Myanmar ( Burma ) 2013, Sittwe, Rakhine State !
Sittwe is the capital of Rakhine State, Myanmar (Burma). Sittwe, pronounced site-tway in the Rakhine language, is located on an estuarial island created at the confluence of the Kaladan, Mayu, and Lay Mro rivers emptying into the Bay of Bengal. The city has 181,000 inhabitants (2006). it is the administrative seat of Sittwe Township and Sittwe District.
Sittwe, ehemals Akjab (birmanisch Tsit-htwe) ist die Hauptstadt des Rakhine-bzw. Arakan-Staats in Myanmar und bildet zugleich den Haupthafen an der Ostküste der Insel Akjab sowie an der Mündung des Arakan-Stroms (oder Kualadan).
Sittwe hat aufgrund des großen und sicheren Hafens eine für die Schifffahrt günstige Lage.Sittwe kam 1826 durch den Vertrag von Jandabu unter britische Herrschaft. Insbesondere wurde hier viel mit Reis gehandelt. 1870 wird der britische Schriftsteller Hector Hugh Munro in Akjab geboren.
Thaye Bazaar in Mandalay
မႏၱေလး ေအာင္ေျမသာစံၿမိဳ႕နယ္မွာရွိတဲ့ သူရဲေစ်းဟာ မႏၱေလး- သူရဲဘူတာကေန မတၱရာၿမိဳ႕ကိုသြားတဲ့ ရထားလမ္းေဘးမွာ တည္ထားတဲ့ေစ်း ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။ အဲဒီေစ်းမွာ ေနရာလံုေလာက္မႈ မရွိတာေၾကာင့္ ေစ်းသည္ေတြဟာ ရထားသံလမ္းေပၚ မွာ ေရာင္းခ်ေနၾကရပါတယ္။ RFA သတင္းေထာက္ ကိုေနေသြးက တင္ျပထားပါတယ္။
ကြယ္လြန္သူေတြကို သရဏဂံုတင္တဲ့အခါ အက်ိဳးရွိပါသလား
ကြယ္လြန္သူေတြကို သရဏဂံုတင္တဲ့အခါ အက်ိဳးရွိပါသလား
ျမန္မာ့ပလက္ေဖာင္းရဲ႕ေဗာဓိအလင္းအစီအစဥ္ကို အပတ္စဥ္တနဂၤေႏြေန႕ရဲ႕ေန႕လည္(၁)နာရီမွာ ပံုမွန္တင္ဆက္ေပးေနပါတယ္။
[ ျမန္မာ့ပလက္ေဖာင္း Myanma Platform ကို Subscribe မယ္ .
Video ၾကည့္ပီး Like မယ္ . Share မယ္ . ေပ်ာ္မယ္ . ဗဟုသုတယူမယ္
အျမဲအားေပးေနေသာ ပရိသတ္မ်ားကို ေက်းဇူးအထူးပါ။ ]
Thank you for watching Myanma Platform Youtube Channel
#myanmaplatform
Bagan Nyaung U market, Burma, Myanmar
The busy central market in Nyaung U in the morning - Bagan, Burma
fabriziocarbognin.com
ก๋วยเตี๋ยวขยำสาวเชียงตุง ของขายริมทางตลาดกาดหลวงเชียงตุง Kengtung Market
ก๋วยเตี๋ยวขยำสาวเชียงตุง Kengtung noodle cute girl
กดติดตาม ติดต่อกินให้อ้วนตาย ได้ทางเฟสบุ๊ค
Removal of Roadside Vendors in Yangon
လြတ္လပ္တဲ့အာရွအသံ
ျမန္မာသတင္းနဲ႔ဗီဒီယိုေတြၾကည့္ႏုိင္ဖို႔
RFA ျမန္မာဌာနဝက္ဘ္ဆိုက္:
RFA ျမန္မာဌာနသတင္းလႊာရယူဖို႔:
RFA ျမန္မာဌာန Podcast:
RFA Burmese သတင္းေတြၾကည့္ရႈသိရွိဖို႔:
Subscribe on YouTube:
Facebook:
Twitter:
YouTube:
Soundcloud:
တယ္လီဖုန္းအတြက္ RFA Burmese Mobile App
Android:
Apple:
Market Day, Kalaw, Myanmar
Market day in hill-town of Kalaw, Myanmar
ซิตตเว SITTWE 9:กินข้าวแกงสาวยะไข่ eating Sittwe street food
ซิตตเว SITTWE 9:กินข้าวแกงสาวยะไข่ eating Sittwe street food
Market Days on Inle Lake, Myanmar.wmv
Teachanywhere visits two village markets on Lake Inle, Myanmar.
