First, They Erased Our Name: A Rohingya Speaks

Author(s): Habiburahman, with Sophie Ansel
Publisher: Scribe Publications
Year of Publication: 2019
Print Length: 256 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Autobiography or Memoir
Area: Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia, Southeast Asia, Australia
Topic: Rohingya, Community, Exile, Lived Experience, Refugees & Forced Migration, Bigotry, Citizenship, Conflict, Dehumanization, Ethnic Cleansing, Hope, Humanitarian Action, Migration, Mobility & Immobility, Peace, Politics & Power, Smuggling & Trafficking, Trauma, Victimhood, Violence & Mass Violence
For the first time, a Rohingya speaks up to expose the persecution facing his people.
‘I am three years old and will have to grow up with the hostility of others. I am already an outlaw in my own country, an outlaw in the world. I am three years old, and don’t yet know that I am stateless.’
Habiburahman was born in 1979 and raised in a small village in western Burma. When he was three years old, the country’s military leader declared that his people, the Rohingya, were not one of the 135 recognised ethnic groups that formed the eight ‘national races’. He was left stateless in his own country.
Since 1982, millions of Rohingya have had to flee their homes as a result of extreme prejudice and persecution. In 2016 and 2017, the government intensified the process of ethnic cleansing, and over 600,000 Rohingya people were forced to cross the border into Bangladesh.
Here, for the first time, a Rohingya speaks up to expose the truth behind this global humanitarian crisis. Through the eyes of a child, we learn about the historic persecution of the Rohingya people and witness the violence Habiburahman endured throughout his life until he escaped the country in 2000, eventually reaching Australia by boat in December 2009. He spent nearly three years in detention centres before being released, and now lives in Melbourne.
First, They Erased Our Name is an urgent, moving memoir about what it feels like to be repressed in one’s own country and a refugee in others.
Table of Contents
1. The ogre of Burma is born / 2. Grandma’s stories: 1984 / 3. The highlanders: Mylmin, a village somewhere between Chin State and Arakan State, 1986 / 4. ‘Mum, don’t leave me’ / 5. Nature’s school /
6. The frontier of happiness: 1988 / 7. Buddha’s tax / 8. Minor escapades / 9. The homecoming / 10. The captain’s toilets: 1990 /
11. My kingdom / 12. The criminals / 13. Operation Phi Thaya (Clean and Beautiful Nation): 1991 / 14. Ethnic cleansing / 15. The path of the innocents
16. The tresspassers / 17. The army’s urinals / 18. The undesirables / 19. The taste of salt / 20. The tree’s memory /
21. Pandemonium / 22. Routine / 23. The young woman / 24. Thwarting apartheid: 1997 / 25. Love and flight /
26. The big departure / 27. My new identity / 28. The riches of the Rohingya / 29. United / 30. The Pamphlets /
31. Checkpoints / 32. The spy: Youth hostel in Irrawaddy, 7 pm on 19 December 1999 / 33. Waking up in hell / 34. I must survive / 35. Goodbye, professor /
36. Black moon over the Mekong / 37. Angels in the City: Bangkok, January 2000 / 38. Escape / 39. The rickety bridge: Golok bus terminal, 25 January, 2000 / 40. Kuala Lumpur, ten men in the night /
41. Malaysia: my new home / 42. From one hell to another / 43. Whistleblowers / 44. Christmas Island / 45. The death of a people
Afterword
Recommended Reading
Tributes and acknowledgments

Habiburahman, known as Habib, is a Rohingya. Born in 1979 in Burma (now Myanmar), he escaped torture, persecution, and detention in his country, fleeing first to neighbouring countries in Southeast Asia, where he faced further discrimination and violence. Then, in December 2009, he moved to Australia by boat. Today, he remains stateless, unable to benefit from his full human rights.
Habib founded the Australian Burmese Rohingya Organization (ABRO) to advocate for his people back in Myanmar and for his community. He is also a translator and social worker, the casual support service coordinator at Refugees, Survivors and Ex-Detainees (RISE), and the secretary of the international Rohingya organisation Arakan Rohingya National Assembly (ARNA), based in the UK. In 2019, he was made a Refugee Ambassador in Australia. The hardship and the human rights violation Habib has faced have made him both a spokesperson for his people and a target for detractors of the Rohingya cause.
Source: https://scribepublications.com.au/books-authors/books/first-they-erased-our-name-9781925849110
More from Habiburahman in this library, click here.

Sophie Ansel is Sophie Ansel is a French journalist, author, and director, who lived in South Asia for several years. It was during a five-month stay in Burma that she first encountered the Rohingya people and heard of their plight. She returned to the country several times, and also visited the refugee communities in neighbouring countries like Thailand and Malaysia, where she met Habib in 2006. Habib helped Sophie to better understand the persecution faced by the Rohingya, and she has been advocating for their cause since 2011. When the Myanmar government accelerated the genocide of the Rohingya in June 2012, while Habib was detained in Australia, she helped him to write his story, and the story of his people.
More from Sophie Ansel in this library, click here.