The leader of Burma’s democracy movement, Aung San Suu Kyi, has joined Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., Mahatma Gandhi, and the Dalai Lama in the global pantheon of those whose lives are dedicated to freedom. Throughout the world, she is associated with a peaceful struggle for democracy and human rights. But what is she really like? What drives her to make such enormous personal sacrifices for her country?
Jesper Bengtsson presents a portrait of one of today’s most significant political activists. He chronicles her background as the daughter of Burma’s liberation hero Aung San, the years she spent in England and New York, and her return to Burma in the 1980s. First placed under house arrest by the military junta in 1989, she spent fifteen of the subsequent twenty-one years in captivity, separated from her husband and two children.
Throughout that period, she remained a unifying figure and activist for Burma’s democracy movement. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991, she saw her reputation and her international stature grow the longer she was under house arrest. Upon her release in November 2010, she immediately took up her work with the democracy movement and proved that she remains the most important political force in Burma.
Aung San Suu Kyi’s ability to affect people and repressive regimes reflects not only her personal charisma and courage but also her devotion to one of the great issues of our What is necessary for democracy to evolve from a deeply authoritarian system?
This book is written more on the history of the Military and Aung San Suu Kyi's Democratic Party. Out of the 15 chapters, only a few are written about Aung San Suu Kyi's life or upbringing.
However, it's still a nice book and offer an insider view of Burma and what the people went through. The report was also quite a detailed one.
Aung San Suu Kyi – one of the most eminent, yet least popular feminine personalities in the world. Someone that has spent a major part of her life in house arrest, fighting for the cause of democracy in her homeland, spoken on par with Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi, she always remained a personality that I wanted to know more about.
With so much of interest did I pick the book ‘Aung San Suu Kyi: A Biography’, by Jesper Bengtsson. But, as it is always said, the more you expect, the more you get disappointed. This book is a disappointment, in the sense that what you get is not a coherent, comprehensive biography, but rather what looks like a hastily compiled bunch of standalone essays.
The author himself makes an excuse at the very beginning stating that this is not a comprehensive biography of Aung San, due to her isolation from the world, being in house arrest. However, isn’t that what the challenge of representing such a personality is about?!
He has done a basic ground work, meeting a lot of her supporters, relatives, party people, contemporaries and opponents. But he has failed miserably in putting it all together in a manner that befits a biography of such a persona. The books jumps here and there and with so many spelling and grammatical errors, makes one wonder whether one should have explored better before deciding on the right book to read about Aung San.
There are some serious lacunae in the book with only patchy information filling up for the serious details. When he ends the chapter about her family life in London - before she ended up arriving at Burma in 1988 and donning the mantle of a national leader – he mentions that she would have remained on the path to her goal of becoming a successful author/academician, if not for the phone call on the last day of March 1988. But neither before this mention, not after that, does he explain or elaborate as to who made the phone call or what was the phone call all about.
Also, the most critical event in the life of Aung San Suu Kyi, which resulted in her becoming a national leader of the Burmese, is her talk in the Shwedagon Pagoda in August 1988. But sadly, the book has no proper information on such a crucial and watershed event in her life. Now, imagine reading the biography of Mahatma Gandhi without any information about his works in South Africa or that of Mother Teresa without any information about her early struggles in the streets of Kolkata!
My view is that if you are keen on reading about Aung San Suu Kyi and her struggle for the Burmese Democracy, this is not the book to read!
Jesper Bengtsson kirjoittaa väkevän historiikin yhdestä nykyajan tunnetuimmista demokratian ja ihmisoikeuksien puolustajista eli burmalaisesta Aung San Suu Kyistä.
Pirjo Ahon suomentaman teoksen alaotsikkona on ”Taistelu vapaudesta”. Aung San Suu Kyi on ollut pitkään kotiarestissa ja vankeudessa synnyinmaassaan eli nykyisessä Myanmarissa. Sotilasjuntta on pitänyt kovassa otteessaan koko maata ja hallinnut sortaen säälimättä eri kansallisia vähemmistöjään.
Kirjan julkaisuhetkellä Kyi oli vielä kotiarestissa mutta on sittemmin päässyt vapaaksi ja on nykyään puolueensa parlamenttiedustaja.
Neljääntoista lukuun jaettu elämäkerta tai henkilökuva laajenee Myanmarin historiaa käsitteleväksi teokseksi, jossa taustoja pengotaan aina brittivaltaa edeltävältä ajalta. Burman kuningaskunta teki hyökkäyksiä itäiseen Intiaan ja viime vuosisadan alkupuolella brittiarmeija valloitti vähitellen lähes nykyisen Myanmarin - lukuun ottamatta lukuisia vuoristoalueita, joilla asuu sotaisia heimoja, mm. karenit ja monet muut.
Kyin isä Aung San oli merkittävä hahmo Burman historiassa ja osallistui mm. japanilaismiehitykseen ja lopulta vaihtoi puolta. Hänen salamurhansa jälkeen Burma joutui japanilaistyrannian jälkeen sotilasdiktatuuriin, jonka seurauksia ja kriisejä on ollut aika ajoin mediassa.
Kirjan päähenkilö lähti maasta jo lapsena, varttui Britanniassa, meni naimisiin ja hankki lapsia. Sitten hän työskenteli mm. YK:ssa ja palasi takaisin entiseen kotimaahansa ja osallistui politiikkaan. Toiminta häiriintyi ensimmäisen vaalivoiton jälkeen, ja siitä alkoi vapaustaistelijan pitkä kotiaresti, n. 15 vuotta.
