Nine Shan FBR Teams Complete Leadership and Ethnic Unity Training and go on Relief Missions in Shan State
Monday, 27 May 2013 16:02
FBR
Shan State, Burma
This month nine new Shan FBR relief teams complete their 8th annual Shan leadership and ethnic unity training. Lead by Shan, Karen and Karenni FBR staff , Â the new teams learned medical, reporting, lifesaving, swimming, counseling, photography, video, mapping, land navigation, GPS, Good Life Club outreach to children, leadership, rappelling and many other skills to prepare for relief missions in Shan State.

Rangers complete a mapping exercise in the mountains of Shan State
The 47 new Rangers on the 9 teams come from a variety of backgrounds, motivated to serve their people. Many students have seen villages in Shan State burned or pillaged by Burma Army soldiers in the past, sometimes due to an accused association with the Shan State Army (a local Shan democracy resistance organization). Their training with Free Burma Rangers will provide these students with refined skills to be able to document human rights abuses that take place in mission areas, and provide a resurgence of hope to the people of Burma.

Senior Ranger staff supervise during a medical exercise
Due to the enduring conflict in Burma, the educational opportunities in Shan State have been minimal for students. Some villages have no schools at all, while others are able to receive basic education at monasteries. Villages that have schools are deficient in educational materials. FBR trainings provide a unique opportunity for students to receive education in a variety of fields, and in turn, share some of their education with the villagers that they come across during their missions.

New
Shan Rangers participate in a Good Life Club program where they
educated local residents on basic healthcare and provided encouragement.

Rangers learn how to navigate terrain in multiple ways, including repelling down mountain sides.

Rangers
must complete several water exercises during their training, including
swimming, water rescue, and rope bridge crossings.
Last year, FBR’s Shan Rangers went on a four-month relief mission where they provided medical assistance, Good Life Club counseling and encouragement, and documented the situation in each village they visited. Their mission began in late June 2012, and lasted through most of October 2012. During the course of the four-month mission, they were able to treat nearly 3,000 patients as they traveled through the mountainous terrain of Shan State.

Last
year, Shan rangers were able to treat nearly 3,000 patients, including
this young boy with malaria, during their relief mission.

47 Shan Rangers graduated from FBR’s 2013 Leadership and Relief Team Training

Members of the 2013 graduating class, shortly before heading out for their first relief mission.
May God bless you,
Shan Free Burma Rangers
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