Bangkok Post

ROHINGYA ARTISTS TACKLE COVID FEARS, PROMOTE VACCINES

- By Naimul Karim in Dhaka

Busy with his brushes beneath a tarpaulin roof, Ansar Ullah works on a mural depicting a giant vial of Covid19 vaccine towering over the ramshackle homes of the world’s largest refugee settlement in Bangladesh.

More than 700,000 Rohingya who fled Myanmar in 2017 live in the refugee camps, where a vaccinatio­n drive originally scheduled to start in March has been postponed indefinite­ly due to delays in supplies from the Covax programme.

Covid cases have remained relatively low despite a recent uptick, but the artists say many refugees have misconcept­ions about the coronaviru­s vaccines, which they aim to allay through their work.

“First, we hope someone or some organisati­on sees this painting and helps us get vaccines. Our camps are crowded and we need them the most,” Ullah, 26, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

“There are also fears about the vaccine in our camps. Some are scared they might die or that their health might worsen because of the injection. We want to address these rumours, so that when the vaccine does come, everybody takes it,” he added.

Painted by a dozen artists, the mural also depicts a refugee receiving the jab and a man using a megaphone to challenge vaccine hesitancy and encourage camp residents to get vaccinated as soon as possible.

“Fear and stigma around Covid-19 has proven to be a major barrier to people getting tested,” Louise Donovan, a spokespers­on for the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) said by email.

“Hence major efforts are being undertaken to ensure that refugees have adequate informatio­n when the vaccinatio­n campaign will begin,” she added.

Ullah and his fellow artists are supported by the New York-based nonprofit group Artolution, and their project is the latest in a series of arts-based initiative­s aimed at tackling issues in the camps — from gender-based violence to mental health concerns.

Rohingya singer Nabi Hossain used to perform at weddings back home in Myanmar, but last year the 50-yearold visited homes around the camps to sing songs about the importance of wearing face masks and respecting social distancing.

“The same messages are given by authoritie­s through megaphones, but people understand the messages better through music,” said Hossain, 50, who was forced to leave for Bangladesh after his village was destroyed during a military crackdown.

UN investigat­ors later concluded that Myanmar’s military campaign was executed with “genocidal intent”. Myanmar denies that, saying the army was battling an insurgency.

While most of Hossain’s family made it safely across the border, two of his sisters who lived in another village were killed.

Hossain said he still grieves for his sisters, but that singing songs about them brought some relief.

“It’s not just me. Many Rohingya have lost their relatives. They ask me to sing about them. They cry when I sing about those days. But they also laugh when I sing happy songs. Some of them even record the songs and take them back,” he added.

Max Frieder, executive director and co-founder of Artolution, said he had witnessed “massive improvemen­ts” in the mental health of the artists he has worked with in recent years.

“The shifts we’ve seen are not always quantitati­ve, but qualitativ­e,” he said. “We’ve seen our artists, many of whom have had traumatisi­ng experience­s, go from becoming victims to survivors to becoming agents of social change.”

Numerous murals adorn the plastic and bamboo structures at the camps in Cox’s Bazar, and many contain broader references to Rohingya culture.

One shows an elephant crossing the Naf River, which thousands of Rohingya had to pass as they fled Myanmar four years ago, and being welcomed by a rooster symbolisin­g Bangladesh.

Before the pandemic, theatre was widely used in the camps to highlight residents’ concerns, too.

The Bangladesh Institute of Theatre Arts (BITA) has organised more than 1,200 plays on issues including traffickin­g, drug abuse and early marriage, and executive director Sisir Dutta said they had raised awareness.

“Take the traffickin­g cases. Initially many adolescent­s didn’t even know the term, let alone the dangers. But when they could visualise it, they understood how brokers worked and how their life could be in danger,” he said.

Many arts-based projects have seen their activities reduced during the pandemic, said Donovan, but she added that the UNHCR aimed to promote community-led art projects later in the year in partnershi­p with groups like Artolution.

Another of the Covid mural painters, Ayla Akter, 18, said the artistic initiative­s were “a must for survival” in the camps.

“As long as we sit together and paint, life in the camp feels really good,” she said. “I don’t really have anything else to look forward to. This gives my mind peace.”

“As long as we sit together and paint, life in the camp feels really good. … This gives my mind peace”

AYLA AKTER Refugee painter

 ??  ?? A painting stressing the need for vaccines in the Rohingya refugee camp in Balukhali, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
A painting stressing the need for vaccines in the Rohingya refugee camp in Balukhali, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
 ??  ?? A man admires a mural at a Rohingya refugee camp in 2019.
A man admires a mural at a Rohingya refugee camp in 2019.

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