Anti-Muslim riots haunt shattered Myanmar city
The town of Meiktila in central Myanmar is still reeling from savage sectarian bloodshed three months ago that saw Buddhist mobs raze Muslim homes and businesses. At least 44 people were killed according to official figures -- although witnesses and rights groups suggest the toll could be much higher, including at least 20 students from a Muslim school on the outskirts of the town. +WARNING: VIDEO CONTAINS VIOLENT IMAGES+Duration: 02:21
Myanmar: Market brings community together
A market in Maungdaw supported by UNHCR brings different sects of the community from Rakhine State together. Hindus, Muslims and Rakhine put aside their differences and work together in peace on daily basis. The market helps build bridges between divided communities in Myanmar who have been long divided by violence and persecution.
“It’s very important to work together. If he (the cook) is absent from work, I have difficulty doing the job, if he (the waiter) is absent, I won’t be able to work,” Momo says while serving customers. “So it’s very important to be together always.”
unhcr.org/uk/news/stories/2017/7/596f75d19/myanmars-ethnic-divisions-forgotten-towns-busy-market.html
Information for media:
If you would like to use this video to communicate refugee stories or require B-Roll, transcripts, stills or much more information, please contact hqvideo@unhcr.org.
---
Keep up to date with our latest videos:
--
UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, works to protect and assist those fleeing war and persecution. Since 1950, we have helped tens of millions of people find safety and rebuild their lives. With your support, we can restore hope for many more.
Read more at
Support our work with refugees now by subscribing to this channel, liking this video and sharing it with your friends and contacts. Thanks so much for your help.
Myanmar ( Burma ) 2016, Yangon & Bogyoke Aung San-Market !
Yangon, also known as Rangoon, is a former capital of Myanmar (Burma) and the capital of Yangon Region. Yangon is the country's largest city with a population of over five million, and is the most important commercial centre, although the military government officially relocated the capital to Naypyidaw in March 2006.
Bogyoke Aung San Market ( formerly Scott's Market ) is a major bazaar located in Pabedan township in central Yangon, Myanmar. Known for its colonial architecture and inner cobblestone streets, the market is a major tourist destination, dominated by antique, Burmese handicraft and jewellery shops, art galleries, and clothing stores. Bogyoke Market is a popular black market location to exchange currency. The market also has a number of stores for local shoppers, selling medicine, foodstuffs, garments and foreign goods.
Fire at Sittwe near Police station
Fire at Sittwe near Police station
An old lady seller and a younger lady buyer at Thandwe Market , Myanmar (Burma)
Just a look of selling/buying at Thandwe Market , Rakhine province, west Myanmar (Burma)
Central Myanmar: Ancient cities around Mandalay
Around Mandalay in central Myanmar are the ancient cities of Amarapura (city of immortality), Inwa and Mingun along the Ayeyarwady river. During this trip into an ancient past full of wonders you can also visit: Maha Ganayon Kyaung, home to several thousands of young monks, the U Bein's bridge, the longest (1200m) teak span bridge in the world and Sagaing hill with a wonderful temple.
Mawlamyine by Tour Mandalay
In this video Tour Mandalay visit Mawlamyine, Myanmar's 4th largest city and the first colonial capital. Highlights include long lost colonial buildings, stunning sunsets, night markets, the Thanbyuzayat war cemetery and Kyaik Than Lan (the pagoda from which Kipling probably wrote his famous poem 'Mandalay'). The video also features a boat trip across to the magical Bilu Island - a destination renowned for its quality arts and crafts industry.
