In Long-Overdue Speech, Dissident Says Nobel Opened Her Heart
OSLO — When she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991,
while under house arrest in Myanmar, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi said
Saturday, she realized that the Burmese “were not going to be forgotten.”
When the Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded her the prize, she
said in her Nobel lecture here on
Saturday, 21 years later, it was recognition that “the oppressed and the
isolated in Burma
were also a part of the world, they were recognizing the oneness of humanity.”
But “it did not seem quite real, because in a sense I did not feel myself to be
quite real at that time,” she said. “The Nobel Peace Prize opened up a door in
my heart.”
She said the prize “had made me real once again; it had drawn
me back into the wider human community,” and it had given the oppressed people
of Burma , now Myanmar , and it’s
dispersed refugees, new hope. “To be forgotten,” Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi added,
“is to die a little.” In a quiet, throaty voice on Saturday she asked the world
not to forget other prisoners of conscience, both in Myanmar and around the
world, other refugees, others in need, who may be suffering twice over, she
said, from oppression and from the larger world’s “compassion fatigue.”
It was a remarkable moment for the slight Ms. Aung San Suu
Kyi, who turns 67 next week and is now a Member of Parliament and the leader of
Myanmar ’s
opposition. She dressed in shades of purple and lavender, her hair adorned with
flowers. It is a gesture she makes in honor of her father, Gen. Aung San, an
independence hero of Burma, who was assassinated in 1947, when she was 2, but
whom she remembers threading flowers through her hair.
The audience in Oslo’s City Hall, which included the
Norwegian royal family, listened raptly, applauding often, standing to clap
when Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi entered the hall and when she finished her speech,
which was at the same time modest, personal and touching, an appeal to find
practical ways to reduce the inextinguishable suffering of the world.
“Suffering degrades, embitters and enrages,” she said. “War is not the only
arena where peace is done to death.”
——————————————————————
Vocabulary
1. Norwegian - 挪威
2. oppressed - 壓迫
3. Burma - 緬甸
4. conscience - 良心
5. fatigue - 疲勞
6. lavender - 薰衣草
7.was assassinated - 被暗殺
8. arena - 競技場
Vocabulary
1. Norwegian - 挪威
2. oppressed - 壓迫
3. Burma - 緬甸
4. conscience - 良心
5. fatigue - 疲勞
6. lavender - 薰衣草
7.was assassinated - 被暗殺
8. arena - 競技場
Aung San Suu Kyi is a global symbol of the fight for democracy and peace, against the ruling military power, in order to fight for democracy in Myanmar over the past 20 years, she has been under house arrest for most of the time, and wherever she goes people received enthusiastic support.
回覆刪除I think she is very mighty.
Aung San Suu Kyi is a brave lady to fight for those refugees. And I am so happy that there is such a person to help those refugees.
回覆刪除Aung San Suu Kyi is really a brave lady to fight for the her own country.
回覆刪除She stand out for the drmocracy at the price of her freedom.
Because of her brave,make the country improve a lot.
Wish the country can be turned into democracy in the future.