the country's population. When the government changed the name, they hoped to reserve the name "Burmese" to refer to the ethnicity and Myanmar to refer to the multi-ethnic country, whose unity they were waging vicious civil wars to maintain.
Of course, the issue of the name itself is secondary to the messy history from which it arises. As journalist and preeminent Burma-watcher Bertil Lintner explains:
The main issue this country is facing is of course the ethnic issue. It's the same as since independence in 1948. 'How do you create a functioning entity in a country as diverse as this?' And it's not enough to change the name of the country. You need much more than that in order for people to feel like they're part of this nation, which isn't really a nation because it's a British colonial creation. Indigenous people had very little to do with the ancient kings of pre-colonial days. The present boundaries of Burma were drawn up by the British and whoever is in power in this country has inherited that mess… And that is what this country has to address and very fast or things will get worse.
One compromise would be to make everyone always use the country's official name, "the Republic of the Union of Myanmar." Then, no one would be happy.
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/groundtruth-burma/nation-state-any-other-name-burma-or-myanmar
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Featured Slideshow
A day at the most British of races.
Royal Ascot 1
Day three of Royal Ascot is Ladies' Day.
- [Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 2
Ladies' Day means hats.
- [Paul Gilham/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 6
Very big hats.
- [Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 4
Understatement is not an option.
- [CARL COURT/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 3
Bravo, madam.
- [CARL COURT/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 14
Some people make their hats themselves.
- [Eamonn McCormack/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 15
You wouldn't want to stand behind this lady.
- [Eamonn McCormack/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 13
Is that...? Yes, yes that IS a full English breakfast on a hat.
- [Ben Pruchnie/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 5
Not to be left out, this guide dog sported some head gear of his own.
- [Paul Gilham/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 16
The horses get fancy, too.
- [Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 8
No wonder the Queen looks happy: her horse Estimate won the prestigious Gold Cup race.
- [Charlie Crowhurst/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 9
It's not just the ladies who wear hats: men must attend in morning dress and a top hat.
- [Paul Gilham/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 10
Very 'My Fair Lady'.
- [Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 11
Demonstrating how to picnic properly.
- [Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images]
Royal Ascot 12
It's all very jolly.
- [Chris Jackson/Getty Images]
This live blog is part of a partnership with Open Hands Initiative and GlobalPost to set out on a reporting journey this June through a changing Myanmar. Twenty top, young reporters from the United States and from Myanmar, also known as Burma, will work as a team on a GlobalPost Special Report to be titled "Burma Telling Its Own Story." Along the way, we will document what these young journalists are learning about the place and about each other.
Funding for this project is provided by the Open Hands Initiative.
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http://www.information.myanmaronlinecentre.com/a-nation-state-by-any-other-name-burma-or-myanmar/
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