Kaiken kaikkiaan kirja on enemmänkin Myanmarin historiaa painottava teos, jossa perheenäidin rooli jää suuren elämäntehtävän jalkoihin ja välit jo edesmenneeseen mieheen ja lapsiin katkeavat. Kirjassa on poliittista vehkeilyä niin oman maan sisäpolitiikassa, Vietnamin sodasta aina Obaman aikaan. Sotilasjuntta on aina löytänyt milloin mistäkin päin maailmaa tukijoita, vaikka omassa kotimaassa valta on perustunut julmuuksiin ja väkivaltaan - ainakin sellaisen kuvan kirja haluaa välittää lukijoilleen.
A poorly written and confused biography, this book lacks creativity to present the life of one of the most admired Asian Leaders of our generation. The author has done very abrupt research and his usage of timeline is so random, that many times it is almost incomprehensible to link the shift of eras. The book has given some space to study the history of Burmese administration through the life of Aung San, the legendary figure and father of our lady in focus Ms Aung San Suu Kyi, and has given a rather average description of his time. But the life of Ms Suu Kyi is just not documented properly. Moreover, many of the acquaintances and close people of Kyi come and leave the book so weirdly that you almost miss their relevance and most of the times are left confused with the happenings. The book is very bland with extremely dry language and lacks the creativity to engage readers with the history. The most baffling point is that many incidents and people presented in the book are mentioned as if readers must know about them. (A good example is on page 124-last paragraph, 2 line; “……was killed in THAT fateful aeroplane crash…..”. I mean, how would I know about THAT crash?) Another example is the Shwedagon Speech which is always referred as a historic point but is never discussed. Many of anecdotes have been introduced without any proper set-up distracting the whole flow of reading. Overall, this is a book that may be avoided because better information about Aung San Suu kyi is available on internet than this book. But I will agree that this book gives some good insight in the Military history of Burma. And oh yes, did I mention that better usage of punctuations makes the read easier, if not more lucid. No? Then please add that to the thoughts above somewhere, because I have lost the art of writing in a flow after reading this book!!!
Ce livre nous fait découvrir la vie d'Aung San Suu Kyi, son engagement, son combat politique, son dévouement pour la cause de son peuple au détriment de sa propre vie. De son enfance marquée par un père figure légendaire de Birmanie, à ses 20 années d'enfermement dans les geôles de la junte et d'isolement, de son mari qu'elle n'a jamais pu revoir à ses succès récents en politique, nous suivons le destin exceptionnel de cette femme hors du commun, liée à la liberté de tout un peuple. Plus qu'une simple biographie et sans jamais tomber dans le mélodrame populaire, Jesper Bengtson nous livre ici un magnifique ouvrage habité par l'espoir. En rendant hommage à " The Lady " et à tous ceux qui se sont battus et qui se battent encore, au sein de la Ligue nationale pour la démocratie, pour le salut de la Birmanie, c'est en réalité l'histoire et de le destin de tout un pays que l'auteur écrit à travers la vie d'Aung San Suu Kyi et de ses proches.
Une biographie riche en témoignages, détails historiques et explications politiques, un texte dense et clair, au style adapté au grand public comme aux amateurs du genre.
Aung San Suu Kyi is an amazing woman. She separates herself from her husband and two sons in order to make a political stand for democracy against the junta controlled state in her native Burma. She endures cruelty and frustration while not allowing herself to fall into despair. She takes in stride things that would drive most people mad like the regime declaring election results null if they were against the regime. Or being allowed to only say hello to her dying husband over the phone before the line is cut. She's a lesson in standing for something and living by simple rules. It's a good thing she's so compelling because the writing in this book wasn't that great... maybe it's the translation.
Rather than being a book about Aung San Suu Kyi within the context of Burma's political environment it is more a book about the political and economic history of Burma from the mid-20th Century to the present day with bits about Aung San Suu Kyi. This book draws heavily on the work of other academics and researchers but this is understandable given the limited access to the key players in the battle for leadership in Burma. I had hoped the book would give an insight to what makes Aung San Suu Kyi who she is and whilst this book didn't quite deliver on this it has sparked an interest in me that will no doubt see me seek out other works on this topic.
Det er ikke bare en bog om Aung San Suu Kyi, men også en lyn lektion i Burmas historie, og det er en spændende, tragisk, blodig og kompliceret historie. Før jeg læste bogen var min viden om Aung San Suu Kyi begrænset til "noget med husarrest og en nobelpris", nu er min respekt for hende mangedoblet, det er fantastisk at man kan beholde et positivt livssyn og forhandlingsvillighed til et regime der gang på gang lyver, smider ens venner og demokatifæller i fængsel og skyder ind i fredelige demonstrationer. Hvis du får en øv-følelse over regeringen eller andre offentlige ting i landet, skulle man læse denne bog - det får lige fødderne ned på jorden igen.
Dry writing; seems as if the author just combined facts about Suu Kyi and Burma during her time, and placed a few quotes by Suu Kyi. Though you learn a few interesting bits, it's difficult to remain with the book as there's no narrative thread or flow. Could have been a promising book, with the topic alone and the writer's own travels.
Not very exhaustive but enough. Not just Aung San Suu Kyi but also Burma's history is depicted in the book. Although the events are not very detailed but that is what prevents it from being boring. The events are also not strictly chronological which though may sometimes be confusing but actually intermingles well. Last two chapters can be avoided though.
Aung San Suu Kyi's life is very inspiring. It was a rather difficult book to read with many dates and historical references that were difficult to follow. I certainly felt I had learnt heaps about a part of the world I knew very little about before.
I didn't think this is such a good book, it's jumps a lot from one fact to another and isn't always chronologically, if it would be chronologically it would be a 4 star for me....it's a pity, because it's good written, clear, and neutral.
Besides just being a biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, the book tells the story of history of Burma, its colonial past, its very short lived tryst with democracy and the repressive dictatorship of the junta regime.