Myanmar (Mon Village) Bago Part 11
Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries. See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!
Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries.
See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!
Myanmar Mon Village Bago:
The Mon of Myanmar generally live in the region southeast of Yangoon and in Mon and Kayin States along the coast. The Mon migrated from the northern territories into what is now known as Thailand and Myanmar (Burma), and established the first great civilization in that region. They pioneered wet rice farming, introduced the nationals to Buddhism, and gave them their alphabet. Between the fifth and eighth centuries, their kingdom was at its peak. However, in the centuries that followed, they were at constant war with the Burmese.
The Mon were finally defeated by the Burmese in 1757, and the time of their political independence ended. Today, most of the Mon are descendants of the fugitives who fled from the Burmese.
What are Their Lives Like?
The Mon live in village settlements from the last three or four hundred years. Their houses are similar to Thai homes, except that they are always situated east and west. They are rectangular, wood-framed houses raised above ground on poles. The walls and floors are made of woven bamboo mats, and the roofs are made of thatch. The wealthier Mon may live in homes with plank walls and floors. There is a verandah in front and a kitchen at the back of the house. A monastery is located in each village.
Most of the Mon are peasant farmers, although a few are merchants and craftsmen. The farmers generally raise fruits or vegetables. Irrigated rice is their principal crop, and it is grown for both consumption and trade. The wet rice farmers cultivate their fields with plows drawn by buffalo or oxen. Vegetables, sugar cane, and pineapples are grown in home gardens. Supplementary crafts for the men include carpentry and brick making; while the women engage in pottery, weaving, and basket-making. Some of the men have full-time jobs as blacksmiths.
Mon families are not particularly patrilineal (male-dominated), except when dealing with the house spirit. This deity is located in the home of the eldest living male of a lineage. The spirit's clothing and gear hang in a basket on the southeastern post of the house.
The Mon do not have formal weddings. Instead, when a boy and girl decide to marry, the boy's friends tell the girl's parents. The groom is allowed to move in with the bride and her family for up to three years. The couple then establishes their own separate household.
Physically, the Mon are taller and stronger than the Thai. Today, most dress like the Thai.
What are Their Beliefs?
Religion is very important to the Mon. A majority are ethnic religionists, practicing a mixture of spirit worship and Buddhism. The others are Theravada Buddhists. Those who are traditional animists believe that good and evil spirits inhabit non-living objects. Their beliefs have been partly influenced by Hinduism, where spirits known as tewatao are associated with trees and fields. Other spirits, such as ancestral spirits, spirits that cause illness, and spirits that have magical influence, are called kalok.
Buddhist monks act as mediators between villagers and the spirits. Other practitioners include shamans (priests or priestesses), doctors, astrologers, and witches. Witches often cause illnesses or spirit possession. The Buddhists believe that a sick person has an insufficient accumulation of merit, so offerings are made to the Buddha images on his behalf. To alleviate the illness, shamans (mostly women) put on spirit dances, at which time they usually become possessed by evil spirits. The doctor then seeks to exorcise the spirits by reciting chants.
Weaving of Lun Yar Kyaw, which is one of the Myanmar Traditional Fabrics. First of all, the white silk is dyed according to design and one's favourite colour. The dyed silk is made into yarn by using a small spindle and put into the wooden reel. These are used as a warp threads when weaving. Simultaneously, yarn of various colours is mixed and made in accord with design and the number of yarn one desires. These mixed yarn are also wound onto the small bamboo bobbin of the wooden shuttle casing for the desired amount. These are to use threads of the weft in weaving.
Gold Coins For Sale Sittwe Myanmar
allinvestglobal.com
Myanmar 2012 - Between New Bagan and Nyaung U (1150)
Villages and scenes of the countryside from a cycling tour between New Bagan and Nyaung U in Myanmar (Burma).