Hunger and Children
An unexpected day-off. I would rather run a clinic for
Rohingya but it was not to be. Had I
known that we had no clinic far ahead of time, I would have booked to fly home
a day earlier. A group of us toyed with the idea of hiring a van to go to visit
the camps. I would have loved to walk in
the camp to get a deeper sense of how the refugees live. It was quite expensive to hire a van to go there and we would have to have a MedGlobal person to accompany us. In the end some
of us decided to take a Tom Tom to see the reclining Buddha in the Buddhist Monastery.
The road that we took was teeming with big long-distance buses and heavy
trucks, which weaved in and out and sometimes coming dangerously close to us.
The reclining Buddha is not quite as impressive as the
one in Bangkok, nevertheless in a Muslim country, it is amazing that this
monastery exists. After that we did not request the Tom Tom to take us anywhere
else.
Another volunteer from Australia came this afternoon
to stay in the apartment. We walked to a neighboring café where the owner after
learning that I am from Malaysia, proceeded to speak to me in Malay. I have
long forgotten most of my Malay but managed to understand him and also answered
him back.
We walked to the beach and sat on the sand. Immediately we were surrounded by people selling coffee, groundnuts and we were serenaded by
three Bangladeshi girls who wished that we could reward their effort with some
taka.
Most days when I stopped at a store which was not
often, one or two children ran to me, they could spot foreigner quickly, persistently touching my arms and
gesturing their hands to their mouth, one used the word “hungry”. I had thought
about taking them to a local restaurant and ordering some food for them but
most of the time when I came back from dinner, they were nowhere to be found.
Tonight I skipped dinner and went in search for these hungry
children. One Bangladeshi man came to me and apologized when a little girl
followed me and tapped me repeatedly on the arm. He told me that this little girl’s
father married three times and left her mother who sent her out to beg. He also
suggested that rather than giving her money, I should buy her food. I told him
that I had seen several children like her.
He then walked further up the road and waved and two more street urchins
came wistfully. I took them to the local
restaurant I frequented and ordered food for them, at the entrance, a security
guard tried to stop them but they pointed at me. While I was ordering a woman sidled up to me
and put her hand to her mouth. She did
not want to sit and be served but preferred to get a take-out.
The three children washed their hands and ate
heartily. The man brought in a smaller girl and as she was washing her hands at
the table pouring water into her dish, the water turned brown with dirt. The
other children pointed her to the sink to wash her hands. I put heaps of rice
on her plate. I watched them eat and wondered when was the last time their
bellies were full. They should sleep well tonight.
The woman was given her bag of food which she
carefully examined. I paid the cashier and left, walking into the soft sea breezes
of the early evening of Cox’s Bazar.
Tomorrow i would take a Tom Tom to the airport heading to Dhaka and then have a very long wait for my plane home.
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