Contexts 129
woman, bean pole, and giraffe”; they also told her she could keep dry during
a thunderstorm if she stood under a telephone wire (173). In spite of these in-
sults, she found her niche at school as a journalist and gained respect as a serious
writer.
Pascal Khoo Thwe, the author of
From the Land of Green Ghosts: A Burmese
Odyssey
(2002), was born in Burma in 1967. A member of the Padaung people,
Thwe enjoyed a childhood influenced by folk beliefs and traditions. A few weeks
after his birth, his father rubbed a pulverized spider on his head to make him
smart and hardworking.
His grandmother, who had traveled to England as a
member of Bertram Mills’s circus, spat on his head three times to save him from
evil spirits. As a young child, Thwe slept in a big bed with his parents and sib-
lings, surrounded by the comforting sounds and smells of his family group.
At the age of five, Thwe reluctantly left home to attend a government board-
ing school. His teacher, Mr. Joseph, bullied his pupils, and the children bullied
each other:
They carried catapults, flint pellets, knives and other ingeniously
painful homemade
weapons. I was a new target, and it seemed impossible not to be part of the system of bul-
lying. Not only did they bully you, they also forced you to join them in bullying others,
to cheat in exams and even to ambush unsuspecting teachers on their way home. To hurt
me they would call me by my father’s name, because for some reason we Padaung found
it insulting when someone uttered the names of our parents. (45– 46)
Thwe’s helplessness as a victim of bullying mirrors many other children’s feelings
in similar situations. Fortunately, after Thwe told his Uncle Yew about the prob-
lem, Uncle Yew started spending time at the government school, taking the chil-
dren on hunting expeditions, and showing them how to practice better behavior.
Thwe’s autobiography also includes other kinds of childhood folklore. He and
his
friends chased each other, “jumping from branch to branch like monkeys”
(74). Spending nights in his own tree house, he watched the stars until he fell
asleep; some of his dreams became predictions of future events that his family
took very seriously. Eventually, he became the “unofficial family oracle” (53).
Belief in ghosts enlivened his childhood years. As a small boy, he worried about
going outside to the bathroom near the parish priest’s house, which had a reputa-
tion for being haunted. If the priest found excrement near his house, he made
children walk around it until one of the children admitted who had defecated on
the ground (27). Besides worrying about the haunted area near the priest’s house,
Thwe and his friends feared “green ghosts,” the vengeful spirits of people who
had died because of accident or murder (85). Ghosts
continued to be important
presences throughout his college years, when he shared a dwelling with other
students and became a guerrilla fighter against the government’s forces.