Willy, a cook, serves lunch to Rohingya children at the Lhok Bani refugee camp in Langsa, Aceh. Together with other Acehnese volunteers at the camp, he provides three meals a day for the Rohingya living at the camp. (Photo: Goh Chiew Tong)
SINGAPORE: The Rohingya refugee crisis was one of 2015's top stories. Thousands escaped Myanmar, drifting for months in treacherous waters in the hopes of being accepted by neighbouring countries to start anew.
While many sought to find refuge in Malaysia, Aceh has received thousands of Rohingya refugees with open arms, providing them with food and shelter.
And when a group of three students from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) heard about this, they decided to help shed some light on the ongoing issue.
Communication Studies majors Goh Chiew Tong, Jade Han Hui Jing and Clarissa Sih are working together on a documentary named Peumulia Jamee, which means "Honouring your Guests" in Acehnese, for their final-year project.
"When we read about the ‘human ping pong’ that went on between some of the South-East Asian countries, and how Aceh was an exception when its fishermen immediately saved the Rohingya that were stranded at sea, we felt that that was a story worth telling," said Ms Goh, the documentary's director.
The trio, who are funding the documentary themselves and via a crowdfunding campaign, have spent time in Aceh meeting with both the local Acehnese and the Rohingya refugees to better understand the situation.
They found that the Acehnese welcomed the Rohingya refugees into their country, even putting themselves at risk to ensure their guests would be safe.
“Their main priority was to rescue them from their boats, and they did so without knowing where the refugees came from, if they were Christian, Buddhist, Muslim; or even if they carried any diseases or weapons with them. They just wanted to save the refugees and bring them to shore. Once they brought them to shore, they offered them food and drink, this despite themselves having so little,” said Ms Sih, the project’s director of photography.
“According to the Acehnese who were involved in the rescue process, when the Rohingya first landed, their hair were long, their bodies were literally skin and bones, and many of them were very ill. The Acehnese quickly gathered water and snacks from their homes, neighbours and shops to feed the Rohingya,” she added.
The trio said the refugees were visibly grateful, especially after being persecuted for their faith and after their ordeal in getting to dry land.
“Some had seen their fellow passengers die on the journey, and were on the brink of giving up hope when the Acehnese rescued them,” said Ms Han.
NOT ALL BLACK AND WHITE
The relationship between the Acehnese and the refugees however, is not as straightforward as one may think. Many of them hope to move on to Malaysia to reunite with their families or to seek work, despite their gratitude towards the Acehnese, said Ms Han.
“There were several refugees who were very grateful for what Aceh has provided them with, but the desire to work and to reunite with their families clearly still exist,” said Ms Goh.
She added that she met a few Rohingya refugees who were very vocal about their unhappiness while in Indonesia, as they are unable to find employment due to their status as asylum-seekers by the UNHCR.
“Many of them complained openly that all they do in camps is to sleep and eat and idle,” Ms Goh said.
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